Would making such a distinction be a legitimate or lawless act? Or would it come down to whose opinion is which?Are there clear criteria to distinguish between legitimate and lawless acts of violence? — Number2018
You are right. To make it clear, it is necessary to bring a more rigorous framework. First, I do not think that somebody's private opinion is worth qualifying as a legitimate or lawless act of violence; unless, by voicing it, one hurts somebody or effectuates some considerable effect. Yet, if one can bring argumentation,Would making such a distinction be a legitimate or lawless act? Or would it come down to whose opinion is which? — Heiko
Once again, my mere opinion about a judge sentence is not important at all. To make it an act, I must demonstrate why this particular sentence is justified or not so that I would be able to question (or confirm) the judge or judicial system authority. Or, I need to apply aFor example, when a judge calls something "criminal", we all know that this might be quite relative, for example depending on where you are. Would that make any difference? — Heiko
what needs to be analysed is the way in which this symbolic violence is linked to the real violence of the institutions with the myriad of almost invisible micro-violences that make up the society of imperial capitalism. — David Mo
we must turn here to a philosopher who is unjustly forgotten today, Jean-Paul Sartre.This oblivion is due in large part to the fact that he dedicated himself to attacking institutional violence as a class phenomenon and to defending the counter-violence of the dominated - with more or less success. — David Mo
But what needs to be analysed is the way in which this symbolic violence is linked to the real violence of the institutions with the myriad of almost invisible micro-violences that make up the society of imperial capitalism. — David Mo
Institutional and structural violence:Could you bring a few concrete examples? — Number2018
Overt and covert violence:Violence can be physical and psychological. It can characterize personal actions, forms of group activity, and abiding social and political policy. This book includes all of these aspects within its focus on institutional forms of violence. Institution is also a broad category, ranging from formal arrangements such as the military, the criminal code, the death penalty and prison system, to more amorphous but systemic situations indicated by parenting, poverty, sexism, work, and racism. — Deane Curtin & Robert Litke : Institutional Violence
How Sartre's perspective on violence was different from the 'classical' marxist view? — Number2018
One author who has studied this at length is Michel Foucault: the micro-powers, as he calls them. They are authoritarian systems that generate an apparently rational discourse aimed at social exclusion. This happens in the school, the family, the business, the asylum, the hospital, etc — David Mo
Brutal and visible repression is no longer exercised -or not limited to- but rather a pressing and permanent control to modify behaviour. — David Mo
So, for example, does a psychologist (who is completely unaware of being an instrument of power)In his view, the very concept of "man" and the sciences associated with it are a result of the techniques of controlling, monitoring and punishing the marginal elements of populations. — David Mo
Actually, a teacher does a lot of things. Wiping wet noses, for example. But his institutional task is mainly to evaluate, classify and exclude. These are forms of domination sustained with institutional violence. This violence is often symbolic when the teacher qualifies with categories of scholars: "He lacks intelligence", "She is lazy", "He is not prepared for...", "She lacks discipline".... Or even more sophisticated means: IQ and other "objective" tests.Is that possible to show explicitly that a teacher is exercising a sort of micro-power while teaching a class? She is not entirely focused on controlling the marginal students of her class. — Number2018
Not exactly. He was against the marxist-anarchist theory of the class state as center of any repression. His model is a network without a unique focus. With his panoptic model he gives is an account of repression that has not ever resort to physical violence. See his criticism of asylums coercions as electroshocks, straitjackets or lobotomies. What is new in him is that the same model included also behaviourism, a form of control that uses psychological techniques more than violence.Foucault tried to make it clear that his conception of power has nothing in common with its violent or repressive theories. — Number2018
Of course, he does when passing over the patient freedom. Of course, he does when passing over the patient freedom. Foucault was very critic with the legal powers of "experts" in psychiatry and other "sciences", for example.So, for example, does a psychologist (who is completely unaware of being an instrument of power) apply “the techniques of controlling, monitoring and punishing” while consulting a patient? — Number2018
Violence, it seems, is defined as physical force intended to damage or destroy a person. — TheMadFool
You have a very limited view of violence. The father who hits his child does not do so to destroy him, but to correct him. And he is violent. In the same way, the champions of violence are not exactly materialistic. The Holy Inquisition and other Christian institutions - if we stick to only one well-known religion - rank first in destroying people and they did it for their own good. And they were violent people.What I'm driving at is that violence seems to be born of a materialistic philosophy - a physical object annoys you and you attack that object physically — TheMadFool
You have a very limited view of violence. The father who hits his child does not do so to destroy him, but to correct him. — David Mo
What's your definition of violence? — TheMadFool
Nullify or weaken someone's freedom by acting through physical force, threat, technique, hierarchy, ideology, manipulation of language or abuse of weakness.
