Visit the interior of the earth,or our ventricles and by rectifying what you find there, . I agree Marcel goodwill should always come with links when resources are available. Scotts-Weapons.pdf Scott, J. C. (1985). Weapons of the weak: everyday forms of resistance. New Haven and London, Yale University Press.

Scott, J. C. (1992). Domination and the Arts of Resistance: Hidden Transcripts. New Haven and London, Yale University Press. It is clear that no Herostratus among them has dared to go into the remote countryside to study the permanent
conspiracy of those whom we still call "the weak" against those who believe themselves "strong"of the peasantry
against the rich. . . . is it not critical to portray at last this peasant who thwarts the {legal} Code by reducing private
property into something that simultaneously exists and does not exist? You shall see this tireless sapper, this
nibbler, gnawing the land into little bits, carving an acre into a hundred pieces, and invited always to this feast by a
petite bourgeoisie which finds in him, at the same time, its ally and its prey. . . . Out of the reach of the law by virtue
of his insignificance, this Robespierre, with a single head and twenty million hands, works ceaselessly, crouching in
every commune . . . bearing arms in the National Guard in every district of France, since by 1830, France does not
recall that Napoleon preferred to run the risk of his misfortunes rather than to arm the masses.
Honoré de Balzac Letter to P. S. B. Gavault introducing Les Paysans
Do not imagine that Tonsard, or his old mother or his wife and children ever said in so many words, "we steal for a
living and do our stealing cleverly." These habits had grown slowly. The family began by mixing a few green
boughs with the dead wood; then, emboldened by habit and by a calculated impunity (part of the scheme to be
developed in this story), after twenty years the family had gotten to the point of taking the wood as if it were their
own and making a living almost entirely by theft. The rights of pasturing their cows, the abuse of gleaning grain, of
gleaning grapes, had gotten established little by little in this fashion. By the time the Tonsards and the other lazy
peasants of the valley had tasted the benefits of these four rights acquired by the poor in the countryside, rights
pushed to the point of pillage, one can imagine that they were unlikely to renounce them unless compelled by a
force stronger than their audacity.
Balzac, Les Paysans
. . . the binary division between resistance and non-resistance is an unreal one. The existence of those who seem
not to rebel is a warren of minute, individual, autonomous tactics and strategies which counter and inflect the
visible facts of overall domination, and whose purposes and calculations, desires and choices resist any simple
division into the political and the apolitical. The schema of a strategy of resistance as a vanguard of politicization
needs to be subjected to re-examination, and account must be taken of resistances whose strategy is one of evasion
or defence the Schweijks as well as the Solzhenitsyn. There are no good subjects of resistance.
Colin Gordon on Michel Foucault, Power/Knowledge I believe the heart is a chamber of reflection