THE POWER MOTIVE
Christopher Ebbe, Ph.D. 9-13
ABSTRACT: The human
motive to gain power is explored, including origins, nature of those who use
power, and effects in different areas of our lives.
KEY WORDS: power,
motivation
From birth to death, human beings are engaged in trying to
influence other human beings, because as social creatures, one of the primary
determinants of our quality of life is how others respond to us and treat
us. Some of these influence efforts are
physical, involving rewarding and punishing, and others involve conveying
emotions and inner states through verbal or nonverbal communication. Some people seek to be liked or loved by
others as a platform for influence, and some utilize power to influence others. Some seek status as a base for having
influence, since others generally assign higher status to and respond more
positively and deferentially to those with greater amounts of admired
qualities, such as pleasing appearance, wealth, age, physical size and
strength, power, and being “the best” at something.
Power is the potential to affect or change something--oneself,
others, or some aspect of the environment.
Power can remain potential (unactualized, having an effect simply
because the potential is known to those whom the person with power wishes to control),
or it can be used overtly in an attempt to create the desired change. All human beings seek the powers needed to
get along socially (such as verbal communication and self-assertion) and the
powers needed to survive in the environment (the power or capability to earn a
living, build a house, hunt game successfully, etc.). “Having power” refers to having the potential
(presumably sufficient power) to do or cause certain things, and “exercising
power” is the overt use of that power.
Psychologists speak more about “control” than about
“power,” but these are synonymous. There
is no control without power, and power creates control (getting what one
specifically wants), both when it is a potential and when it is exercised. For some human beings, having power becomes a
highly salient or primary motive, and this often results in significant harm to
or problems for others.
Power and control are key concepts for personality
investigation and treatment. Alfred
Adler based his theory of personality and pathology on the “will to
power.” The philosopher Arthur
Schopenhauer organized his philosophical system around “will,” which can be
understood as desire and which leads immediately to efforts to control others
and the environment in order to get what one wants.
Sometimes we exercise power directly upon the world ourselves,
as in fighting or altering the physical environment. A few people seek greater power over
themselves (greater control of themselves), for the sake of a better
psychological state, often through religious, spiritual, or psychological
regimens, but the focus of the power concerns of most of us is on other people
and how they might block our efforts to get what we want. With regard to other people, the purpose of
having or utilizing power or control mechanisms is to influence the other
person to do what one wants him or her to do. Naturally we would prefer to have sufficient
power to cause them not to block our efforts, so power “over” others naturally
becomes a goal.
We see the social mechanisms of power most often in terms
of leverage, including blackmail, extortion, hostage taking, fear induction,
and threat (whether implied or overt). Governance
examples would be “controlling” enough votes in a matter to get one’s way or forcing
a political opponent to withdraw or amend a motion made through threats of
damaging actions (exposing a sin, firing a relative, introducing a competing
motion, etc.). This sort of leverage is
exercised in politics, in our families, and everywhere else that social
relations exist.
Every individual has some leverage, through their potential
reactions to the behavior of others (a baby cries; an adolescent threatens to
run away or makes it clear that he will do something regardless of what parents
say; a wife waits to get her husband’s agreement on something until after
enjoyable sex; a wife or husband uses “the silent treatment” on the other), but
some have much more leverage than others.
Families vary in whether the father or mother has more leverage (such as
control of the money versus the capacity to withdraw love or sex). A fair amount of power in families is of the
“having power” (potential) type, with members doing or not doing things because
they have learned of the probable consequences, but we sometimes find the need
to “teach someone a lesson” by exercising some degree of our potential power.
“Having power” does no harm (or good) to others, except for
whatever effects on others result from the awareness of those others that the
individual has that power. We do not
like to be “in the power” of others, because it restricts our options, but it
is in the exercise of power (rather than the “having of power”) that most
ethical and moral issues arise, since most people seem to think that if power
is only potential, then no “crime” has been committed, and they view themselves
as having a choice in cases of someone having potential power with respect to them
(even if that is a choice between undesirable options). (Ethical issues are those related to how we
treat others, while moral issues are those relating to what is “right” and
“wrong.”)
“Power differentials,” with their presumptions of potential
harm to those with less power, are clearly present in any relationship between
a person with more status and a person with less status, as in teacher-student,
pastor-parishioner, and parent-child relationships, and power is also an issue
in relations between men and women. The
physical size and strength advantages of men, their supposed tendency to anger
and physical expressions of anger, and their control of family income (in some
families) enhance the power of men in relationships, and women naturally try to
even up the power balance by using their greater emotional perspicacity, their
roles as givers of nurturance and love, and whatever capacity they have to
withhold sex in the particular relationship.
