Key Mental Models of Power Flows
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
- Discussion is frequently wrong. For example, when we say $44k median household income, it means an absolute average of x per person when everyone is counted.
- imperial power - common power-concentration tendencies in so-called humans - 48 Laws of Power
- influencing behavior -
Civilization Power Flows Canon (Minimum Viable Stack)
| Book | Domain | Key Operational Value | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| The 48 Laws of Power | Power strategy | Codifies historical patterns of power acquisition, manipulation, and survival in competitive environments. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_48_Laws_of_Power |
| The Prince | Political power | Practical guide to statecraft; maintaining power through strategy, perception, and force when necessary. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prince |
| The Art of War | Strategy | Strategic doctrine for conflict, deception, positioning, and indirect control. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Art_of_War |
| On War | Military theory | Analysis of war as continuation of politics; introduces friction, fog of war, and strategic realism. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_War |
| Propaganda | Narrative control | Explains how mass opinion is shaped and managed through media and institutions. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda_(book) |
| Manufacturing Consent | Media systems | Structural analysis of how media filters shape public perception and political outcomes. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manufacturing_Consent |
| The Power Broker | Institutional power | Case study of Robert Moses; demonstrates how infrastructure control translates into political dominance. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Power_Broker |
| Seeing Like a State | Governance failure | Shows how power fails when systems ignore local knowledge; complements power acquisition with failure modes. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seeing_Like_a_State |
| Elite Theory (The Ruling Class) | Sociology of power | Explains that all societies are governed by elites; analyzes structure and circulation of ruling classes. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaetano_Mosca |
| The Managerial Revolution | Institutional control | Describes shift from owner capitalism to managerial control of large organizations. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Managerial_Revolution |
| The Dictator’s Handbook | Political incentives | Explains how leaders maintain power via coalition management and resource distribution. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dictator%27s_Handbook |
| The Sovereign Individual | Macro power shifts | Predicts shift of power from states to individuals due to technology and capital mobility. | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sovereign_Individual |
Structure of Power Flows
- Strategic Layer:
- The Art of War
- On War
- Political Power:
- The Prince
- The Dictator’s Handbook
- Social / Elite Control:
- The 48 Laws of Power
- Elite Theory (Mosca)
- Institutional Power:
- The Power Broker
- The Managerial Revolution
- Narrative Control:
- Propaganda
- Manufacturing Consent
- System Failure / Limits:
- Seeing Like a State
- Macro Shifts:
- The Sovereign Individual
How to Use This
This stack explains how power actually operates:
- Acquire and maintain power (Machiavelli, Greene)
- Understand conflict and positioning (Sun Tzu, Clausewitz)
- Control institutions (Moses, Burnham)
- Shape perception (Bernays, Chomsky)
- Manage coalitions (Selectorate theory)
- Understand elite dynamics (Mosca)
- Anticipate structural shifts (Davidson)
Bottom Line
This is the minimum viable stack for understanding civilization power flows:
- It spans individual → institutional → geopolitical power
- It integrates strategy, media, governance, and incentives
- It exposes both how power is gained and how it fails
Without this layer, civilization engineering lacks realism about how systems are actually controlled.