Hidden Brain - Episode 43: The Perils of Power
Episode Date: September 6, 2016We've all heard the old adage that "power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely," but psychologist Dacher Keltner at UC Berkeley has found evidence to prove it. His book i...s The Power Paradox: How We Gain and Lose Influence.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantan.
When you imagine a powerful person, what comes to mind?
Gaffney, we had our own brand of diplomacy.
Shake with your right hand, but hold a rock in your left.
Perhaps you don't picture someone as evil as Frank Underwood from House of Cards. But you also probably don't think of someone very nice.
We don't normally associate power with qualities like compassion and kindness.
But the psychologist Docker-Cantner at UC Berkeley says,
maybe we should.
What the science is finding is that kids at school, kids in summer camps,
people in colleges, people in organizations,
if they are emotionally intelligent and really focus on others and even practice generosity,
they rise in social power.
Docker studies power dynamics and he's found something that might seem counterintuitive.
If you think of power as all about Machu valiance scheming, The people would display altruism, kindness, social intelligence.
Docker finds that these are the people who gain power and respect from their peers.
But there's a catch.
Once these people become powerful, power tends to undermine the very qualities that help
them get there in the first place. There's something about the seductions of power that makes you lose sight of ethics
and other people's interests.
Docker Calthner is the author of the new book, The Power Paradox, How We Gain and Lose Influence.
We think his ideas are especially relevant right now when so many people are vying for power
in this election season.
Dacker, welcome to Hidden Brain.
It's great to be with you, Shankar.
I'm fascinated by the research that you cite in the book, Dacker, that suggests that power
shapes nearly all of our relationships.
If you put a bunch of 13-year-old kids in a room, you say that power dynamics quickly
emerge, and you make the case that kids who are kinder and more empathetic
are the ones who quickly assume the mantle of power in the group.
So you're right on both counts, Shankar.
First of all, one of the things that we've learned in the science of power is that really
power dynamics, who's influencing whom, shape every relationship from parent child dynamics
to dynamics in the US Senate.
And then, you know, what we've discovered over the past 20 years is
probably a little bit counterintuitive and it challenges older ideas about power, more Machiavellian ideas. And what the science is finding is that kids at school, kids in summer camps, people
in colleges, people in organizations, if they are emotionally
intelligent and really focus on others and even practice generosity, they rise in social
power.
I have to say it's like here that I have some skepticism and this might be because you attended
nicer schools than I did, but my experience of middle school felt more emotionally like
the Hunger Games that kids who were stronger and louder and mean are often got that way.
I mean, is my experience an aberration?
Well, I don't know where you went to school, but it tends to be an aberration.
You know, so what these studies do is they take a group of seventh graders.
You find out who has respect in a steam at the start of the year.
You study what their social behaviors are, their social strategies, and then you track how they do in the hierarchy of that seventh grade
class to use your example. And, you know, what you find is, yes, the bullies and the Machiavellians,
the sociopaths, they get a little bit of attention early. But over the long haul, and this is true
in other contexts, they don't have as much power as they would like to. And instead, what studies find now numbering in the dozens, it's really the connecting
kid, the empathetic kid, the kid who's really open and curious, who really rises in the
esteem and the ranks of the class.
I'm wondering if this really comes down to thinking about power in two different ways.
The power that I'm hearing you talk about is really reputational power.
I think of doctors without borders, for example, it's having reputational power.
They don't cut my paycheck and they can't fire me, but I pay attention to what they say
because I respect them as an organization.
On the other hand, when you have coercive power, people who can punish you or people who
can take away your life or your freedom, it feels like maybe is it possible that those two different, there are two different paths
to power for those two different kinds of power?
Absolutely, and that's a wonderful observation, and so one of the things that the science of
power is done, which I report on in the power paradox, is to take a step back and think,
what do we really mean by power?
We intuitively define it as money,
but a lot of things happen in the world
that are independent of capital.
We might think of it historically as military might,
but you can easily come up with counter examples
where a man's military might actually produces weakness.
