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The Power Paradox

The traits that earn power are destroyed by having it

Dacher Keltner's 20-year research at UC Berkeley revealed a disturbing pattern: we gain power through empathy, collaboration, and social intelligence—but the experience of having power erodes these very abilities, making us behave "like patients who have damaged their brain's orbitofrontal lobes."

🔄 THE PARADOX: Good behavior gets us power. Power destroys good behavior.

🎭 Experience the Power Paradox

Phase 1: Rise to Power
Phase 2: Wielding Power
Phase 3: Corruption Test
10%
No Power Moderate Influence High Power
100
Empathy Level
10
Power Level
0
Corruption Index

📊 Your Power Trajectory

Analysis of your behavioral changes as power increased

💚 Empathy Trajectory

🔴 Corruption Pattern

"We rise in power and make a difference in the world due to what is best about human nature, but we fall from power due to what is worst."
— Dacher Keltner, The Power Paradox (2016)

🧠 The Neurological Reality

Keltner's research found that powerful individuals "behave like patients who have damaged their brain's orbitofrontal lobes"—the region critical for empathy and socially appropriate behavior. Stanford research by Deborah Gruenfeld found that Supreme Court justices writing from positions of power crafted less complex arguments than those writing from low-power positions.