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1
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
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+
3
+
4
+ By
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+ Robert Greene
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+
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+
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+ WISDOM IN A NUTSHELL
9
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
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+
11
+
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+ The Big Idea
13
+ A comprehensive, well-researched synthesis of timeless philosophies –from Machiavelli to
14
+ Suntzu, as applied in real-life situations by powerful figures in history such as Queen Elizabeth I
15
+ and Henry Kissinger. Absorbing and entertaining, this book lends business people a wealth of
16
+ ideas on the subtle art of playing the power game, exercising clever cunning, and understanding
17
+ human weaknesses. Whether it is in the boardroom, at a power lunch, or a cocktail party– these
18
+ laws will make you master of the game and give you the edge over your rivals.
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+
20
+ 1. NEVER OUTSHINE THE MASTER.
21
+ • Transgression of the Law.
22
+ Finance Minister Fouquet unintentionally outshone his master, King Louis XIV, making
23
+ the King feel insecure by throwing a lavish party that would show off Fouquet’s
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+ connections, cultivated manner and charm. Thinking this move would make him an
25
+ indispensable asset to the king, Fouquet had actually offended his master who did not
26
+ like the fact people were more charmed by his finance minister than by him. The King
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+ found a convenient excuse to get rid of Fouquet.
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+
29
+ • Observance of the Law
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+ Galileo was clever in observing this law by giving glory to his patrons. In order to solve
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+ his perennial problem of funding, he dedicated his discovery of the moons of Jupiter to
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+ the Medicis, since the royal symbol of the Medici family was the planet Jupiter. He then
33
+ commissioned an emblem for them, with each moon representing one of the sons who
34
+ revolved around the patriarch. The Medici family became his major patron, appointing
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+ him their official court mathematician and philosopher, thereby giving him a more
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+ comfortable life and a steady salary.
37
+
38
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
39
+ • Present your ideas in such a manner that they may be ascribed to your master,
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+ or could be viewed as an echo of your master’s thoughts.
41
+ • If you are more intelligent than your master, act as if you are not.
42
+ • Never take your position for granted.
43
+ • Never let favors you receive go to your head.
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+ • Discreet flattery is much more powerful. Make it seem like you want to seek his
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+ expertise and advice.
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+ 2. NEVER PUT TOO MUCH TRUST IN FRIENDS, LEARN HOW TO USE
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+ ENEMIES.
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+
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+
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+
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+ • Transgression of the Law.
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+ Michael III of the Byzantine Empire in the mid-ninth century A.D. placed too much
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+ trust in his friend, Basilius. This was a young man who had once saved his life, and in
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+ return, was given all the privileges an emperor could bestow on a friend. Michael
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+ turned the peasant Basilius into a sophisticated and educated courtier. Basilius later
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+ on became greedy for more wealth and power and had his former benefactor and
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+ best friend Michael III murdered.
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+
64
+
65
+ • Observance of the Law
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+ Emperor Sung of China in 959 A.D. was able to turn all his enemies into loyal friends.
67
+ He persuaded his generals to retire to a life of nobility and give up their dreams of
68
+ grabbing his throne one day. He spared those who conspired against him, and was
69
+ able to win over enemies with his generosity.
70
+
71
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
72
+ • Do not rely on friends. They will never be totally honest with you. They will not
73
+ openly disagree with you in order to avoid arguments.
74
+ • Enemies expect nothing so they will be surprised when you are generous.
75
+ • An enemy spared the guillotine will be more grateful to you than a friend.
76
+ • When you decide to hire a friend you will discover qualities she has kept hidden.
77
+ • Skill and competence are more important than friendly feelings.
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+ • Hiring friends will limit your power.
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+ • All working situations require a kind of distance between people.
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+ • You destroy an enemy when you make a friend of him.
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+ • An enemy at your heels keeps you sharp, alert, and focused.
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+
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+
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+
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+ 3. CONCEAL YOUR INTENTIONS.
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+
87
+
88
+
89
+ • Transgression of the Law.
90
+ The Marquis de Sevigne was young and inexperienced in the art of love. He confided
91
+ in the infamous courtesan of seventeenth-century France, Ninon de Lenclos, to
92
+ instruct him on how to seduce a difficult young countess. She made him follow a plan
93
+ over a number of weeks, where the Marquis would be appearing in public always
94
+ surrounded by beautiful women, in the very places the countess would be expected
95
+ to see him. He was supposed to assume an air of nonchalance. This increased the
96
+ jealousy of the young countess, who was not sure of his interest in her. One day the
97
+ Marquis, unable to control his passion, broke from Ninon’s plan, and blurted out to
98
+ the countess that he loved her. After this admission, the countess no longer found
99
+ him interesting and avoided him.
100
+
101
+ • Observance of the Law
102
+ Otto von Bismarck was a deputy in the Prussian parliament at a time when many
103
+ fellow deputies thought it was possible to go to war against Austria and defeat it.
104
+ Bismarck knew the Prussian army was not prepared, so he devised a clever way to
105
+ keep the war at bay. He publicly stated his praises for the Austrians and talked about
106
+ the madness of war. Many deputies changed their votes. Had Bismarck announced
107
+ his real intentions, arguing it was better to wait now and fight later, he would not have
108
+ won. Most Prussians wanted to go to war at that moment and mistakenly believed
109
+ their army to be superior to the Austrians. Had he gone to the king his sincerity would
110
+ have been doubted. By giving misleading statements about wanting peace and
111
+ concealing his true purpose, Bismarck’s speech catapulted him to the position of
112
+ prime minister. He later led the country to war against the Austrians at the right time,
113
+ when he felt the Prussian army was more capable.
114
+
115
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
116
+ • Use decoyed objects of desire and red herrings to throw people off scent.
117
+ • Use smoke screens (a poker face) to disguise your actions.
118
+ • False sincerity is one powerful tool that will send your rivals on a wild goose
119
+ chase.
120
+ • Publicly declare your false intentions to give misleading signals.
121
+ • A noble gesture can be a smoke screen to hide your true intentions.
122
+ • Blend in and people will be less suspicious.
123
+
124
+
125
+
126
+
127
+ 4. ALWAYS SAY LESS THAN NECESSARY.
128
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
129
+
130
+
131
+
132
+ • Transgression of the Law.