And so we have to kind of problematize it
and what the field has done is thought about
one strategy to power that works in certain contexts is a kind of a coercive top-down Machiavellian strategy.
Another kind is a more socially intelligent strategy that involves some of these things we've been talking about.
And you know what's really interesting, Shankar, and one of the things that inspired me to write this book is a lot of data that have been summarized by people like Alice Egley
finding that our conception of power is moving from coercive strategies to more collaborative
strategies. So it's one of the reasons I wrote this book.
So when you describe this kind of power that is more reputational, by that account you would
say, you know, the United States's power in the world is not just a reflection of the strength of its military and the size of its armed forces.
It's really about the power of its ideas and its ability to do well in the world.
Is that the argument you're making that this kind of soft power in some ways is more important than the hard power that we've come to associate with power? Well this is one of the ideas that really spurred the science of power in our lab and other
labs for the past 20 years, which is that if you think about the influence the US has
on the average world citizen, part of it is through the flow of capital and economics and
part of it is having this expansive military, but a bigger component or dimension
to our power is how do we shape the thinking of people around the world?
How do we shape the emotions of people around the world?
Are there what they deem to be fair or right?
And that comes through books, it comes through forms of art, it comes through journalism.
And I think, you know, I took that thinking of soft power, if you will,
which is in some ways is harder, and really
extended it to the personal realm, which
is that as a parent, yeah, I have economic control over my kids.
I have, I'm bigger than they are.
But really, I also influenced them through ideas,
through preferences that I enable,
through the context that I put
them in. So power is much more than economic or military might. It's really how we influence
the states of other people.
You're talking the book about the story of Abraham Lincoln and psych is rise to power
as a classic example of what you're talking about, the skills that you're talking about.
Yeah. One of the things I did, or you know, in the three years of writing
this book, and really, while I've been doing the science of power, is just to read broadly
on the biographies of great leaders, the historical accounts of important social change.
And you know, what I encountered is time and time again that there are these examples, very compelling
examples of great leaders who lead through advancing the interests of other people.
I mean Abraham Lincoln was such a compelling example, and I love this observation about
him of Thurlow Weed, who was a journalist at the time and a close student of the politics
of Lincoln's era.
And he's like, what is it about Lincoln that accounts for his really unpredictable rise
in power?
He's a poor guy, awkward, didn't have all the advantages that often give you power.
And he said, Thurloweed said, you know, Lincoln sees and hears everybody who comes to him.
He just engages in the interests of others.
And then when I read that, and then I heard about the science,
for example, of Stiffon Cote, showing it's really these
emotionally intelligent managers in workplaces
that rise in the ranks and build strong teams.
I saw this nice convergence of evidence.
strong teams, I saw this nice convergence of evidence. When we come back, I'm going to ask Dacquer about several experiments he's conducted
that show that even as kindness and empathy can give rise to power, having power can undermine
kindness and empathy.
Stay with us.
Support for NPR and the following message come from care.com, a great place to find in Annie. Stay with us. to an anti-tax preparation. Care.com home pay makes it easy to set yourself up for success.
Learn more at myhomepay.com.
Support also comes from Talkspace.
Talkspace provides an affordable, confidential and convenient way
to access unlimited messaging to a dedicated and licensed
therapist for a low-weekly cost.
With Talkspace, you can text, audio message, or video message
your therapist as many times as you want.
Visit Talkspace.com slash brain for a special 20% discount off your first month.
Or download the Talkspace app on the Apple or Android app store and use the coupon code brain.
Talkspace, therapy for how we live today.
Hi there, I'm Maggie Penman, I'm one of the producers of Hidden Brain.
Encouraging you to download
the NPR1 app.
As summer winds down, it's a great way to find new shows and stories for those lovely
last-road trips to the beach, or if vacation is over for you, maybe you could download it
before your morning commute.
Basically, you should just download it.
It's in your App Store, NPR-ONE.
Dacker, you've done a lot of work looking not just at the forces that give rise to power,
these forces of empathy and generosity and kindness, but also what power does to those forces
in turn, that when people acquire power, it seems to change their ability to be empathetic,
to be kind.
