Structural Notes on Indirect Power
Analytical Work on the Hidden Architecture of Social Control
Structural Notes on Indirect Power is an analytical series that revisits each essay from the Indirect Power series and examines the psychological structures the essay format could not sustain. These are not expansions or extended versions but second-order notes focused on mechanisms, conditions, misrecognitions, developmental origins, and points of escalation, emphasizing structure over stance and clarity over persuasion. The work reflects thinking in motion: analysis may be refined, constrained, or left deliberately open, and the goal is precision rather than completion, inviting readers into the analytical process itself rather than presenting them with finished conclusions.
Structural Notes on Normalization
These structural notes examine normalization as a form of indirect social control that governs through baseline shifting, habituation, and perceptual recalibration. The document analyzes contingency disappearance, moral and emotional attenuation, institutional reliance, interaction with other mechanisms, and subjectivity reshaping. It extends the public essay by showing how repetition converts choice into inevitability without overt enforcement.