Concepts · Classical Mode

Concepts.

Begin with the classical line.

The concept library begins in Classical Mode. Start with ordinary political theory and political science: actors, effects, institutions, legitimacy, sovereignty, rights, interests, behavior, and method. If the classical line is not enough, you can move the same object into Cubist Mode and then, if necessary, into Quantum Power Mechanics.

A → B
Classical line of power

Classical concepts ask who acts, what effect follows, and which established political theory or political science model explains the line.

The concepts are organized by mode. Begin with the line, move to the prism, and enter the vector only when the analysis requires it.

Classical → Cubist → Quantum. The page enforces the sequence when you are analyzing an object.


Classical concepts.

Each card names a concept, its definition, the field, paradigm, or method it belongs to, what it helps explain, and the typical A → B model it produces.

Actor

core

An agent capable of acting politically — individual, group, office, or state.

Names who acts in A to B.

actor to effect on another actor

Effect

core

The observable outcome of a political act on another party or institution.

Names what follows from A.

act to measurable change in B

Power

core

The capacity of A to bring about an effect B that would not otherwise occur.

Anchors the entire line.

capacity to compliance

Sovereignty

public law

The authority to decide, command, and maintain order within a political community.

Explains final authority.

sovereign command to public compliance

Authority

core

Recognized right to command and be obeyed.

Distinguishes legitimate from coercive power.

directive to voluntary compliance

Legitimacy

political theory

The belief that an authority's commands ought to be obeyed.

Explains durable compliance.

legitimate rule to stable obedience

Rights

liberalism

Protected claims individuals or groups hold against the state or each other.

Constrains permissible A.

rights claim to state restraint

Consent

liberalism

Voluntary acceptance of authority or rule.

Grounds legitimacy.

consent to obligation

Political Obligation

political theory

The duty to obey legitimate authority.

Closes the consent loop.

legitimacy to obligation to compliance

Representation

democratic theory

The standing of one to act politically on behalf of others.

Bridges citizens and state.

vote to representative to policy

State

comparative politics

An organization claiming monopoly of legitimate force over a territory.

Names the principal A.

state action to social outcome

Institution

institutionalism

A stable rule-bound structure that shapes political behavior.

Explains regularities.

rule to behavioral pattern

Law

public law

Authoritative rules enforced by the state.

Concretizes A's commands.

statute to enforcement to behavior

Public Opinion

behavioralism

Aggregate attitudes of a public on political questions.

Constrains and prompts A.

opinion shift to policy change

Interest

rational choice

A stake an actor has in a political outcome.

Predicts A's choices.

interest to strategic action

Class

Marxism

A group defined by shared position in economic structure.

Explains aligned actors.

class position to political behavior

Party

American politics

An organization that contests elections and organizes governance.

Channels A into office.

platform to governing action

Ideology

political theory

A structured belief system that orders political action.

Explains coherent A patterns.

ideology to preference to vote

Conflict

core

Contestation between actors with incompatible aims.

Drives most A to B chains.

rival interests to confrontation

Coercion

realism

Power exercised through force or threat.

Names hard A.

threat to forced compliance

Compliance

behavioralism

Observable adherence to a command, norm, or law.

Operationalizes B.

directive to measured compliance

Order

realism

Patterned stability of political relations.

Names system-level B.

institutions to durable order

Liberty

liberalism

Freedom from undue interference or domination.

Normative constraint on A.

limit to protected liberty

Equality

liberalism

Equal standing or treatment under law and politics.

Benchmark for B.

rule to equal treatment

Justice

political theory

The principled distribution of benefits, burdens, and recognition.

Evaluates B.

principle to just allocation

Democracy

democratic theory

Rule by the people through institutionalized participation.

Names a system of A to B.

election to mandate to policy

Domination

republicanism

Power exercised so the subject is dependent on the dominator's will.

Names unfree B.

arbitrary power to unfreedom

Citizenship

political theory

Formal political membership in a polity, with rights and duties.

Defines who counts.

status to standing to participation

Political Behavior

behavioralism

Observable political conduct of individuals and groups.

Operationalizes A.

stimulus to behavior

Paradigm

method

A coherent framework that organizes questions, methods, and theories.

Selects which A to B counts.

paradigm to research design

Method

method

A disciplined procedure for generating and testing claims.

