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POLITICAL SCIENCE 13 Power and Justice POLITICAL SCIENCE 13 Power and Justice

POLITICAL SCIENCE 13 Power and Justice - PowerPoint Presentation

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POLITICAL SCIENCE 13 Power and Justice - PPT Presentation

INTRODUCTION Instructor Tracy B Strong Office SSB 374 Office hours T 10301200by appt 534 7081 or drop in Email tstrongucsdedu Reading you are asked to read the works of a number of individuals ID: 641494

theory political live claim political theory claim live common politics lear american

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Slide1

POLITICAL SCIENCE 13Power and JusticeSlide2

INTRODUCTION

Instructor: Tracy B. Strong

Office: SSB 374

Office hours

: T: 10:30-12:00,by

appt (534 7081) or drop in

Email:

tstrong@ucsd.eduSlide3

Reading: you are asked to read the works of a number of individuals.

How to approach them.

These are particular individuals -- political theorists. Slide4

Political Theory

politics

is about the arrangements that people make to live a life in common, that is with others who are not their blood relations.

Implies sharing (having something in common) and thus difference or individuality. (I and you)

I like to think of human activities as answers to questions. Thus:

psychology is the answer to the question of what or who am I?

Religion to the question of why do I suffer

economics to that of how do I get what I want

morality to that of what should I do

and POLITICS to that of the simultaneous answer to what am I and who are we? (

Eg

what one is claiming when I says (I take this to be political) “I am an American

” – It is thus a claim on others.Slide5

What makes something political?I hold a claim that I make to apply to others

A. “Eavesdropping

on private conversations without a warrant is un-American.”

B. “How

can you say that? The country is in danger from terrorists.”

“Well

, that is what I feel

.”

“A’s” response is

not

politicalSlide6

A. “Eavesdropping on private conversations without a warrant is un-American.”

B. “How can you say that? The country is in danger from terrorists.”

A. “The

Fourth Amendment to the Constitution

clearly

forbids it

.”

A’s response is political.Slide7

But not resolvedB. “In cases like this one the President can make an exception. Lincoln did it during the Civil War.”

Now

we have an

argument

, an argument that is political. It cannot be resolved except in the interaction of A and

B. Hence politics involves conflict.Slide8

Note this difference for a non-political exchange

A. 2

+ 2 = 4.

B. I

think it is 22.

A. No

– that is a “plus” sign, not some symbol for association.

B. Oh

, of course! You are right.Slide9

And from this oneA. I

would like to buy that car.

B. It

really too expensive for you, given your income.

A. Nevertheless, I am going to – I really want it. [Or: Damn! I guess you are right.]

Here

,

no

claim is made to something

common

to

the two, there is no “I” to “We” claim. Slide10

And this oneA. Eavesdropping

on private conversations without a warrant is un-American.

B. Perhaps

so, but that is a small price to pay given the danger.

Here, any notion of a common claim (“being American”) is ruled out. B reveals his preference and willingness to pay a price.Slide11

What has gone wrong here?

King Lear (that one) has in the First Act asked “

Which of [our daughters] shall we say does love us most?”

and proposed to divide his kingdom accordingly.

Cordelia

famously refuses the test. Lear banishes her and decides to live alternately with others (

Goneril

and Regan), taking his very large retinue of knights and retainers with him. The daughters object to the extent of Lear’s retinue. He responds:Slide12

LEAR

[To GONERIL]

I

'll go with thee:

Thy fifty yet doth double five and twenty,

And thou art twice her love.

GONERIL

Hear me, my lord;

What need you five and twenty, ten, or five,

To follow in a house where twice so many

Have a command to tend you?

REGAN

What need one?

KING LEAR

O, reason not the need: our basest beggars

Are in the poorest thing superfluous:

Allow not nature more than nature needs,

Man's

life's as cheap as beast's:…

Act II, sc. 4Slide13

What is theory?

THEORY is derived from the Greek word

theoros

- spectator, often a delegate from one city to another to observe their rituals.

Theory is seeing , getting it. “Oh! I see.” And KNOWING what it is that you have gotten in such a way that you can make it available to yourself and to others.

POLITICAL THEORY is thus understanding about politics: most generally about what humans try to do when they live a life with others.

These political Theorists are central to who we are, i.e. to how we understand ourselves when we live in a political matter.

Who is “we” -- explain. -- anyone who finds these voices in him or her or rejects them. -- provocation as modality of knowing

Slide14

Political Theory1/ who is “we”? What do we find out about about “we”?

E.g. of property

2/ how do we study this in this course?

classic texts

literary texts (give us a world)

scholarly analyses

theory in practice(court cases)Slide15

Power 1. power to make a decision

2. power to set an agenda

3. power to control what counts as a contestable itemSlide16

Justice…Why is it hard to determine it?