The word politics comes from the Greek word for urban problems. We have changed dominant governance and lifestyle from Socrates and Plato era, but politics is an important part of our interaction with the world around us. With this in mind, defining politics is always a difficult task, and with the development of definitions of political forms, ideologies, and world-wide words, most people think that the universal definition of politics We think it is impossible.
Political scholar Harold Laswell defines politics as a power struggle for "who, when, and how to get". David Easton defines politics as distribution of resources. David Easton defines politics as "an authoritative precious resource distribution". These resources are divided into three general types. Please explain these kinds. These three resources are as follows. Economic resources: This resource includes national financial resources (wealth, annual national income, capital supply and investment opportunities), industrial and agricultural production, and natural resources (petroleum, coal, water and mineral) resources. These are also scarce resources such as oil and water. We must think that we can use oil without water. A water war may occur in the 21st century.
Human competitiveness has even become the most basic definition of social science. Economics is formally defined as "to distribute scarce resources effectively for competitive use" research. (2) Politics is defined as "a relationship between special interest groups that compete for limited resources". (3) War is a fierce competition for resources - especially land - so it is famous for Karl von Clauseewitz "War is to continue politics through other means." Since competition is won by the most powerful people, political science is defined as "discipline of power distribution in power research and different types of political systems". (4) These different disciplines have taken different approaches to reach the same conclusion, but the human concept of competing for limited resources is an elegant and coherent view of unifying social science.