Problems of Power
The person with power may cause harm to others when he or she ignores ethical and moral concerns in exercising power to achieve a goal (as when a person with power bribes or blackmails public officials into approving a building project that requires destruction of an existing neighborhood of homes, even though it results in new and nicer homes, albeit more expensive, or when person A with power in a family keeps other family members from helping family member B with a problem, with the implied threat of harm of one sort or another, even though the others would like to help member B). If power is exercised on the environment, such as in the building of a great dam, it may be of benefit to many but harmful to some.
The basic ethical issue with power is that a person having
power or using power is trying to get what he wants at a cost to others. Others oppose his having or using power
because if he exercises his power or succeeds, they will be disadvantaged or
harmed. There is no discussion of
win-win strategies, since most power-oriented persons perceive this as a
zero-sum game (only one person can win).
If a person sought what he wanted without using the leverages of power,
others would not be so inclined to oppose him.
So, a focus on power logically and inevitably implies an atmosphere of
contention and loss, and the more people who are involved in uses of power, the
more negative is the atmosphere.
An interesting recent book, The 48 Laws of Power by
Robert Greene, synthesizes lessons regarding power from around the world and
across the centuries. The author contends
that human life is inevitably an arena of power struggles, so that it is simply
in everyone’s interest to learn how to gain and wield power. He emphasizes the importance of gathering and
maintaining one’s power by deftly keeping one’s intentions secret, keeping
others off balance, keeping people dependent on one, deceiving and manipulating
whenever possible, being unpredictable, avoiding being associated with the
unfortunate and needy, and destroying enemies completely whenever
possible. This is a picture of a social
environment with little room for love, closeness, trust, and cooperation
(except to destroy a joint enemy), and I leave it to the reader to decide which
kind of society he or she would prefer.
A counterclaim that one can use power on one’s enemies but
not on one’s family and therefore have love, closeness, and trust within one’s
in-group is simply not credible against the psychological evidence that
indicates that people do not operate with that degree of compartmentalization. The skills and worldview needed for a life of
power are quite different from the skills and worldview that are needed for a
life of trust and cooperation, and I know of no examples of an individual doing
both well (or even wanting to learn both well).
Even those who might wish to have both, such as Tony Soprano, fail,
because it is simply not human to be able to turn these two polar attitudes off
and on at will. One inevitably ends up
having and/or using power with family members as well, which inevitably leads
to resentment and often to retaliation.
It is worth noting here that a certain proportion of the
population responds to persons with power with admiration and obedience,
whereas it is suggested above that everyone around a person with power is at
risk for being harmed or disadvantaged.
Being able to control others and get one’s way is certainly appealing in
itself, and we can understand why people might admire a person who can do
that. Readily obeying a person with
power may stem from our having learned well to obey the more powerful as
children in dealing with our parents, particularly if they used leverage and
power strategies to control our behavior.
Children who believe in values of fairness and equality taught to them
by their parents would certainly detest and rebel against the deceit and
manipulation of a person having and using power.
A fair number of citizens vote for the more
powerful-seeming candidate in an election, hoping, usually unconsciously, for a
strong and beneficent parent. Some might
argue that a power-oriented leader is likely to do a better job of ensuring the
survival of the group against outside threats, since she will have no qualms
about hurting outsiders or insiders in order to achieve the goal, but the
motive to protect the group is universal, and although they might not be as
ruthless in getting to the goal as the power-oriented person,
non-power-oriented leaders may do just as good a job of actually protecting the
group.
Origins
The origins of power are intimately bound up with our
attempts to fulfill our desires. When we
want something, getting it always involves an effect created by someone or
something. We may create the effect ourselves,
as in getting a glass of water for ourselves or calming our emotions by
meditating. We may create the effect by
interacting with the environment, as when we chop down a tree to get firewood. We may create the effect by inducing someone
else to do something for us, as when we get someone to pay for dinner or give
us a ride. When we envision (imagine)
our capacity to accomplish these effects (and thereby fulfill our desires), we
become aware of our power or lack of it, and only then does our power becomes
meaningful to us. We may then be
satisfied with our power, be disappointed with our power, or wish for more
power. We “measure” the power of other
individuals by the degree to which they are able to effect their desired
outcomes.
People who gather or have power are likely to have little
faith in their ability to induce others to cooperate with them or little faith that
those others’ will cooperate or help, so that turning to the collection and use
of power is an understandable alternative and may become the preferred
method of getting what they want. They
might, of course, attempt a more collaborative approach while holding their
power in the background until needed.