Talk about that.
Well, this was some of the more dramatic work that we engaged in,
that's now been replicated in a lot of different places.
And that's why I call the Book the Power Paradox,
which is, if you look at this social science of power,
we get power through the pro-social tendencies that we are in doubt with.
But then once we feel powerful, or we come from a background of privilege and feeling above
others, we lose those tendencies.
So let me give you an example.
There are a lot of studies that show that empathetic practices get you power.
So one of my favorites is work by William College showing, you know, you give teams these complex
problems to solve.
It's really the more empathetic individuals that make their team stronger and perform better,
right?
They're listening well, they're asking good questions, they're paying attention to other
people.
So, empathy makes the team and the individual stronger.
And then what we started to show in our lab
is once we feel powerful, we lose our capacity
to empathize and to know what others are thinking,
really is diminished.
So in one study, really simple, we get bring people to the lab,
we have them engage in this exercise
where they compare themselves to the sort of the real poor people of society
and it makes them feel powerful.
Or they compare themselves to the kind of the elite of society and they feel as a result
of that comparison less power.
And then we just present them some photos of people expressing different emotions with
subtle muscle movements around the eyes, like concentration or flirtatious or decisive.
And what we find is when you feel powerful, you lose your ability to read emotion in people's
facial expressions.
Why would that happen?
Well, I mean, there are a couple of deep reasons.
One is, you know, and this is just striking research by Keely Mescatel and Sukvindu Obi,
which is that, you know,
Shanko, if I feel powerful, the studies show,
I just feel less interested in other people,
less invested in them, and as a result,
the empathy networks in the brain are actually quieted.
They're less active, so Keely Muscatel brought people
to the lab, She had them sort of
think about another student's daily life. And if you come from a position of
privilege and power, the classic empathy networks in the frontal lobes of your
brain are not even active when you're thinking about another student. So, this is a
very deep effect of what power does to our empathic capacities.
So what you're saying in some ways is that we are empathetic
to others in part because that's useful to us.
We lack power in many situations and being empathetic
and being aware of others allows us to navigate
our social worlds effectively.
But when we perceive ourselves having power and privilege,
in some ways we don't need to depend as much as we do
on others, we don't need to depend as much as we do on others.
We don't need to reach out to others.
And so those networks shut down.
Yeah.
No, really well put because if you think about, for example, somebody who's poor and doesn't
have a lot of resources, they're dependent on other people to get to work, to do a little
bit of, you know, ad hoc child care or what have you.
So you're dependent on others and out of that state of
mutual dependence, you really with vigilance attend to other people and are aware of what they're doing. And that produces these empathy benefits coming out of less power. And then the compliment,
you lose that empathy when you feel less dependent on others and powerful.
So one of the paradoxes of this is something that you and others have identified, which is to look at the generosity of people who are rich and poor, and you find some really
surprising things.
Yeah.
So, again, what studies are finding, and again, this is part of the power paradox, which
is that there is this really interesting literature called competitive altruism, and
if you take the average person in a social network
and they practice generosity and they share resources
or they encourage others through those acts of generosity,
they rise in power.
People trust them, they esteem them.
You even see this in hunter-gatherer societies
where it's really the individual who shares the most food
in the hunter-gatherer societies who rises in the ranks. And yet, you know,
what we started to find with Paul Piff and other colleagues is, once I feel powerful, I
proved to be less generous. So in one study, we brought people to lab who varied in terms
of their social class and family wealth. We just gave them a very simple opportunity to share resources
with a stranger.
And we found it was really the poor who shared more and higher power people, more privileged,
people shared less.
Now, obviously, people who are millionaires and billionaires, they might be philanthropic
and they might give larger amounts of money.
But what you're really saying is it's a proportion of your wealth for a millionaire to give
a thousand dollars is not the same thing as somebody at the poverty line who's
giving fifty.
Yeah, we always have to be careful about how we interpret these results.
And these are just, you know, proportions of sharing and not absolute amounts and you
absolutely right.
But you even get this experimentally.