133
+ Coriolanus was a great military hero of ancient Rome. People held him in awe, until
134
+ he opened his mouth. He spoke his mind, hardly able to control his arrogance and
135
+ boastfulness. He slandered and insulted people. The more speeches he made, the
136
+ less people respected him. He suffered the people’s wrath and was eventually
137
+ banished from the city.
138
+
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+ • Observance of the Law
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+ Masters of enigma Andy Warhol and Marcel Duchamp knew the power of saying less
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+ and keeping people guessing. The less Duchamp talked about his work, the more it
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+ was talked about in the art circles. Andy Warhol recognized it was hard to talk people
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+ into doing what you wanted, so when interviewed, he would give vague and
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+ ambiguous answers and let the interviewer find his own interpretation.
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+
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+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
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+
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+ Saying less will keep you from saying something foolish or even dangerous.
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+
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+ Once the words are out you cannot take them back.
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+
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+ Keeping silent makes people reveal more about themselves. This is information
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+ you may be able to use against them later on.
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+
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+ 5. SO MUCH DEPENDS ON REPUTATION – GUARD IT WITH YOUR
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+ LIFE.
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+
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+
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+ Observance of the Law
160
+ During China’s War of the Three Kingdoms (A.D.207-265), General Liang was able to
161
+ fool his rival Sima Yi simply by letting his track record for being an undefeated leader
162
+ in battle do the work for him. Liang’s troops were far outnumbered by Sima Yi’s, yet
163
+ he devised a clever last resort plan. Liang donned a Taoist robe and played the lute
164
+ upon the wall of the city he was defending. His soldiers opened the gates and hid.
165
+ When Sima Yi’s troops advanced upon the unguarded city, Yi recognized his
166
+ opponent sitting alone upon the wall. Fearing a trap, Sima Yi called his soldiers to
167
+ retreat.
168
+
169
+ P.T. Barnum was an expert at destroying his competitor’s reputation. He published
170
+ letters in newspapers, warning the public against buying his opponent’s stock. He
171
+ was a master at poking mockery at the tactics of his rivals.
172
+
173
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
174
+
175
+ Sow doubt and spread rumors about your rival. Even if they vehemently deny it,
176
+ people will still be wondering why they are so defensive.
177
+
178
+ Use humor or gentle mockery at your rival’s expense.
179
+
180
+ A solid reputation increases your presence and exaggerates your strengths
181
+ without your having to spend much energy.
182
+
183
+ Never appear desperate in your self-defense against the slander of others.
184
+
185
+ Be careful not to go too far in attacking another’s reputation, it draws more
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+ attention to your vengefulness than to the person you are slandering. Use subtler
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+ tactics like satire and ridicule.
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+
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+
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+ 6. COURT ATTENTION AT ALL COST.
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+
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+
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+ Observance of the Law
194
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
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+
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+ Page 5
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+ www.bizsum.com
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+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
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+ P.T. Barnum learned about courting attention to his favor. Any form of publicity would
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+ benefit his entertainment business, no matter if it were bad publicity. He promoted his
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+ shows of curiosities to audiences with all kinds of gimmicks. He would offer Free
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+ Music for Millions, but hire bad musicians, so the crowd would end up buying tickets
203
+ to the show so they could avoid the bands. He planted articles in newspapers and
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+ even sent anonymous letters to keep his name in the limelight.
205
+
206
+ Margaretha Zelle was able to use this law to make a name for herself as the
207
+ mysterious exotic dancer Mata Hari. It was rumored she was from India and danced
208
+ in private parties, in an Eastern manner never before seen in Europe. She would
209
+ slowly discard her veils and sarongs for the most prominent people in Paris who
210
+ came to see her. Many years later it would be discovered she was just a native of
211
+ Holland and had worked for the Germans as a spy.
212
+
213
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
214
+
215
+ Surround your name with the sensational and the scandalous.
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+
217
+ Create an air of mystery.
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+
219
+ It is better to be attacked and slandered than ignored.
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+
221
+ Make yourself appear larger than life.
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+
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+ Any sort of notoriety will bring you power.
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+
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+ 7. GET OTHERS TO DO THE WORK FOR YOU, BUT ALWAYS TAKE THE
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+ CREDIT.
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+
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+ Transgression and Observance of the Law
229
+ Nicola Tesla was a Serbian scientist who never learned how this law was used
230
+ against him time and again. His invention, the AC or alternating current system was
231
+ associated not with his name but with that of George Westinghouse, who funded his
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+ research. Both Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse were ruthless
233
+ businessmen who took credit for Tesla’s work. In the end, Tesla was living in poverty,
234
+ while royalties for his life’s work went to Edison and Westinghouse. He accepted
235
+ small sums as buy-outs for his work, when in reality his creations could have been
236
+ worth millions. Even Marconi made use of a patent filed by Tesla in 1897. Tesla was
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+ the real “father of radio” but received no money or credit for this invention.
238
+
239
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
240
+
241
+ Save time and energy by hiring others to do the work.
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+
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+ Your helpers will be forgotten and you will be remembered.
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+
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+ Borrow from history. Use the past and profit by others’ experience.
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+
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+ You can only exploit others’ talents if your position is unshakable.
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+
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+ 8. MAKE OTHER PEOPLE COME TO YOU – USE BAIT IF NECESSARY.
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+
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+ Observance of the Law
252
+ Napoleon’s former foreign minister Talleyrand was master of this law. He knew
253
+ Napoleon loved the adoration of the masses, and this was the perfect bait to make
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+ the former ruler play into the hands of his opponents. In 1814 Napoleon was
255
+ banished to a small island called Elba near Italy. Here he was given information that
256
+ France would embrace him again if he escaped. From Elba he was able to escape
257
+ and march back into Paris with a small army. The people bowed to him, and soldiers
258
+ changed sides to join him. The statesmen who had taken over his empire fled.
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+ Talleyrand watched as his plan unfolded. Napoleon ruled France again for a hundred
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+ days, but the country was bankrupt and could not sustain Napoleon’s wars any
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+ longer. Napoleon was recaptured at the Battle of Waterloo and exiled to the barren
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+ island St. Helena, off the west coast of Africa. This was a much further place with no
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+ chance of escape, and was more to Talleyrand’s liking.