Either way, this suggests that persons who gather or have power do not
have a particularly positive “feeling” about their relationships with others and
do not expect regularly to get what they want through cooperation and
collaboration.
People vary in their amount and the nature of their desires,
with some wanting more in life than others.
The more one wants in general, the more one might be concerned about
one’s power to create the effects that one wants.
People who feel disappointment more keenly, for whatever
reason--biological or conditioning, would be more emotionally affected by
having insufficient power. We might
suppose that they would be more likely than average to seek power in order to
avoid future disappointments (or, complementarily, to avoid or obfuscate issues
of capacity altogether).
Persons who are more inclined to be anxious are more likely
to worry about whether their power is sufficient, and this can lead to efforts
to increase one’s power, so that one would worry less about future
gratification efforts.
Some people who seek power do so because of specific life
experiences in which they were severely restricted by others in their efforts
to fulfill their desires, so they guard themselves against this happening again
by establishing power over others. Many
of them are also seeking power to “turn the tables” and be the superior or more
powerful one in the same (or analogous) relationships.
Some people who seek power enjoy having and exercising that
power because it gratifies a need for revenge or gratifies a sadistic part of
the personality.
Some people who seek power do so because they have been
disadvantaged or in low status positions, and they wish to improve their
earlier status relations. Since goods
and outcomes are assigned to some degree according to status, the fact that a
person of higher status gets more means that those of lower status will get
less (the “zero sum” game) and will suffer emotionally from being identified as
inferior. It may sometimes be necessary
for people with status to demonstrate their power through initiating some
negative effects on others, to train those others to defer to them regularly.
Uses of power are by definition selfish, since by using
power one seeks to get her own way at some cost to others. It seems likely that the more selfish a
person is, the more easily she might turn to power as a means to
gratifications. It is also likely that
the more selfish people there are in a group, the more power methods will be
utilized. It seems clear that the more
power is utilized, the more disappointments will be experienced in the group
and the more time will be spent on attempts to “win” and to reverse past losses
or humiliations.
People who seek power over others must be willing to affect
the lives of others negatively, since to get one’s way one must change what
those other people would naturally or prefer to do. People who have normal or above average
empathy for others would rarely be willing to affect other people negatively on
purpose, and people who seek power usually are not affected much by others
having negative outcomes in their lives. People with power will exert all the power at
their disposal to keep their power, if necessary, since to lose power would
threaten their self-esteem or their security concerning getting what they want.
Usually power is exercised over those we are in some sort
of relationship with, because we need their cooperation to get what we want,
but a few people engage in sending anonymous letters, mass killing, or computer
hacking, for example, because in doing so they feel (in fantasy) that they have
power over others. In real life, of
course, this means that they generally don’t feel powerful and probably resent
others who they feel have power over them or who have rejected them. Power, then, can be sought and exercised in
order to gain or bolster self-esteem, if a person has felt deprived, powerless,
or mistreated.
In summary, persons who develop and seek to develop power
over others (1) may do so simply to get more for themselves, either because
they have been deprived earlier or they have been blocked from gratification by
others in their past; (2) probably have little faith in their ability to get
what they want through cooperation and collaboration; (3) may worry more than
most people about getting what they want; (4) may be more sensitive to
disappointment, (5) may bolster or seek self-esteem through power if they have
felt powerless or mistreated; (6) may seek to be superior to or have power over
individuals who have had power over them in the past; (7) may gratify revenge
or sadistic desires through exercising power over others; and (8) must be
willing to make the lives of those they exercise power over worse.
Pathological Power
Seeking power and using power over others is in one sense
“natural” to human beings, but it can be considered pathological or excessive
if (1) it is used to gain material benefits or self-esteem and by that use
inflicts negative outcomes on others (either directly on individuals, or
indirectly on masses of people) that are significantly worse than the negative
outcomes that most people experience in their daily lives; or (2) is used to
purposely harm or inflict negative outcomes on others to gain superiority or
revenge or to gratify sadistic needs (whether or not that use of power also
produces material gain or gratifications for the powerful person).
What To Do If You Have Less Power Than Others
If you have less power than someone else who is using his
power in ways that negatively influence you (like restricting you from doing
what you would like to do in a situation so that he can do or get what he
wants), you can (1) accept the situation, (2) call his bluff, (3) gain more
power yourself for future encounters, or (4) convince the more powerful person
that he can do better by not using his power over you. If you accept the situation, you are
acknowledging that the best thing for you at the moment is to accept the
superior power of the other person and do what he wants. There is no shame in this, if in doing that
you are really choosing what is best for you.
