Insights About Human Nature: Difference between revisions
		
		
		
		
		
		Jump to navigation
		Jump to search
		
				
		
		
	
 (Created page with "*Paying close attention to public opinion allows a demagogue to amplify hidden needs from constituents; people engage in moral decoupling, which is a ponerological phenomenon....")  | 
				 (→Books)  | 
				||
| (6 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
*Paying close attention to public opinion allows a demagogue to amplify hidden needs from constituents; people engage in moral decoupling, which is a ponerological phenomenon. [https://thebulwark.com/three-errors-about-trump-and-an-encouraging-truth/]  | *Paying close attention to public opinion allows a demagogue to amplify hidden needs from constituents; people engage in moral decoupling, which is a ponerological phenomenon. [https://thebulwark.com/three-errors-about-trump-and-an-encouraging-truth/]  | ||
*Permission Structure - “permission structure,” a mental construct that makes it easier for someone to do something unfamiliar. [https://thebulwark.com/biden-trump-and-the-science-or-instinct-of-persuasion/]  | |||
*''virtually all human decisions are shaped by emotion'' - ibid.  | |||
[[Category:Political Ponerology]]  | |||
[[  | =Books=  | ||
*[[Snakes in Suits]] - psychopathy in the C suite  | |||
*[[Negotiation Genius]]  | |||
*[[Not Born Yesterday]] on credulousness  | |||
*[[The 7 Rules of Power]], Jeffrey Pfeffer.  'Power Play' (HBR July 2010) to get a good overview on this topic. Such as,  having power is good for your health. [https://www.yumpu.com/en/document/read/49063175/download-jeffrey-pfeffer]  | |||
Latest revision as of 09:08, 13 February 2021
- Paying close attention to public opinion allows a demagogue to amplify hidden needs from constituents; people engage in moral decoupling, which is a ponerological phenomenon. [1]
 - Permission Structure - “permission structure,” a mental construct that makes it easier for someone to do something unfamiliar. [2]
 - virtually all human decisions are shaped by emotion - ibid.
 
Books
- Snakes in Suits - psychopathy in the C suite
 - Negotiation Genius
 - Not Born Yesterday on credulousness
 - The 7 Rules of Power, Jeffrey Pfeffer. 'Power Play' (HBR July 2010) to get a good overview on this topic. Such as, having power is good for your health. [3]