264
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
265
+
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+ Page 6
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+ www.bizsum.com
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+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
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+
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+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
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+
272
+ For negotiations and meetings, it is wise to lure others into your territory, or a
273
+ territory of your choice.
274
+
275
+ Once someone suspects you are manipulating him, it will be harder to control
276
+ him. Making him come to you gives the illusion he is in control.
277
+
278
+ Most often the effective action is to stay back, keep calm, and let others be
279
+ frustrated by the traps you set for them.
280
+
281
+ 9. WIN THROUGH YOUR ACTIONS, NEVER THROUGH ARGUMENT.
282
+
283
+ Observance of the Law
284
+ Michelangelo knew how to satisfy a patron while getting his way at the same time. Piero
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+ Soderini, Florence’s mayor, commissioned him to transform a ruined piece of marble into
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+ a statue. Soderini visited the studio one day and commented that the nose of the statue
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+ (that of David with a sling in his hand) was too big. Michelangelo invited the mayor to
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+ climb up a scaffolding, allowing him to look at the nose from a different perspective, while
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+ the artist chiseled a bit, pretending to correct the size of the nose. The mayor was
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+ convinced the nose looked much better. Michelangelo succeeded in making Soderini
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+ think his comment had helped improve the work.
292
+
293
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
294
+
295
+ Demonstrate, do not explicate.
296
+
297
+ Arguing will only offend your superior.
298
+
299
+ Learn to demonstrate the correctness of your ideas indirectly.
300
+
301
+ Choose your battles carefully.
302
+
303
+ Don’t bother demonstrating if time and experience will eventually teach the other
304
+ person what you are trying to say. Save your energy and walk away.
305
+
306
+ No one can argue with a demonstrated proof.
307
+
308
+ 10. INFECTION: AVOID THE UNHAPPY AND THE UNLUCKY.
309
+
310
+ Transgression of the Law
311
+ In the 1840’s Marie Gilbert, better known as Lola Montez, came to Paris to become a
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+ dancer and performer. She had many husbands, and caused the ruin of many a powerful
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+ man. Because of her ambition to be a dancer she “accidentally” ran into Alexandre
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+ Dujarier, then the owner of France’s most popular newspaper and a drama critic himself.
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+ Although still legally married to an Englishman with whom she eloped at 19, Lola kept her
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+ status secret from all her husbands. Dujarier was shot dead defending her honor at a
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+ duel against another drama critic. Lola went on to have several husbands, even causing
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+ King Ludwig of Bavaria to abdicate. She left another man who later fell into a deep
319
+ depression, became a drunkard, and eventually died at a relatively young age. The man
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+ who published her autobiography went bankrupt.
321
+
322
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
323
+
324
+ In the game of power, the people you associate with are critical.
325
+
326
+ An infector can be recognized by the misfortune they draw on themselves, their
327
+ turbulent past, a long line of broken relationships, unstable careers, the very
328
+ intensity of their emotions, and the force of their character.
329
+
330
+ Gravitate towards prosperous, cheerful, and gregarious people.
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+
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+ Never associate with those who share your defects.
333
+
334
+
335
+ 11. LEARN TO KEEP PEOPLE DEPENDENT ON YOU.
336
+
337
+ Observance of the Law
338
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
339
+
340
+ Page 7
341
+ www.bizsum.com
342
+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
343
+ Michelangelo was able to keep his patron Pope Julius II dependent on him. When he and
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+ the pope quarreled over the building of the pope’s marble tomb, Michelangelo left Rome
345
+ in disgust. The pope sought him out and begged the artist to stay. Michelangelo knew he
346
+ could always find another patron, but the pope knew he could not find another
347
+ Michelangelo.
348
+
349
+ Michelangelo’s power was intensive, depending on one skill. Henry Kissinger’s power
350
+ was extensive. He was so involved in so many areas of the political structure that to
351
+ remove him would lead to chaos. The intensive form of power provides more freedom
352
+ than the extensive.
353
+
354
+ Machiavelli said it is better to be feared than loved. Fear can be controlled; love, never.
355
+
356
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
357
+
358
+ Be the only one who can do what you do. Make the fate of those who hire you so
359
+ entwined with yours they cannot possibly get rid of you.
360
+
361
+ If you are ambitious, it is wiser to seek out weak masters with whom you can
362
+ create a relationship of dependency.
363
+
364
+ Possess a talent or creative skill that sets you apart from the crowd.
365
+
366
+ By knowing other people’s secrets and holding information they wouldn’t want
367
+ made public, you seal your fate with theirs.
368
+
369
+ 12. USE SELECTIVE HONESTY AND GENEROSITY TO DISARM YOUR
370
+ VICTIM.
371
+
372
+ Observance of the Law
373
+ Count Victor Lustig promised Al Capone into giving him $50,000 on the terms that he
374
+ would double this investment in sixty days. Lustig kept the money untouched in a safety
375
+ deposit box. After the sixty days were up, he apologized to Capone saying he had failed
376
+ to double the money. Capone expected either $100,000, or nothing, what he did not
377
+ expect was an honest gesture of Lustig actually returning the $50,000. Al Capone was a
378
+ man who lived in constant mistrust of people around him, and was so touched by the
379
+ honest gesture he gave Lustig an extra $5,000.
380
+
381
+ The classic tale of the Fall of Troy is one example of hiding your ulterior motives within a
382
+ gift. The Trojan Horse was designed to hold soldiers that would attack the city of Troy
383
+ and recapture Helen who had been taken away from the Greeks by Paris.
384
+
385
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
386
+
387
+ The essence of deception is distraction. An act of kindness, generosity, or
388
+ honesty will distract and disarm people and turn them into gullible children.
389
+
390
+ Give before you take.
391
+
392
+ Nothing in the realm of power is set in stone. Overt deceptiveness may
393
+ sometimes cover your tracks. If you have a history of deceit behind you, then
394
+ play the rogue, be consistent and this will be interpreted as you simply being
395
+ yourself. Your dishonesty becomes an act of honesty.
396
+
397
+ 13. WHEN ASKING FOR HELP, APPEAL TO PEOPLE’S SELF-INTEREST,
398
+ NEVER TO THEIR MERCY OR GRATITUDE.
