Refract · One site, three analytic modes

Choose an analytic mode.

Classical and Quantum are not separate pages. They are modes of analysis. Switch the toggle to switch the world the equation lives in.

Classical and Quantum are not separate pages — they are modes of analysis.


Classical Mode

The inherited language of political power.

A → B · Classical line of power

Classical Mode begins with established political theory and political science. It asks how the canon and the discipline would explain a political event before any higher-resolution framework is introduced. The starting point is simple: A acts, and B is affected.

Equation
A → B
The classical line of power

Classical political analysis begins with a line: A acts, and B is affected. The work is to determine who counts as A, who or what counts as B, and which inherited theory best explains the movement between them.

A → B
read as “A over B”

“The ability for A to make B do what B would not have otherwise done.”

— The classical definition of powerIntroduced to students of power on day one
On founding new orders

“There is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success, than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things.”

— Niccolò Machiavelli, The Prince, Chapter 6Source: Columbia University Core Curriculum excerpt

Classical Mode begins with the problem Machiavelli names: political action must introduce, preserve, or contest orders. The first analytic question is whether that movement can still be explained as a stable line of power: A → B.

I. What Classical Mode Is For

Give inherited political thought its strongest chance.

Classical Mode uses established concepts, theorists, fields, and methods to determine whether a political event can be explained through ordinary political analysis. The goal is not to force every object into a new theory. The goal is first to ask what standard political theory and political science can already explain.

The question is not which theorist we prefer. The question is which theory best explains the line.

Only if this baseline proves insufficient should the analysis continue into the site’s later modes.

II. The Classical Line

A → B

A

actor, ruler, citizen, class, state, institution, party, court, movement, public, or sovereign.

the movement of political force, authority, obligation, domination, persuasion, coercion, legitimacy, or action.

B

affected subject, population, institution, law, public, class, regime, norm, outcome, or political order.

Classical theory usually begins by making politics legible as a directed relation. A commands B. A authorizes B. A dominates B. A represents B. A disciplines B. A persuades B. A liberates B. A corrupts B. A founds B. A destabilizes B. Theories differ because they disagree about what kind of relation this line represents.

Sovereignty model · A → B
Hobbes · Schmitt
A · Actor
Sovereign decision under disorder
B · Effect
Command, obedience, order

The sovereignty model reads A → B as the conversion of disorder into command. Order is what the sovereign can decide and enforce; legitimacy follows from protection.

AActor
A bounded, identifiable political agent with a unified will.
Arrow
Direct causal transmission. Treated as complete at conduct.
BEffect
A determinate outcome attributable to A's act.
tLinear time
Cause precedes effect in a single, irreversible sequence.
III. The Political Theory Canon

A library of models for the A → B relation.

The canon is a library of models for understanding the A → B relation. Each thinker teaches the analyst to see a different kind of political line.

Plato

philosophic knowledge → just order

Sees
justiceeducationhierarchy of soulsrule by knowledgecorruption of regimesappearance vs. truth
Best for

regime critique · political education · elite rule · truth and opinion

Aristotle

constitutional form → civic flourishing

Sees
regime typevirtuecitizenshippractical judgmentmixed governmentpolis as a form of life
Best for

constitutions · civic virtue · political community · comparative regimes

Cicero

law / virtue → republican order

Sees
natural lawcivic dutyrepublican virtuepublic officeconstitutional order
Best for

republican legality · civic obligation · public duty

Augustine

disordered love → earthly politics

Sees
sinprideauthoritylimits of politicscity of God / city of man
Best for

political theology · moral limits of order · empire and humility

Aquinas

natural law → legitimate authority

Sees
lawreasondivine ordercommon goodlegitimate rulemoral hierarchy
Best for

natural law · moral authority · legitimacy and obligation

Machiavelli

founding action → new orders

Sees
powerfoundingvirtù and fortunanecessityappearanceinstitutional survivalpolitical risk
Best for

leadership · founding moments · crisis · regime change · strategy

Hobbes

fear / disorder → sovereign order

Sees
fearinsecuritysovereigntyobedienceprotectioncivil peace
Best for

state authority · emergency · security politics · legitimacy through protection

Locke

rights / consent → legitimate government

Sees
natural rightspropertyconsentlimited governmentresistancelegitimacy
Best for