More simply: through the use and abuse of power.
I think that Merriam-Webster's dictionary and others, by hiding the usual uses in politics and social sciences of the terms of institutional violence, structural violence or symbolic violence, is a typical case of the latter. Depriving the victim of violence of a conceptual resource for his or her defense. — David Mo
I think that a teacher’s major institutional task is to include her students into a wide educational network by using primarily nonviolent, seemingly objective professional pedagogical techniquesa teacher does a lot of things. Wiping wet noses, for example. But his institutional task is mainly to evaluate, classify and exclude. These are forms of domination sustained with institutional violence. This violence is often symbolic when the teacher qualifies with categories of scholars: "He lacks intelligence", "She is lazy", "He is not prepared for...", "She lacks discipline". — David Mo
What is new in him is that the same model included also behaviourism, a form of control that uses psychological techniques more than violence. — David Mo
What's your definition of violence?
— TheMadFool
Nullify or weaken someone's freedom by acting through physical force, threat, technique, hierarchy, ideology, manipulation of language or abuse of weakness. — David Mo
Most likely, Anti-Oedipus was written to counter the conceptions of the internalization of the repressive coercive regimes of violence as a primary mode of power.Deleuze and Guattari made up for the concept of "regimes of significants", following Nietzsche based on the ancient "sign(s) deep into the flesh" to signify ownership or subjection. With the internalization of those archaic structures we get to allegiance in advance. — Heiko
It is right as a common sence point of view. However, we cannot explain a variety of patternsMost people for example never get into serious conflict with the state because they know the rules. — Heiko
I didn't intend to evaluate the violence. The first step is to define violence. The second step is to identify it. The third is to assess it.Do you mean a father is justified to "nullify" and "weaken" his child? — TheMadFool
The problem of violence is not the ends (see my previous comment) but the means to the ends. In that sense, simply forcing every teenager to stay locked up for several hours a day listening to uninteresting talk is violence. Even more so when he can be qualified as "unfit" or "very deficient" -or similar.I think that a teacher’s major institutional task is to include her students into a wide educational network by using primarily nonviolent, seemingly objective professional pedagogical techniques and methods. — Number2018
Further, ''government'' covers various non-disciplinary modes of power, such as bio-power, pastoral power, normalization power, etc. — Number2018
You give a soft idea of Foucault. As if he authorizes all means of domination that are not directly violent. I remind you that on discipline and punishment he wrote more than one book and on "pastoral power" he made a very harsh criticism in volume I of the History of Sexuality. For example: Under the pretext of ensuring the salvation of the sheep, the shepherd builds a subtle device of power, capable of unfolding even over the intimate solitude of the believer and leading him towards a new form of widespread servitude.I think that Foucault conceived 'freedom' as produced and constructed , as the effect of power. — Number2018
I do not think that Foucault's aim was to authorize the means of domination.It looks like his intention was to make them discernible. He attacked the dominating academic framework, pointing out tohidden and ubiquitous forms of power. These strategies were much more subversive and effective than the direct and apparent criticism.You give a soft idea of Foucault. As if he authorizes all means of domination that are not directly violent. I remind you that on discipline and punishment he wrote more than one book and on "pastoral power" he made a very harsh criticism in volume I of the History of Sexuality. For example: Under the pretext of ensuring the salvation of the sheep, the shepherd builds a subtle device of power, capable of unfolding even over the intimate solitude of the believer and leading him towards a new form of widespread servitude. — David Mo
simply forcing every teenager to stay locked up for several hours a day listening to uninteresting talk is violence. Even more so when he can be qualified as "unfit" or "very deficient" -or similar. — David Mo
You give a soft idea of Foucault. — David Mo
You don't need to be very patient to see the state go berserk. We get images every day. — David Mo
Symbolic violence.
The negative prejudices and stereotypes that are reproduced by institutions are a central factor in institutional violence and a trigger for personal violence.
Symbolic violence encourages the adoption of discriminatory or coercive positions in ideology, economics, gender relations, destruction of nature, etc. It is based on an extensive network of values assimilated from childhood and then reinforced by society's legal norms to inculcate in us an oppressive culture because it is uncritical and prepares us for passive and/or active submission to unfair structures. For example, public stereotypes about the immigrant or atheist can support the passivity of authorities in the face of labour exploitation or a legislation or practice that prevents access to public office based on religious beliefs. — David Mo
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