399
+
400
+ Observance of the Law
401
+ Genghis Khan was known for his greed and self-interest. When he conquered China,
402
+ instead of slaughtering all the citizens, his adviser Yelu Ch’u-Ts’ai persuaded him to reap
403
+ the benefits of their new territory by taxing its people. It was Ts’ai who also convinced
404
+ Khan to spare the inhabitants of Kaifeng, where China’s finest craftsmen and engineers
405
+ had fled. Ts’ai’s reasoning was Khan could use these people for his own benefit.
406
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
407
+
408
+ Page 8
409
+ www.bizsum.com
410
+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
411
+
412
+ Most people are very pragmatic, and when negotiating, do not bring up the need for
413
+ gratitude for what you have done for others in the past. These appeals will be ignored.
414
+ Pragmatic people look towards the future, so it is best to emphasize how they will benefit
415
+ from an alliance with you.
416
+
417
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
418
+
419
+ Understand the other person’s motivation.
420
+
421
+ See things their way and offer suggestions that will advance their cause.
422
+
423
+ For others who want to feel superior and do not want to appear selfish, appeal to
424
+ their need to display their charity in the public eye.
425
+
426
+ 14. POSE AS A FRIEND, WORK AS A SPY.
427
+
428
+ Observance of the Law
429
+ Joseph Duveen was the greatest art dealer of his time; from 1904-1940 he single-
430
+ handedly monopolized the art-collecting market through his ingenious spying tactics. He
431
+ would place the household employees of his potential clients on his own payroll. These
432
+ spies would provide him valuable information as the tastes of his mark. He would arrange
433
+ “accidental” meetings in elevators, leading his prey of wealthy patrons right into his trap.
434
+ When clients came to visit his galleries, they found themselves surrounded by works they
435
+ would most likely buy.
436
+
437
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
438
+
439
+ Gather information at social events when people’s guards are down.
440
+
441
+ Use other people to give you the information you need.
442
+
443
+ Mislead others by giving out false information. Watch them react and base your
444
+ next action on what you discover.
445
+
446
+ 15. CRUSH YOUR ENEMY TOTALLY.
447
+
448
+ Observance of the Law
449
+ The great Empress Wu of China was ruthless in her rise to power. She started out as a
450
+ concubine of an emperor, but did not want to follow the traditional path: that of living the
451
+ rest of her life in a convent after the emperor’s death. She had seduced the emperor’s
452
+ son in the royal urinal and befriended his wife. Because of this Wu was able to get a royal
453
+ edict out of the convent. She returned to the harem, became pregnant, and murdered her
454
+ own baby, knowing the prime suspect would be the jealous wife of the new emperor. The
455
+ wife was charged with murder and executed. Wu took her place and her new husband
456
+ handed over the reins of government to her, opting for a life of pleasure. Empress Wu
457
+ ruled until the age of eighty when she was forced to abdicate. Throughout her rule she
458
+ eliminated son after son, anyone who would challenge her throne.
459
+
460
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
461
+
462
+ Show no mercy. Crush your rivals or else you will give them time to regroup and
463
+ plot their revenge.
464
+
465
+ Banish enemies or plot for the best time to render them harmless.
466
+
467
+ Leave your enemies no options.
468
+
469
+ Sometimes enemies will destroy themselves.
470
+
471
+ Thoughts of reconciliation will open you up to attack.
472
+
473
+
474
+
475
+ 16. USE ABSENCE TO INCREASE RESPECT AND HONOR.
476
+
477
+ Observance of the Law
478
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
479
+
480
+ Page 9
481
+ www.bizsum.com
482
+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
483
+ This law is most appreciated in matters of seduction and love. Make yourself too
484
+ available and your presence will be taken for granted. In the Middle Ages, ladies played
485
+ the game of presence and absence by sending their knights off on long arduous quests.
486
+ Sir Guillaume de Balaun wanted to taste the joy of love after reconciliation, and twice he
487
+ intentionally made himself scarce, withdrawing his affections from Madame Guillelma de
488
+ Javiac. The first time he drove his lover wild with grief, the second time she became
489
+ angry and cut him off. When he wrote her begging to be let back into her favor, she
490
+ allowed him back only on the condition he do penance for his cruelty.
491
+
492
+ With business, an early retirement at the height of your career will keep people holding
493
+ you in high regard, and waiting to see you make a comeback.
494
+
495
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
496
+
497
+ Create value through scarcity. Make yourself less accessible; otherwise the aura
498
+ you have created around yourself will wear away.
499
+
500
+ 17. KEEP OTHERS IN SUSPENDED TERROR: CULTIVATE AN AIR OF
501
+ UNPREDICTABILITY.
502
+
503
+ Observance of the Law
504
+ Bobby Fischer beat chess champion Boris Spassky using this law of unpredictability.
505
+ Spassky’s method of playing chess was to base his strategy on the patterns he read in
506
+ his opponent’s moves. Fischer unnerved him by arriving late for the first two tournaments,
507
+ even letting a match get forfeited. On the third game he made moves that were so
508
+ uncharacteristic and bold Spassky was thrown off balance. Fourteen games later
509
+ Spassky claimed Fischer was probably putting drugs in the orange juice they drank while
510
+ playing. Spassky resigned a few months later and never recovered from his defeat.
511
+
512
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
513
+
514
+ A person of power instills fear by deliberately unsettling those around him to keep
515
+ the initiative on his side.
516
+
517
+ Only the terminally subordinate act in a predictable manner.
518
+
519
+ 18. DO NOT BUILD FORTRESSES TO PROTECT YOURSELF –
520
+ ISOLATION IS DANGEROUS.
521
+
522
+ Observance of the Law
523
+ King Louis XIV recognized the importance of always keeping his eyes and ears on
524
+ everyone and everything around him. He built a palace in Versailles where all the nobility
525
+ could keep apartments near to his. He knew that if he were to isolate himself for one
526
+ moment, conspiracies would rise behind his back. The daily activities all revolved around
527
+ the king, leaving no one unnoticed, hundreds of visitors and attendants were always
528
+ present. There was not very much privacy for the king and he preferred this life to one of
529
+ isolation.
530
+
531
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
532
+
533
+ A fortress may be impregnable, but everyone knows you are there and it may easily
534
+ turn into a prison.
535
+
536
+ Power depends on social interaction and circulation.
537
+
538
+ Isolation is deadly for the creative arts. Shakespeare was always producing plays for
539
+ the masses. He was in constant touch with reality and what people wanted.