rights claims · liberal constitutionalism · consent and limits

Rousseau

popular sovereignty → general will

Sees
freedomequalitycorruptiondependencepopular sovereigntycivic formation
Best for

democracy · legitimacy · civic equality · critique of inequality

Montesquieu

institutional balance → political liberty

Sees
separation of powersclimatelawsmoderationinstitutional designliberty
Best for

constitutional structure · checks and balances · moderation

Burke

tradition / inheritance → ordered liberty

Sees
prescriptionprudencecontinuitysocial inheritancedanger of abstractionrevolution
Best for

conservative critique · institutional continuity · revolution and reform

Tocqueville

democratic equality → habits of freedom or soft despotism

Sees
equalitycivil societyassociationindividualismpublic opiniondemocratic character
Best for

democracy · civil society · American politics · associational life

Mill

liberty / individuality → social progress

Sees
libertyindividualityharm principlemajority tyrannyfree speechdevelopment
Best for

free expression · liberal individuality · dissent · democratic limits

Marx

class relation → political conflict

Sees
laborcapitalexploitationideologymaterial interestclass struggleproduction
Best for

inequality · labor conflict · political economy · capitalism and crisis

Weber

authority claim → legitimate domination

Sees
authoritybureaucracylegitimacydominationrationalizationcharismavocation
Best for

bureaucracy · institutional authority · legitimacy · modern administration

Nietzsche

will to power → value creation

Sees
valuedominationmoralityressentimentstrengthgenealogyself-overcoming
Best for

moral critique · elite formation · ressentiment · symbolic struggle

Schmitt

decision / exception → political order

Sees
sovereigntyexceptionfriend/enemydecisioncrisisconstitutional limits
Best for

emergency politics · executive power · constitutional crisis · conflict

Arendt

public action → political world

Sees
actionpluralitypublic spacefreedomnatalitytotalitarianismappearance
Best for

public action · democratic freedom · revolution · totalitarianism

Gramsci

cultural leadership → consent

Sees
hegemonycivil societyideologycommon senseintellectualsconsent
Best for

culture · ideology · political education · domination through consent

Foucault

discipline / discourse → subject formation

Sees
power-knowledgedisciplinesurveillancenormalizationbiopoliticssubject formation
Best for

institutions · prisons · schools · medicine · discourse

Du Bois

color line → divided consciousness and political order

Sees
racecitizenshiplabordouble consciousnessdemocracydomination
Best for

race and democracy · citizenship · racial capitalism · American political development

Fanon

colonial domination → psychic and political violence

Sees
colonialismraceviolenceliberationembodimentdecolonization
Best for

anti-colonial politics · violence · liberation · colonial subjectivity

Butler

normative repetition → subject formation

Sees
performativitygendernormrepetitionrecognitionsubject formation
Best for

gender · identity · normativity · performative politics

IV. Political Science Fields

The ordinary disciplinary toolkit.

Classical Mode also uses the ordinary fields of political science to locate the object. Different events sit most naturally inside different subfields, and each subfield has its own concepts, questions, and methods.

American Politics

Focus
electionspartiespresidencyCongresscourtsfederalismpublic opinionpolarizationrace and American institutions

International Relations

Focus
wardiplomacysecurityalliancessovereigntyinternational institutionsglobal order

Comparative Politics

Focus
regimesdemocratizationauthoritarianismpolitical developmentnationalismrevolutionstate capacity

Political Theory

Focus
justicelegitimacyfreedomequalityobligationauthoritystatedemocracy

Political Methodology

Focus
causalityinferencemeasurementpollingstatisticsexperimentsqualitative methodsformal modeling

Public Law

Focus
courtsconstitutional interpretationrightslegal institutionsjudicial behavioradministrative law

Political Economy

Focus
classlabormarketsinequalitytaxationregulationredistribution

Political Behavior

Focus
votersattitudesideologyidentitypolarizationpersuasionparticipation

Media and Politics

Focus
agenda-settingframingcampaignsnewssocial mediapublic opinionpolitical communication
V. Paradigms and Traditions

What each tradition sees — and tends to miss.

Classical Mode also tests whether the event is best explained by a particular theoretical paradigm or tradition. Each names a different A, a different B, and a different shape of the line between them.

