My feeling behind this OP is that politics is not about values. It’s originally a state of being, of viewing the world around one in terms of personal boundaries, what one has and doesn’t have, who has things and what they are, what’s happening around one and will they be affected by it and how to get what they want. — Brett
Your views seem to be in line. :up:Some broader ideas on politics:
“ Agonism argues that politics essentially comes down to conflict between conflicting interests. Political scientist Elmer Schattschneider argued that "at the root of all politics is the universal language of conflict",[27] while for Carl Schmitt the essence of politics is the distinction of 'friend' from foe'.[28] This is in direct contrast to the more co-operative views of politics by Aristotle and Crick. However, a more mixed view between these extremes is provided by the Irish author Michael Laver, who noted that "Politics is about the characteristic blend of conflict and co-operation that can be found so often in human interactions. Pure conflict is war. Pure co-operation is true love. Politics is a mixture of both." Wikipedia. — Brett
"Arbitrary" in so far as any historically persistent features of human behavior can be substituted for any of the ones on offer in your OP. My initial post (p. 1) suggests 2 other quartets.↪180 Proof
no arbitrary list of "pillars" is compelling
— 180 Proof
Why arbitrary and what would you add or delete? — Brett
I’m interested in what anyone might have to add, change or clarify.
Poetry: the expression of human consciousness and the unconscious. Art is a product of this.
Politics: ideas of nationalism. Division. Ideas of opposition. Power, the rule of law and society are products of this.
Economics: value in things, profit and loss. Power and private property are the products of this.
Religion: metaphysics, belief, the unknown, the unsayable. The church, the priests and power are the products of this. — Brett
I’m interested in what anyone might have to add, change or clarify.
Poetry: the expression of human consciousness and the unconscious. Art is a product of this. — Brett
Politics: ideas of nationalism. Division. Ideas of opposition. Power, the rule of law and society are products of this.
Economics: value in things, profit and loss. Power and private property are the products of this.
Religion: metaphysics, belief, the unknown, the unsayable. The church, the priests and power are the products of this.
And then right in the middle of it all, bringing everything together, is where I’d put philosophy. — Pfhorrest
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