540
+
541
+ Mobility and social contact protects you from plotters.
542
+
543
+ 19. KNOW WHO YOU’RE DEALING WITH – DO NOT OFFEND THE
544
+ WRONG PERSON.
545
+
546
+ Transgression of the Law
547
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
548
+
549
+ Page 10
550
+ www.bizsum.com
551
+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
552
+ In the early thirteenth century, Muhammad the Shah of Khwarezm made the grave
553
+ mistake in offending a new tribal leader who was emerging in the east. His name was
554
+ Genghis Khan. Khan offered to share the Silk Route with Muhammad, sending
555
+ ambassadors to forge a deal. After his ambassadors were beheaded, Genghis Khan
556
+ declared war. Eventually his forces seized the capital of the Shah’s empire, Samarkand.
557
+ Muhammad fled, and the Silk Route fell into the hands of Genghis Khan.
558
+
559
+ Learn to distinguish from opponent, sucker, and victim. The five difficult and sometimes
560
+ dangerous marks are: the arrogant and proud, the hopelessly insecure, the suspicious,
561
+ the serpent with a long memory, and the plain, unassuming, unintelligent man.
562
+
563
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
564
+
565
+ Measure up your opponent, but never rely on instinct. Do some research on concrete
566
+ facts about that person’s character and history.
567
+
568
+ Never trust appearances.
569
+
570
+ 20. DO NOT COMMIT TO ANYONE.
571
+
572
+ Observance of the Law
573
+ Queen Elizabeth I managed to avoid the trap of marriage and war, by dangling the
574
+ possibility of marriage to all who courted her. She forged alliances with the countries
575
+ these suitors came from, all for the benefit of England. By keeping her independence
576
+ above all, Elizabeth protected her power and made herself an object of worship.
577
+
578
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
579
+
580
+ By refusing to commit, but allowing yourself to be courted, you become powerful
581
+ because you are ungraspable.
582
+
583
+ As your reputation for independence grows, more people will desire you and want to
584
+ conquer you.
585
+
586
+ Politely decline. You cannot allow yourself to feel obligated to anyone.
587
+
588
+ Seek promises from both sides, so no matter what the outcome of an election or
589
+ battle, your position is secure.
590
+
591
+ Observe quarreling parties and stay neutral but supportive to both sides. Gain power
592
+ as a mediator.
593
+
594
+ You may commit to one to prove you are capable of attachment, but be emotionally
595
+ uninvolved. Preserve the unspoken option of being able to leave anytime and reclaim
596
+ your freedom. The friends you made while being courted will help you jump ship.
597
+
598
+ 21. PLAY A SUCKER TO CATCH A SUCKER – SEEM DUMBER THAN
599
+ YOUR MARK.
600
+
601
+ Observance of the Law
602
+ In what was the biggest diamond scam of the century, prospectors Philip Arnold and
603
+ John Slack fooled the biggest financiers of the time, Asbury Harpending, Baron
604
+ Rothschild, and William Ralston into investing their millions in a fake mine site. The two
605
+ men played up their small town, scruffy image; convincing the sophisticated tycoons that
606
+ they would easily be bought out for their discovery of the mines. In the end, after the legal
607
+ pay-off was made to the two men, the investors realized the mine had been salted with
608
+ uncut gems by Arnold and Slack. Since all the business had been legal, and experts had
609
+ inspected the mines, there was no way to go after the two men.
610
+
611
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
612
+
613
+ Intelligence is an important part of people’s vanity. Subliminally reassure your
614
+ opponent of his superiority.
615
+
616
+ Playing naïve lets you see opportunities to deceive others.
617
+
618
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
619
+
620
+ Page 11
621
+ www.bizsum.com
622
+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
623
+ 22. USE THE SURRENDER TACTIC: TRANSFORM WEAKNESS INTO
624
+ POWER.
625
+
626
+ Observance of the Law
627
+ German writer Bertolt Brecht was called to appear before the US Congress’s House of
628
+ Un-American Activities Committee during the heyday of the Communist investigations.
629
+ Unlike his companions in the Hollywood 19, (other producers, directors and writers who
630
+ espoused communism in their scripts) he chose to be respectful to the committee. Subtly
631
+ he mocked them by offering vague but polite answers, used an interpreter to run circles
632
+ around them when asked about the lines from his poems, and was summarily dismissed.
633
+ He was free to leave America and continue writing as he pleased, while his friends in
634
+ Hollywood lost valuable working years as a result of being blacklisted.
635
+
636
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
637
+
638
+ Do not fight aggression with aggression. Put your opponent off-guard by yielding, and
639
+ in effect have more control over the situation.
640
+
641
+ Surrender is a way of mocking your enemies.
642
+
643
+ Surrender disguises your real motives and allows time to plan your next move.
644
+
645
+ 23. CONCENTRATE YOUR FORCES.
646
+
647
+ Observance of the Law
648
+ The Rothschild banking family concentrated its wealth within a very tight-knit structure.
649
+ Five brothers each controlled a part of the empire from Paris, Frankfurt, Vienna, Naples,
650
+ to London. They established themselves as a powerful force in business and politics,
651
+ keeping the secrets of the family business by exchanging internal communications only in
652
+ code or Frankfurt Yiddish. Family policy ruled and their children intermarried, all of them
653
+ first cousins.
654
+
655
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
656
+
657
+ Single-mindedness of purpose and total concentration on one goal will overwhelm
658
+ the enemy every time.
659
+
660
+ A single patron appreciates your loyalty and becomes dependent on your services.
661
+
662
+ In the arts, being too single-minded can make you an intolerable bore.
663
+
664
+ 24. PLAY THE PERFECT COURTIER.
665
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
666
+
667
+ Avoid ostentation. Talk less about yourself. Modesty is generally preferable.
668
+
669
+ Practice nonchalance. All your hard work must come off as effortless.
670
+
671
+ Be frugal with flattery.
672
+
673
+ Arrange to be noticed.
674
+
675
+ Alter your style and language according to the person you are dealing with.
676
+
677
+ Never be the bearer of bad news.
678
+
679
+ Never affect friendliness and intimacy with your master.
680
+
681
+ Never criticize those above you directly.
682
+
683
+ Be frugal in asking those above you for favors.