So, you know, in one of our early studies in power, we were interested in does experimentally
produce power lead to kind of the hoarding of resources which we've been talking about.
We brought groups of three people to the lab. We randomly signed one individual to the position
of power. And then by design, they went through this experiment and was kind of boring and
writing policies for the university. And we brought in halfway through the study, this plate of
five chocolate chip cookies.
Every member of the group, three people all together, took a cookie, and so we asked who
took that fourth cookie, and it was our high-power person who tended to take that cookie, not only
that, but they ate in this kind of impulsive way where their lips were smacking, mouths were open.
Crumbs, we took it seven months ago, this crumbs falling on their sweaters.
And again, what this tells us is really two things, Shankar, which is power does make
us a little bit more self-focused.
In this, you're sharing less, you're keeping more for yourself, you're eating the cookie
in an impulsive way.
But the other thing, I think we shouldn't lose sight of is this can happen to us all, right?
This is just what the mind does when we feel powerful.
Because of course, these were just random people who are brought into the lab and you've
randomly picked one of them to assign them a feeling of power.
Yeah, absolutely.
You did mention there were five cookies and three people,
so what happened to the fifth cookie? Well, this was where it was really interesting because,
you know, the rules of politeness suggest that you really should not be that uncouth person
who takes the last cookie off the plate. And so we did pilot testing for the experiment
and no one would take that fourth cookie. So that's why we added a fifth cookie just
to free somebody up to take that second, the fourth cookie. So that's where we added a fifth cookie just to free somebody up to take that second the last cookie.
So it's fascinating because of course what you see in these lab experiments is often reflected
on much, much bigger stages where you see people in power abusing that power, you know,
having affairs, cheating and, you know, falsifying financial returns.
At one level, the conventional view, I think, is sort of say these are just people who
were bad people who rose to the top.
What you're suggesting is actually something more complex and in some ways much sadder,
which is that these might not be bad people who rose to the top, but these might be good
people who rose to the top and but these might be good people who rose to the top, and power has made them bad.
Yeah, I mean, that's such a very compelling and sweeping statement about this Shankar,
you know, that does align with how I read this social scientific evidence, which is that
you know, there are dozens of experiments where we randomly assign typical people to either
positions of power or less power, and you find these patterns where, if I'm
just randomly given power, and I feel this sense of sort of expansive euphoria that comes
with power and a sense of omnipotence, I speak more rudely, I take resources that are meant
for somebody else, I'm more likely to flirt inappropriately, I'm more likely to engage
in inappropriate sexual behavior.
We have studies showing when you make somebody feel powerful.
You're more likely to cheat at a game to win 50 bucks.
The list goes on.
And it really lends credence to Lorde Acton's
old observation that I think stands the test of time,
which is power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
You've also found the same thing looking at drivers of various cars.
I understand you ran an experiment where you stood outside an intersection and saw who
stopped at a stop sign.
Yeah.
I mean, so I remember one day I was biking to work and I almost got hit by a black Mercedes and the guy, you know,
and I was in the riot, I sort of waited and gone through this faraway stop area in California and this guy plowed and almost hit me
and he looked at me as if, you know, I was the Hoi Polo and should be sort of taken off the road.
And I thought, you know, it'd be really interesting to test these ideas about the impulsive actions that power
produces by looking at people drive. So you know what we did in one of the
versions of this study is we put a young Berkeley undergraduate at a pedestrian
zone right next to the Berkeley campus. The pedestrian zone is a strip that
cuts across the road that is the it gives the pedestrian the right of way. You
get to cross the road. It's white the pedestrian the right of way. You get across the road.
It's white stripes.
And then we coded, and we had these Berkeley undergrads kind of hide it in the bushes.
Our one student was standing at the pedestrian zone, the other student who was coding was
noting the make of the car, and weather, very simply, did they stop for the pedestrian,
which is law, or did they blaze through the pedestrian zone?
And 0% of our drivers have poor cars, the Ugo's and Plymouth satellites of the world, drove through the pedestrian zone,
46.2% of our drivers of wealthy cars, you know, the Mercedes and the like drive through the pedestrian zone.