Tests the A to B reading.

method to evidence to inference

Evidence

method

Observations marshaled to support or undermine a claim.

Warrants B.

data to inference

Inference

method

The reasoning move from evidence to claim.

Connects evidence and theory.

evidence to inference to claim

Causality

method

The relation by which A produces or alters B.

The arrow itself.

cause to effect

Theory Model

method

A simplified representation that explains A to B for a class of cases.

Names the best line.

assumptions to prediction

Line of Best Fit

method

The simplest classical model that adequately tracks A to B across the case.

Closes the classical step.

case to fitted model

American Politics

field

The field studying U.S. institutions, behavior, and policy.

Frames U.S. A to B.

institution to outcome

International Relations

field

The field studying interactions among states and global actors.

Frames inter-state A to B.

state to state outcome

Comparative Politics

field

The field comparing political systems and within-country variation.

Frames cross-case A to B.

regime type to policy outcome

Political Theory

field

The normative and conceptual study of politics.

Frames what A and B should be.

principle to judgment

Political Methodology

field

The study of methods used to make political claims.

Disciplines the inference.

design to valid inference

Public Law

field

The study of constitutional, administrative, and judicial structures.

Frames legal A to B.

ruling to legal effect

Political Economy

field

The study of the interaction of politics and economic structures.

Frames economic A to B.

policy to market outcome

Media and Politics

field

The study of media institutions, content, and political effects.

Frames mediated A to B.

coverage to opinion to vote

Liberalism

paradigm

A paradigm emphasizing individual rights, consent, and limited government.

Rights to restraint.

rights to constrained state

Realism

paradigm

A paradigm emphasizing power, interest, and order under anarchy.

Interest to balance.

power to equilibrium

Constructivism

paradigm

A paradigm in which identities and norms shape interests and action.

Meaning to behavior.

norm to action

Institutionalism

paradigm

A paradigm in which institutions structure political outcomes.

Rules to behavior.

rule to equilibrium

Marxism

paradigm

A paradigm in which class and material relations drive politics.

Class to state.

mode of production to political form

Republicanism

paradigm

A paradigm centered on non-domination and civic virtue.

Institutions to non-domination.

mixed government to liberty

Conservatism

paradigm

A paradigm valuing tradition, order, and prudential change.

Continuity to stability.

tradition to social order

Feminism

paradigm

A paradigm analyzing gendered power and its political effects.

Gender to political outcome.

patriarchal structure to unequal effect

Critical Theory

paradigm

A paradigm exposing structures of domination and ideology.

Ideology to consent.

ideology to reproduced power

Postcolonial Theory

paradigm

A paradigm analyzing colonial legacies and global hierarchies.

Colonial history to present.

imperial structure to present hierarchy

Behavioralism

paradigm

A paradigm focused on observable, measurable political behavior.

Stimulus to behavior.

attitude to action

Rational Choice

paradigm

A paradigm modeling actors as utility maximizers under constraint.

Preference plus constraint to choice.

preferences to equilibrium

Historical Institutionalism

paradigm

A paradigm emphasizing path dependence and temporal sequence.

Prior to present.

critical juncture to trajectory

Interpretivism

paradigm

A paradigm focused on meaning, understanding, and context.

Meaning to action.

shared meaning to practice

Quantitative Methods

method

Statistical procedures for inferring patterns from numeric data.

Tests A to B at scale.

data to coefficient to claim

Qualitative Methods

method

Interpretive procedures for studying meaning, process, and context.

Tests A to B in depth.

case to mechanism to claim

Formal Theory

method

Mathematical modeling of strategic interaction.

Derives A to B from assumptions.

model to equilibrium

Historical Analysis

method

Tracing political outcomes through time and sequence.

Locates A to B in time.

sequence to trajectory

Legal Analysis

method

Interpretation of legal texts, doctrines, and judicial reasoning.

Tests legal A to B.

doctrine to ruling

Discourse Analysis

method

Study of how language structures political meaning and power.

Tests framing to reception.

frame to reception

Network Analysis

method

Study of relations among actors as a structural system.

Tests relational A to B.

tie structure to diffusion

Interpretive Analysis

method

Reconstruction of actors' meanings and self-understandings.

Tests meaning-laden A to B.

meaning to practice
Classical Analysis Workspace

Read the line.

Enter or paste an object — a text, a question, a political event — then identify A, B, and the best classical line.