684
+
685
+ Never joke about appearances or taste.
686
+
687
+ Do not be the court cynic.
688
+
689
+ Be self-observant.
690
+
691
+ Master your emotions.
692
+
693
+ Fit the spirit of the times.
694
+
695
+ Be a source of pleasure.
696
+
697
+ 25. RE-CREATE YOURSELF.
698
+ Observance of the Law
699
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
700
+
701
+ Page 12
702
+ www.bizsum.com
703
+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
704
+ Julius Caesar always incorporated drama and theatrics in his speeches and daily
705
+ appearances. He was a great public showman, timing his entrances and exits,
706
+ sponsoring extravagant spectacles, gladiator shows and theatrical events. The masses
707
+ loved him, but his rivals feared him.
708
+
709
+ Aurore Dupin Dudevant left her husband and family in the provinces to become a writer in
710
+ Paris, something unheard of and almost impossible for a woman to do in 1831. For the
711
+ publication of her novel Indiana, she assumed the pseudonym George Sand. She
712
+ dressed in men’s breeches, smoked cigars, and expressed herself in conversation like a
713
+ man. She even carried on affairs with the most famous artists of Europe - Musset, Liszt,
714
+ and Chopin - living with freedom and independence unlike any other female writer before
715
+ her.
716
+
717
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
718
+
719
+ Control your appearances and emotions. Play sincere, but not necessarily be
720
+ sincere.
721
+
722
+ Create a memorable character. Do not limit yourself to the role society assigns to
723
+ you.
724
+
725
+ 26. KEEP YOUR HANDS CLEAN.
726
+ Observance of the Law:
727
+ Cleopatra was always able to get people to do her bidding without them realizing she was
728
+ manipulating them. She was able to charm Julius Caesar into restoring her to the throne
729
+ of Egypt, and playing her siblings against each other. Marc Antony was seduced by her,
730
+ and had her younger sister Arsinoe executed, ridding Cleopatra of any threats to her
731
+ place as Queen.
732
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
733
+
734
+ Conceal your mistakes. Your good name and reputation depends more on what you
735
+ conceal than on what you reveal.
736
+
737
+ Always have a convenient scapegoat.
738
+
739
+ Never do the dirty work yourself.
740
+
741
+ 27. PLAY ON PEOPLE’S NEED TO BELIEVE TO CREATE A CULT-LIKE
742
+ FOLLOWING.
743
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
744
+
745
+ Keep it simple; keep it vague. Create new words for vague concepts.
746
+
747
+ Emphasize the visual and sensual over the intellectual.
748
+
749
+ Borrow the forms of organized religion to structure the group. Create rituals. Use
750
+ names and ranks and titles. Ask them to make sacrifices and give alms. Act like a
751
+ guru or a prophet.
752
+
753
+ Disguise your source of income.
754
+
755
+ Set up an us-versus-them dynamic. Keep followers united by identifying outsiders as
756
+ a devious enemy.
757
+
758
+ The tendency to doubt and reason is broken down when we join a group.
759
+
760
+ 28. ENTER ACTION WITH BOLDNESS.
761
+ Ivan the Terrible waited five years before executing his first major bold move. After years
762
+ of persecution by the Shuisky family, the poisoning of his mother Helena, and the
763
+ banishment of his only friend Vorontsov, the thirteen year-old Ivan invited his rival Prince
764
+ Andrei Shuisky into his room. No one feared the young boy and the boyars often ridiculed
765
+ him. When the guards were suddenly ordered to seize Prince Andrei and execute him, no
766
+ one saw it coming. This one swift and bold act secured Ivan’s power for decades to
767
+ come.
768
+
769
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
770
+
771
+ Page 13
772
+ www.bizsum.com
773
+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
774
+ Ivan initially lay low, showing neither ambition nor discontent. He waited until he had won
775
+ over the palace guards to his side. They had come to hate the cruelty of the Shuiskys
776
+ over the years, and the time was at hand to strike boldly and swiftly.
777
+
778
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
779
+
780
+ The bolder the lie, the better.
781
+
782
+ Lions circle the hesitant prey.
783
+
784
+ Boldness strikes fear; Fear creates authority.
785
+
786
+ Going halfway digs the deeper grave. Do not negotiate if you opponent will more
787
+ likely take the opportunity to destroy you.
788
+
789
+ Hesitation creates gaps. Boldness obliterates them. Move swiftly and surely.
790
+
791
+ Audacity separates you from the herd.
792
+
793
+ 29. PLAN ALL THE WAY TO THE END.
794
+
795
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
796
+
797
+ Take into account all possible obstacles and circumstances that may prevent you
798
+ from achieving your goal, and plan how you will overcome them.
799
+
800
+ When you see several steps ahead, you will no longer need to improvise along the
801
+ way, and risk deviating from your plan.
802
+
803
+ Prepare alternatives and be open to adapt new routes to your goal.
804
+
805
+
806
+ 30. MAKE YOUR ACCOMPLISHMENTS SEEM EFFORTLESS.
807
+ Observance of the Law:
808
+ Sen no Rikyu was an important tea master and adviser on aesthetic and political matters
809
+ to the Emperor Hideyoshi. He despised hosts who looked like they were trying to hard.
810
+ Cha-no-yu, or the Japanese tea ceremony, is an art form, from the preparation to the
811
+ serving; the whole process must look natural and easy. Accidental grace and beauty
812
+ were Rikyu’s specialty. On the night before the Emperor was to visit him for a tea
813
+ ceremony, he artfully laid cushions in the snow on each stepping-stone to his house. In
814
+ the morning, he removed the cushions revealing the pattern of the stepping-stones like a
815
+ perfect mold within the snow. This was just one of Rikyu’s clever aesthetic tricks which
816
+ impressed the Emperor, never calling attention to the work gone into it, but implying a
817
+ polite gesture in itself.
818
+
819
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
820
+
821
+ What imitates nature by appearing effortless and natural approximates nature’s
822
+ power.
823
+
824
+ Never show your work until it is finished. When people see the effort and time it takes
825
+ to make it, and if they witness a work-in-progress, the magic of the finished piece is
826
+ spoiled.
827
+
828
+ 31. CONTROL THE OPTIONS: GET OTHERS TO PLAY WITH THE CARDS
829
+ YOU DEAL.
