Originally shared by Ray Radlein
Originally shared by Ray Radlein
Remember-Caesar-Thou-Art-Mortal Dep't:
"Insofar as it affects the way we think, power, Keltner reminded me, is not a post or a position but a mental state. Recount a time you did not feel powerful, his experiments suggest, and your brain can commune with reality.
"Recalling an early experience of powerlessness seems to work for some people—and experiences that were searing enough may provide a sort of permanent protection. An incredible study published in The Journal of Finance last February found that CEOs who as children had lived through a natural disaster that produced significant fatalities were much less risk-seeking than CEOs who hadn’t."
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/07/power-causes-brain-damage/528711/
Remember-Caesar-Thou-Art-Mortal Dep't:
"Insofar as it affects the way we think, power, Keltner reminded me, is not a post or a position but a mental state. Recount a time you did not feel powerful, his experiments suggest, and your brain can commune with reality.
"Recalling an early experience of powerlessness seems to work for some people—and experiences that were searing enough may provide a sort of permanent protection. An incredible study published in The Journal of Finance last February found that CEOs who as children had lived through a natural disaster that produced significant fatalities were much less risk-seeking than CEOs who hadn’t."
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/07/power-causes-brain-damage/528711/
I binge watched Silicon Valley over the weekend and just realized after reading this article that almost all of the humor in that show is derived from this phenomenon.
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