Ethical Power
According to Paula Caproni, author of "Management Skills For Everyday Life", there are six universal forms of influence. Reciprocation Committment & consistency Authority Social proof Scarcity Liking Power emanating from these forms of influence can be considered ethical. Founding principles: You should tell people explicitly what you want. Organization's interest and others' interest is at par or above your own. You treat everyone fairly, follow process and do not abuse. You leave yourself reasonably open to be influenced by others. You back your points with valid data. These founding principles and ethical form of influence is in direct contrast to the Robert Greene's "The 48 Laws Of Power" in which he shockingly suffocates any breath of ethics. The book is laced with a dark sense of human power perversion. For instance, #31 Control the options: Get others to play with the cards you deal. #32 Play to people's fantasies and #36 Disdain things yo...