Liberalism

rights-bearing actors → legitimate or illegitimate government

Sees
rightsconsentlibertylegitimacyrule of law
Tends to miss

Structural inequality and the role of inherited power.

Realism

power-seeking actor → strategic advantage or security

Sees
powerinterestsecuritycoercionsurvival
Tends to miss

Norms, identity, and the constitutive role of legitimacy.

Constructivism

norm or identity claim → changed meaning or legitimacy

Sees
normsidentitymeaninglegitimacysocial facts
Tends to miss

Material interest, coercion, and brute capacity.

Institutionalism

institutional design → predictable political behavior

Sees
rulesofficesprocedurepath dependenceveto points
Tends to miss

Informal power and structural change outside formal rules.

Republicanism

citizen action → civic freedom or republican corruption

Sees
civic virtuenon-dominationpublic actioncommon good
Tends to miss

Conflict that exceeds civic framing; structural domination.

Conservatism

inherited order → ordered liberty or revolutionary rupture

Sees
traditionprescriptionprudencesocial inheritance
Tends to miss

Injustice carried by inherited order; conditions for legitimate reform.

Marxism

class relation → political conflict and state form

Sees
classlaborcapitalideologymaterial structure
Tends to miss

Politics not reducible to class; identity and culture in their own right.

Feminism

gendered order → political subordination or contest

Sees
genderpatriarchycareprivate/public divideembodiment
Tends to miss

Variation by class, race, region; intersecting structures.

Critical Race Theory

racial order → legal and political inequality

Sees
raceracial formationlaw as racial structuresubordination
Tends to miss

Non-racial drivers when present; cross-national variation.

Postcolonial Theory

colonial structure → political subjectivity and contestation

Sees
empirecolonial differenceraceknowledgesovereignty
Tends to miss

Local agency that is not fully legible as resistance to empire.

Critical Theory

structural domination → constrained or emancipatory politics

Sees
dominationideologyrationalizationemancipation
Tends to miss

Specific institutional mechanics; empirical variation.

Behavioralism

individual attitudes → aggregate political outcomes

Sees
observable behaviorattitudesmeasurementindividual choice
Tends to miss

Structure, history, meaning, and constitutive norms.

Rational Choice

strategic actor → equilibrium outcome

Sees
preferencesincentivesstrategic interactionequilibria
Tends to miss

Preference formation; norms and identity that resist optimization.

Historical Institutionalism

historical sequence → durable institutional form

Sees
timingsequencecritical juncturespath dependence
Tends to miss

Rapid change unmoored from prior institutional path.

Interpretivism

shared meaning → political action and legitimacy

Sees
meaningcontextdiscoursepractice
Tends to miss

Generalization across cases; causal weight of material conditions.

VI. Methods

What kind of method best studies the object?

Classical Mode also asks what kind of method would best study the political object. Each method is good for a particular kind of question, requires a particular kind of evidence, and is weak in some other situations.

Quantitative methods

Good for

Causal inference across many cases; testing general claims.

Evidence required

Numerical data, surveys, administrative records, experiments.

When it is weak

Rare events, meaning, deep context, novel cases.

Qualitative methods

Good for

Mechanisms, meaning, context, and process.

Evidence required

Interviews, ethnography, archival research, close reading.

When it is weak

Broad generalization; precise effect sizes.

Formal theory

Good for

Clarifying logic of strategic interaction and institutional design.

Evidence required

Stylized models, equilibrium analysis.

When it is weak

When preferences, information, or rules are poorly known.

Historical analysis

Good for

Sequence, timing, critical junctures, long-run change.

Evidence required

Primary sources, comparative cases, periodization.

When it is weak

Strong claims about counterfactuals or precise causal weights.

Legal analysis

Good for

Constitutional structure, doctrine, rights, institutional roles.

Evidence required

Statutes, opinions, regulations, legal history.

When it is weak

Behavior outside formal legal practice.

Discourse analysis

Good for

Legitimation, framing, identity, ideology.

Evidence required

Texts, speeches, media, official rhetoric.

When it is weak

Distributional outcomes; material capacity.

Network analysis

Good for

Mapping relations among actors, institutions, or ideas.

Evidence required

Relational data, affiliations, citations, flows.

When it is weak

Causal mechanism inside ties; meaning of relations.