830
+ Observance of the Law:
831
+ Seventeenth-century French courtesan Ninon de Lenclos needed to devise a way of
832
+ maintaining her lifestyle while having the freedom no woman could achieve in her day.
833
+ She gave her lovers and suitors three choices, a payeur would pay for her services, but
834
+ she would only sleep with him when she liked, a martyr would not have to pay, and be
835
+ part of her harem of men, and from the martyrs she would choose a favori, or one man to
836
+ whom she would abandon herself to totally until she was tired of him. The payeurs were
837
+ able to finance her needs while she enjoyed complete freedom, independence, and
838
+ variety from her lovers. She had the equality to men no married woman of the time could
839
+ possess.
840
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
841
+
842
+ Page 14
843
+ www.bizsum.com
844
+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
845
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
846
+
847
+ Make people your puppets and give them options to let them feel they have control.
848
+ Force them to choose between the lesser of two evils, both of which serve your
849
+ purpose.
850
+
851
+ Present options but color the one you prefer as the best solution.
852
+
853
+ Force the resister into “choosing” to do what you want by appearing to advocate the
854
+ opposite.
855
+
856
+ Alter the playing field so the only options available are the ones you offer.
857
+
858
+ Shrinking options force people to buy in now or else the goods won’t be available
859
+ tomorrow.
860
+
861
+ The weak man must be propelled into action through fear and terror.
862
+
863
+ Involving your victim in your scheme with the threat of their exposure later will keep
864
+ them tied to you. They cannot expose you because they will be found out as well.
865
+
866
+ Use the horns of a dilemma: whichever way they choose, there is no escape.
867
+
868
+ 32. PLAY TO PEOPLE’S FANTASIES.
869
+ Observance of the Law:
870
+ In the 1700s, a mysterious stranger named George Psalmanazar came to fame with his
871
+ books and lectures on the language, culture and history of the island of Formosa (now
872
+ Taiwan). After his death, it was revealed that he was in fact a Frenchman with a rich
873
+ imagination who played on the British need for the exotic and strange. He had invented
874
+ everything he had professed to be an expert on, having capitalized on it with best-selling
875
+ books and having been a favorite guest at many royal dinners.
876
+
877
+ Abraham Lincoln created an image of himself as the homespun country lawyer with a
878
+ beard. He played to the fantasy of the common man’s president.
879
+
880
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
881
+
882
+ People need a fantasy to escape from the humdrum of everyday life. The more
883
+ vague and exotic, the more captivating.
884
+
885
+ Promise a pot of gold and instant gratification, rather than a gradual improvement
886
+ through hard work.
887
+
888
+ Keep your distance so the fantasy remains intact.
889
+
890
+ 33. DISCOVER EACH MAN’S THUMBSCREW.
891
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
892
+
893
+ Every person has a weakness or insecurity you can use to your advantage.
894
+
895
+ Train yourself to probe for weaknesses in everyday conversation.
896
+
897
+ Find the childhood need that went unfulfilled, supply it, and your victim will be unable
898
+ to resist you.
899
+
900
+ People’s weaknesses are the opposite of the qualities they reveal to you. The shy
901
+ person is actually dying for attention; a prude may be hiding a lascivious soul, etc.
902
+
903
+ Find the weak link or the one person in a group who will bend under pressure.
904
+
905
+ Feed on uncontrollable emotions or motive – paranoia, lust, greed, vanity, or hatred.
906
+
907
+ When searching for suckers, always look for the unhappy, insecure and dissatisfied.
908
+
909
+ 34. BE ROYAL IN YOUR OWN FASHION: ACT LIKE A KING TO BE
910
+ TREATED LIKE ONE.
911
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
912
+
913
+ How you carry yourself reflects what you think of yourself. Exude confidence and the
914
+ feeling you were destined for greatness.
915
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
916
+
917
+ Page 15
918
+ www.bizsum.com
919
+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
920
+
921
+ Do not confuse regal bearing with arrogance.
922
+
923
+ Dignity is the mask you assume under difficult circumstances. Act like nothing can
924
+ affect you and you have all the time in the world to respond.
925
+
926
+ Set your price high and do not waver.
927
+
928
+ Deal with the highest person in the building.
929
+
930
+ A gift is an equalizer. You do not beg but ask for help in a dignified way.
931
+
932
+ 35. MASTER THE ART OF TIMING.
933
+ Time as a human-made concept
934
+ There are three kinds of time we deal with when building power: the Long Time is the
935
+ years-long period of waiting for the right opportunity while creating a strong foundation or
936
+ base to work from. Forced Time is upsetting the timing of others and setting their
937
+ deadlines for them. The opponent will be more likely to make mistakes because of the
938
+ need to hurry, or in the case of business, will be forced to buy whatever you offer
939
+ because the time to make a decision is limited. End Time is when we execute a plan with
940
+ speed and absolutely no hesitation.
941
+
942
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
943
+
944
+ Never look as though you are in a hurry. It betrays a lack of control.
945
+
946
+ Learn to stand back and be patient. Strike only when the time is right.
947
+
948
+ Anticipate events and work with the spirit of the times.
949
+
950
+ Recognizing the prevailing winds does not necessarily mean running with them.
951
+
952
+ 36. DISDAIN THINGS YOU CANNOT HAVE: IGNORING THEM IS THE
953
+ BEST REVENGE.
954
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
955
+
956
+ The more attention you pay an enemy, the stronger you make him. The less interest you
957
+ show, the more superior you seem.
958
+
959
+ Remember: You choose to let things bother you. You can just as easily choose to
960
+ consider the matter trivial and unworthy of your interest. That is the powerful move.
961
+
962
+ If it is impossible to ignore, then secretly get rid of it. Sometimes threats just go away by
963
+ themselves.
964
+
965
+ 37. CREATE COMPELLING SPECTACLES.
966
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
967
+
968
+ Never neglect the way you arrange things visually.
969
+
970
+ Associate yourself with colors, images and symbols that communicate strong
971
+ messages.
972
+
973
+ People are always impressed by the superficial appearance of things, the grand, and
974
+ the spectacular, what is larger than life.
975
+
976
+ 38. THINK AS YOU LIKE BUT BEHAVE LIKE OTHERS.
977
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
978
+
979
+ Wise and clever people learn early on that they can display conventional behavior
980
+ and mouth conventional ideas without having to believe in them.
