Politics and power
15
exerted (preferences of the actors? or their needs or interests? declared or covert,
illusionary or real?) or the conflicts (open
and visible, as in the Weberian defini-
tion I have adopted above? or non-visible but possible?) that it temporarily settles.
Others may miss notions introduced by Michel Foucault (1926–1984) such as bio-
power and governmentality, and largely used in the last decades.
My reasons for this absence, or the deflating of these and other notions like
domination, are the following:
A. This is an introduction to political philosophy (in the very specific understand-
ing of it, to be explained in Excursus 1), not to a
general social theory that
includes a phenomenology of life-forms in the society at large.
B. Being this is an introduction, I aim at defining and explaining the elementary
concepts that support the structure of political interaction, while not getting
involved – as far as it goes – in a debate concerned with conflicting
concep-
tions of politics and society endowed with a high
amount of presuppositions
and value-laden assumptions.
23
To add – as suggested by Lukes – to decision
making and agenda setting a third dimension of power, that is the power to
prevent people from enacting the so far ‘latent’ conflict between the interests
of those holding power and the ‘real’ interests of those excluded, requires a
comprehensive philosophy of history and society
indicating what the visible
but elusive and what the hidden but ‘real’ interest of the people is, and what
they should do in order to become aware of the latter and pursue it. Now, the
philosophically most refined version of this theory remains Lukács (1923), the
incunabulum of Critical or Western (as opposed to Soviet) Marxism. Accord-
ing to this eminent theorist (1885–1971) of Communism, the overturning of
capitalism, not its reform – as social-democrats wanted to have it – was seen
to be the real interest of the working class. Lukács wrote this at the dawn of
Soviet Communism, and we cannot today ignore what
this strategy led to in
the history of the twentieth century: division of the left in Western Europe
resulting in its weakening in front of Fascism, state terror with 10 million
victims and economic backwardness in the Soviet Union. I shall pursue no
further the question of the ‘real’ interest. Apart from the reasonable wish not to
overburden our study of the elements of politics with philosophical disputes
among various
positions and ideologies, there are indeed in our time, unlike
in the nineteenth century, enough open conflicts and well-articulated interests
in and between our societies to make the search for ‘real’ but latent interests
redundant.
C. Having replied to some possible objection, let
us now work out some con-
sequences deriving from our definitions. That politics lives among conflicts,
their settlement by acts of power and influence and the new arising conflicts
means that political processes normally end in the making of
decisions about
the conflict matter. Decision making has two sides, the
political and the
policy
side. The former revolves around the conflicting parties, the
conflict techniques
16 What is politics?
(from rational arguing to negotiating to cheating and threatening) and the
crucial achievement of
consensus in the public opinion, between parties and in
the elites. In the policy corner the focus is on the issue at stake, its
substantive
features, the efficacy and efficiency of the solution found. As it happens, politi-
cal reasons (aimed at gaining consensus or neutrality from some less privileged
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