Interpretive analysis

Good for

Reconstructing how participants understand political life.

Evidence required

Practices, symbols, situated accounts.

When it is weak

Aggregation across very different settings.

VII. Classical Questions

The questions Classical Mode asks.

Q.01

Who acts?

Q.02

Who or what is affected?

Q.03

What type of power connects A to B?

Q.04

Is the relation command, consent, domination, persuasion, legitimacy, coercion, representation, class conflict, civic action, or symbolic authority?

Q.05

Which theorist best explains that relation?

Q.06

Which theory clarifies the object with the least distortion?

Q.07

Which theory is tempting but misleading?

Q.08

Does the line hold?

VIII. The Classical Line of Best Fit

The strongest available theory-model.

The Classical Line of Best Fit is the strongest available theory-model for explaining the A → B relation under classical assumptions. It does not ask which theory is most famous. It asks which theory best explains the dominant movement of power.

  1. 01Identify A
  2. 02Identify B
  3. 03Determine the type of relation
  4. 04Test the canon
  5. 05Rank theory-models
  6. 06Argue the best fit
  7. 07Identify weak or distorting fits
  8. 08Determine whether the line holds

The best fit is the theory that explains the most important movement of power with the least distortion.

IX. Classical Models of the A → B Relation

Nine model types.

Hover any row to refit the live A → B card above to that model.

Model TypeClassical ThinkersA → B PatternBest For
SovereigntyHobbes · Schmittdisorder / exception → command / orderEmergency, state authority, security, obedience
Consent / LegitimacyLocke · Rousseau · Millrights / people / liberty → legitimate or illegitimate ruleRights, consent, democracy, resistance
Republican / CivicAristotle · Cicero · Machiavelli · Arendtcitizen action / virtue → public order or freedomRepublics, civic action, founding, corruption
InstitutionalMontesquieu · Tocqueville · Weberrules / offices / associations → political behaviorInstitutions, bureaucracy, federalism, civil society
ConservativeBurke · Tocquevilleinheritance / tradition → ordered libertyReform, revolution, institutional preservation
Material / ClassMarx · Du Boisclass / labor / material structure → conflict or dominationCapitalism, inequality, labor, political economy
Disciplinary / HegemonicGramsci · Foucault · Butlerculture / discourse / norm → consent or subject formationIdeology, institutions, identity, cultural power
Anti-Colonial / RacialDu Bois · Fanoncolonial / racial order → domination or liberation struggleRace, empire, decolonization, citizenship
Genealogical / ValueNietzsche · Foucaultvalue / morality / discourse → domination or transformationMorality, culture, identity, symbolic power
X. When Classical Mode Is Enough

Classical sufficiency.

Classical Mode is sufficient when the event can be explained by a stable A → B relation. If the actor is identifiable, the effect is clear, the medium is secondary, the event is largely completed at conduct, and one theory explains the dominant relation with high confidence, the classical line holds.

Example · Labor Strike

Workers → employer bargaining position

Best fit · Marx

The dominant relation is class conflict organized through labor and capital.

Example · Emergency Order

Sovereign authority → public compliance

Best fit · Hobbes / Schmitt

The dominant relation is disorder, command, security, and obedience.

Example · Rights Dispute

State action → rights-bearing citizens

Best fit · Locke / Mill

The dominant relation is legitimacy under conditions of rights, liberty, and consent.

Example · Bureaucratic Decision

Administrative office → regulated population

Best fit · Weber

The dominant relation is authority, rule, procedure, and legitimate domination.

XI. Run a Classical Line of Best Fit

The Classical Fit Analyzer.

Paste a political object and the tool will identify the basic A → B relation, test it against the canon, locate the relevant political science field, rank the strongest paradigms, and recommend the best method of analysis.

Output stays within established political theory and political science.
  • Plain A → B
  • Best canon thinker / theory
  • Political science field fit
  • Paradigm fit
  • Method fit
  • Weak or distorting fits
  • Classical sufficiency result
XII. When the Line Is Not Enough

A doorway, not a theory.

Some political events cannot be fully explained by a stable A → B relation. If established political theory and political science can explain the event with sufficient clarity, Classical Mode is enough. If not, the analysis can continue into another mode.

Classical Mode asks what established political thought can explain before the line is handed to the prism.