Article contents
Is ‘Power’ Essentially Contested?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 January 2009
Extract
The proper role of the values of the doer in the doing of political theory is a continuing and vexed problem. Is the holding of values an encumbrance or an integral part of the process? Recently Lukes has made a determined effort to argue, in the case of one particular concept, ‘power’, that theoretical and value disputes cannot in principle be disentangled: ‘I shall argue for a view of power (that is, a way of identifying it) which is radical in both the theoretical and political senses (and I take these senses in this context to be intimately related). The view I shall defend is… ineradicably evaluative and “essentially contested”.’ The notion of ‘essentially contested’ is defined by reference to Gallie, and although the above quotation may be ambiguous, Lukes' later usage makes clear that he is claiming that it is the concept of power (and not his metatheoretic statement about it) that is ‘essentially contested’. This claim is technically mistaken and the mistake, I would argue, is substantively pernicious.
- Type
- Notes and Comments
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1976
References
1 Lukes, S., Power: A Radical View (London: Macmillan, 1974), p. 9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 Gallie, W. B., ‘Essentially Contested Concepts’, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, LVI (1955). 167–98.Google Scholar
3 Sokal, R. D. and Sneath, P. H., Principles of Numerical Taxonomy (San Francisco: W. H. Freeman, 1963), pp. 5–11.Google Scholar
4 Lukes, , Power, p. 26 (emphasis added).Google Scholar
5 Gallie, , ‘Essentially Contested Concepts’, p. 171.Google Scholar
6 Gallie, , ‘Essentially Contested Concepts’, p. 180.Google Scholar
7 Lukes, , Power, pp. 26–7.Google Scholar
8 Gellner, E., ‘The Concept of a Story’, Ratio, IX (1967), 49–66.Google Scholar
9 Gellner, , ‘The Concept of a Story’, p. 55.Google Scholar
10 Barry, B. M., ‘The Obscurities of Power’, Government and Opposition, X (1975), 250–4, p. 252.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
11 Lukes, , Power, p. 34.Google Scholar
12 Lukes, , Power, p. 39.Google Scholar
13 Lukes, , Power, p. 33.Google Scholar
14 Weinstein, W. L., ‘The Concept of Liberty in Nineteenth-Century English Political Thought’, Political Studies, XIII (1965), 145–62, p. 152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
15 Macdonald, K. I., ‘Allegorical Landscape in the “Faerie Queene”’, Durham University Journal, XXXII (1971), 121–4.Google Scholar
- 5
- Cited by