981
+
982
+ Put on the mask appropriate to the group you are joining.
983
+
984
+ 39. STIR UP WATERS TO CATCH FISH.
985
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
986
+
987
+ Anger and emotion are strategically unproductive. Make your enemies angry but stay
988
+ calm yourself.
989
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
990
+
991
+ Page 16
992
+ www.bizsum.com
993
+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
994
+
995
+ Angry people usually end up looking ridiculous.
996
+
997
+ Nothing in the game of power is personal.
998
+
999
+ An occasional outburst may be powerful, but use anger too often and it loses its
1000
+ power.
1001
+ 40. DESPISE THE FREE LUNCH.
1002
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
1003
+
1004
+ By paying your own way you stay free of gratitude. What is offered for free normally
1005
+ has a hidden obligation.
1006
+
1007
+ Generosity is a sign of power. Most powerful people spend freely and are not misers.
1008
+
1009
+ Use money as a way to give pleasure to others and win them over.
1010
+
1011
+ 41. AVOID STEPPING INTO A GREAT MAN’S SHOES.
1012
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
1013
+
1014
+ Choose a different path and personal style if you are the daughter or son of a great
1015
+ person. You will forever be in your predecessor’s shadow unless you find a way to
1016
+ shine on your own.
1017
+
1018
+ Only after the father figure has been done away with will there be space to establish
1019
+ a new order.
1020
+
1021
+ Do not become complacent once you reach success and security. Prosperity makes
1022
+ us lazy. Writers like Tennessee Williams and Fyodor Dostoyevsky preferred the
1023
+ struggle to security; the way poverty or emotional difficulties pushed them to create
1024
+ good work.
1025
+
1026
+ 42. STRIKE THE SHEPHERD AND THE SHEEP WILL SCATTER.
1027
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
1028
+
1029
+ Within any group, trouble can be traced to a single source, the unhappy,
1030
+ chronically unsatisfied one who stirs up dissension and infects the group.
1031
+ Recognize troublemakers by their complaining nature. Separate him from the
1032
+ group.
1033
+
1034
+ In every group power is concentrated in the hands of one or two people. Human
1035
+ nature shows people will orbit around a single strong personality.
1036
+
1037
+ 43. WORK ON THE HEARTS AND MINDS OF OTHERS.
1038
+ Transgression of the Law
1039
+ Marie-Antoinette was put to death by guillotine in 1793, after the French monarchy was
1040
+ ended by the revolution. Not a single soul came to her defense. Marie-Antoinette brought
1041
+ upon herself the hatred of all. Her jewelry, wardrobe, hair, and masked balls, her lavish
1042
+ lifestyle had been more important to her than the needs of her people.
1043
+
1044
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
1045
+
1046
+ Aim at the primary emotions: love, hate, and jealousy. Be alert to people’s
1047
+ individual psychologies and their basic emotional responses.
1048
+
1049
+ Maintain a stable of writers, artists, or intellectuals who are very good at
1050
+ appealing to people’s hearts and minds.
1051
+
1052
+ 44. DISARM AND INFURIATE WITH THE MIRROR EFFECT.
1053
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
1054
+
1055
+ The neutralizing effect: Do what your enemies do, follow their actions and they
1056
+ will not see what you are up to. When you mirror them, if mocks and humiliates
1057
+ them. Mimicry infuriates.
1058
+
1059
+ The Shadow effect: Shadow your opponents’ every move, gather information,
1060
+ and gain insight to their routines and habits without them seeing you.
1061
+ The 48 Laws Of Power
1062
+
1063
+ Page 17
1064
+ www.bizsum.com
1065
+ © 2001, 2002 Copyright BusinessSummaries.com
1066
+
1067
+ The Mirror effect: Show you understand by reflecting their innermost feelings.
1068
+
1069
+ The Moral effect: Teach others a lesson by giving them a taste of their own
1070
+ medicine.
1071
+
1072
+ The Hallucinatory effect: offer a perfect copy of an object, place or person and
1073
+ see how people take the bait.
1074
+
1075
+ 45. PREACH THE NEED FOR CHANGE, BUT NEVER REFORM TOO
1076
+ MUCH AT ONCE.
1077
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
1078
+
1079
+ Make change and reform seem like a gentle improvement on the past. People
1080
+ are creatures of habit and the sudden change will cause some to rebel.
1081
+
1082
+ Disguise change by dressing it in tradition.
1083
+
1084
+ 46. NEVER APPEAR TOO PERFECT.
1085
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
1086
+
1087
+ Never underestimate the power of envy. Occasionally reveal a weakness, defect,
1088
+ or anxiety, or find new friends. It is the people in your own circle of peers who will
1089
+ be the first to envy your success.
1090
+
1091
+ Envy is often a problem for people who have great natural talent. You may think
1092
+ you are charming people with your natural talent when in fact they are coming to
1093
+ hate you for it.
1094
+
1095
+ To deflect envy, employ a display of weakness, or a harmless vice.
1096
+
1097
+ Envy is disguised sometimes as excessive praise, or slander and criticism. Win
1098
+ your revenge by ignoring the envious.
1099
+
1100
+ Reversal: Display the utmost disdain for those who envy you. Instead of hiding
1101
+ your perfection, make it obvious. Make every triumph an opportunity to make the
1102
+ envious squirm.
1103
+
1104
+ 47. DO NOT GO PAST THE MARK YOU AIMED FOR; IN VICTORY, LEARN
1105
+ WHEN TO STOP.
1106
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
1107
+
1108
+ The powerful know that the essence of strategy is controlling what comes next.
1109
+
1110
+ There is no better time to stop and walk away than after a victory.
1111
+
1112
+ 48. ASSUME FORMLESSNESS.
1113
+ Wisdom in a nutshell:
1114
+ Accept the fact that nothing is certain and no law is fixed. Be as fluid and formless as
1115
+ water, adapting and moving with change naturally. The powerful are creative in
1116
+ expressing something new. This feminine, formless style of ruling as practiced by
1117
+ Elizabeth of England and Catherine of Russia, allows flexibility and makes subjects feel
1118
+ less coerced. Play the chameleon but break your enemy from the inside. Morph and
1119
+ adapt but keep your long-term strategy in mind at all times.
1120
+