46%? Is this something to do with Berkeley?
You know, it's funny. I just got a letter from a guy in Germany who was like,
this would not happen in Germany where we really value our Mercedes and BMWs.
You know, we've replicated it. It's been replicated in other states.
It led people to email me from all manner of context. One of my favorites
was a prehistriver email me and said, well, you know, that's Mercedes, but of course prehistrivers
abide by the law. So we checked and prehistrivers were actually the worst. So, you know, and this
just fits this larger profile
that I'm sure your listeners are aware of
that there's something about the seductions of power
that makes you lose sight of ethics
and other people's interests.
You're talking the book about leaders
who are able to overcome the paradox of power
and we talked earlier about Lincoln
and how his rise to power was marked by
demonstrations of these positive behaviors, but you also write about how he was
able to retain a sense of that kinder gentler, more empathetic self, even as he
acquired and wielded great power. Talk about that story and what he did that
might be illustrated for the rest of us.
Well, I think that the thing that really is striking about Lincoln's power is, you know,
he had a short presidency, but he remained focused on the interests of others. He remained
focused on uniting disparate parties and really the greater good, if you will, that he
knew that there was this state of the union that he was heading toward.
And the way that he did it, you know, is, and it just comes through, for example, Doris
Kern's good one's team of rivals, is he just, he kept close to not only the dignity of
everybody and treated, you know, the warring sides, if you will, with respect. But he also, and I think this is really important, is that he
sort of kept close to the suffering that was involved,
and what the costs and stakes were, and that was
really foundational to his power, and what you see
in a lot of the great leaders is this really commitment to
the greater good and the concept of respect and the needs of others?
You know, Daco, you and I have talked before and as I was reading the book, I remembered
something that you had told me in the past, which is you didn't grow up with a lot of power
and privilege.
And to some extent, you now have some of those things.
And I'm wondering if you can talk about your own journey and you know how your own journey
may have changed you and whether
you see yourself affected by the very same forces you describe in this book.
Yeah, you know, I mean, it's so striking, you know, and it just comes back and bites you and
you know, that as I've been lucky enough to get a good education and
you know become a professor and be on this show and have a voice. I find I am just as vulnerable to the power paradox as anybody.
I find that when I'm feeling powerful, suddenly my scientific acumen is in this sharp.
I find when I'm feeling powerful, the way I speak to other people is a little diminished.
Here's one of my favorite examples, and this is not a joke.
When I was writing the chapter about the car study that we just described, about people
driving fancy cars or feeling powerful, kind of driving in ethical ways, I went to pick
up my daughter, who was rock climbing, a bunch of her friends, teenagers piled into the
back of the car.
I was feeling powerful and writing this chapter and feeling like a good dad.
I was captivated by this sense of my own self-worth and I drove off and ran over my daughter's best
friends. Flut. Oh my god. You know, so I know and you know, I could have cost a lot of serious damage
fortunately. I did not, but this is part of the lesson of the book, which is that power is part
of every moment of our social lives.
We've got to be aware of it.
It can lead us to do foolish things,
and we should try to do the things that make it a force for good.
Dagger Keltener, I want to thank you for talking with me today.
It's been great to be with you, Shankar.
Dagger Keltener is a psychologist at the University of California,
is the author of the Power Paradox, How We Gain, and Lose Influence.
of the power paradox, how we gain and lose influence. This episode of the Hidden Brain Podcast was produced by Maggie Pennman, and edited by
Tara Boyle. Our staff includes Karam Agar-Kallison, Chris Benderev, Jenny Schmidt, and Renee
Clarre. You can find more Hidden Brain on Facebook and Twitter and listen for my stories
on your local public radio station. If you like this episode, write a review. It helps others find the show. I'm Shankar
Vedantam and this is NPR.
Thanks for listening to Hidden Brain. When you're in the mood for some fun, check out
the Ask Me Another podcast for games, trivia and puzzles. It's like trivia night, but much
funnier. Play along now at npr.org slash podcast and on the npr1 app.
one app.