Some people, though, are greatly bothered by “giving in” because they
resent being “in the power” of another, which is usually based in earlier experiences
of being openly humiliated by persons with greater power. The humiliated individual may benefit
significantly by figuring out how not to continue to be affected by those past
humiliations, either through gaining greater self-esteem (so that in his own
eyes, someone having more power doesn’t threaten his self-worth), talking about
the problem with trusted others, or getting therapeutic help.
The solution of gaining more power for yourself so that you
won’t have to give in to the power of another may be a possibility, but it has
its own problems. Competing in power
usually leads to more overt exercises of power by everyone and therefore
potentially to more total harm to you and the other person, and if you want
more power so that you can use it in general in your life, then you become one
of those persons who is resented by others and who purposely causes negative
outcomes for those around her to get her way.
Calling the other person’s bluff challenges the power of
the other person and may well lead to the exercise of what would otherwise be
potential power, by for example, actually telling your secret to others, if
that has been the threat that gave him power, or by buying your company and
firing you, so before you call the bluff, you should prepare to be hurt. Decide how you will live with the exposed
secret. See if you can vitiate the
self-esteem threat by adopting more psychologically healthy attitudes and beliefs
yourself (e.g., maybe you could be proud of being gay). Consider revealing the secret yourself before
he does but in a way that minimizes the harm done. Decide how you will cope with the loss of job
or whatever else another’s exercise of power might do to you. Depending on the threat behind the potential
power, getting it over with may be a good choice, so that it is no longer a
threat controlling your life.
A final option is to convince the person with power that he
will benefit more by following a course other than using his power on you. This would involve thinking even better than
the powerful person about how to get he wants, possibly including pointing out
the negative effects on him of using his power.
Moderating Pathological Power
Employing power implies that there will be winners and
losers. It is certainly true that each
person has somewhat different immediate goals, and it is often true that not
everyone can have exactly what he or she wants at the same time. Employing power is one way of determining who
will get what he wants and who will not, but there are other forms of social
interaction that can be used, such as efforts to assess the needs of all
involved and to search jointly for routes to meeting as many needs as possible
in each situation, viewing it as a “sharing” situation rather than an
“either-or” issue. If non-power methods
are used, then exactly who benefits can be rotated among the group over time
and different circumstances to ensure that everyone feels like he is getting a
fair outcome.
The abuses of power depend on having little concern about
causing others harm in order to get what one wants, so gathering and using
power is “natural” to such people, and the only real “cure” for them would be
to start caring more about others and their lives. Developing greater empathy for others would
be very helpful in this regard, but it would usually not occur to a
power-oriented person that empathy is desirable (except perhaps in the sense of
being able to better figure out what will induce people to do what one wants or
to part with their money). Occasionally
a personal tragedy will shock a power-oriented person into realizing what he
has been missing out on in life (a fairly frequent movie theme), but this would
only happen for a person who had previously had some caring capacity that he
had later ruthlessly repressed, probably in order not to be hurt further. Power-oriented persons who were also or who had
become full-fledged psychopaths or sociopaths would probably not be swayed to
change by tragedies.
Non-power-oriented persons would be well advised not to get
close to or depend on power-oriented persons, because no one around those
persons will be immune from having power exercised on them. When this occurs, as noted above, one
response is to do what is wanted without fighting about it, and this can be
workable if one can detach oneself from any humiliation that is implied by
acquiescing. Using the option of
convincing the powerful person to alter course prevents the immediate harm to
oneself, but remaining in that relationship with the powerful person only
delays the harm that is almost sure to come at some point. The only responses that can hope to preserve
self-respect or change one’s situation are to call the power-oriented person’s
bluff or leave (or threaten to leave) the situation. This is easier if one has prepared oneself to
value self-respect far more than public embarrassment.
Non-power-oriented persons can, to some degree, protect
themselves from having power used against them by minimizing actions about
which they could later be blackmailed, but power-oriented persons can usually
find some leverage that could embarrass one or some illegal legal chicanery to use
as leverage.
If an important goal is to minimize abuses of power, non-power-oriented
persons would be wise to vote only for persons for public office or corporate
advisory boards who have the least amount of power motive, but until we require
public disclosure of power motives, that may be hard to judge!
Finally, non-power-oriented persons can minimize future
harmful uses of power in general by being successful themselves at apportioning
gratifications and adequately getting what they want through adaptive
cooperation and collaboration. Others
can then imitate these methods and get better themselves at non-power-oriented
methods, and the greater the percentage of persons there are in a society
successfully using non-power-oriented methods, the less “normal” and perhaps
less acceptable using power-oriented methods will become.
Greene, Robert (1998).
The 48 Laws of Power. New
York: Viking Penguin.
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