Power
How Influence, Authority, and Control Shaped Civilization
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Joel Thomas
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Most people think power lives in leaders: presidents, generals, kings, executives, and revolutionaries.
They are wrong.
Power lives in systems.
In Power: How Influence, Authority, and Control Shaped Civilization, Joel Thomas examines power not as a personality trait, moral virtue, or political slogan, but as a structural force that determines how societies are built, governed, stabilized, challenged, and eventually transformed.
Across history, civilizations rise and fall not simply because of great leaders or decisive battles, but because power organizes itself through recurring mechanisms: authority, coercion, legitimacy, wealth, information, institutions, culture, technology, fear, and consent.
This book reveals the hidden architecture behind those mechanisms.
Inside, you will examine:
- why authority is cheaper and more durable than force
- how institutions outlive the people who create them
- why legitimacy is one of power’s greatest force multipliers
- how economic, military, political, cultural, and technological power convert into one another
- why systems resist reform even after their failures become obvious
- how power hides in rules, routines, incentives, traditions, and accepted assumptions
Drawing from political theory, history, sociology, and institutional analysis, Power follows the structural patterns that have shaped human civilization from pre-state societies and sacred kingship to empires, bureaucracies, markets, mass movements, and modern systems of control.
This is not a leadership book.
It is not a motivational argument.
It is not a simple history of rulers and wars.
It is a diagnostic framework for understanding how power actually works.
If you want to understand why civilizations rise, why institutions endure, why control is often invisible, and why meaningful change is harder than it appears, this book provides the machinery behind the surface of history.