The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

masses,then,


keepyour

eye

onthebanaltruthsthat

weighheavily

onus

all.Neverbedistracted

bypeop1e’sglamorous

portraits

ofthemselvesand

their


lives;

searchand

dig

forwhat

really

imprisons

them.Once
you

find

that,
you


havethe

magicalkey

thatwill
putgreatpower

in
your

hands.

Although

times
and

peoplechange,

letus
examine
a
fewof
the
oppres~

siverealitiesthat
endure,
andthe
opportunities


for

powertheyprovide:

The


Reality:Change

isslowand

gradual.

It
requires

ham’

work,

abit
of

luck,
a
fair

amount
of

rel
—sacrg'fice,

andalot
pfpatience.

The
Fantasy:

A
sudden

tmmfarmation

will

bring

a
total
change

in
aneivfiirtunes,

bypassing
work,luck,
self-sacrifice,

andtimeinone

fantastic

make.

Thisisofcoursethe

fantasypar

excellenceofthecharlatanswho

prowl among

ustothis

day,

andwasthe

key

to

B1'agadin0’s

success.

Promisea
great


andtotal
change-—~frompoor

to
rich,
sickness
to
health,

misery

to

ecstasy—and

you

willhavefollowers.

How did the

great sixteenth-century

German

quack

Leonhard

Thumeisserbecomethecourt

physician

fortheElectorof

Brandenburg

withoutever

studying

medicine?Insteadof

offeringamputations,

leeches,

and

foul~tastingpurgatives

(the

medicaments
ofthe

time),

Thurneisser
ofv

fared
sweevtasting


elixirs and

promised

instant
recovery.

Fashionable

courtiers

especially

wantedhissolutionof“drinkable

gold,”

whichcosta

fortune.Ifsome

inexplicable

illnessassailed
you,

Thur-neisserwouldcon-

sulta

horoscope

and

prescribe

atalisman. Who couldresist such a

fantasy-—-health


and

well-being

withoutsacrifice
and
pain!

The


Reality:

Thesocialrealmhaslzard~setcodesandboundaries.Weunderstand


timelimitsandknowthatwehavetomovewithinthesame

familiar

circles,
ziay

in

and
ritzy

out.

Tim
Fantagv.“

WE’canenter
:1

totally

newworld
with
a':fi"m'ent

codes
and
ihepmmzke

of

adventure.

Inthe

early

1700s,


allLondonwasabuzzwithtalkofa

mysterious

stranger,


a
young

man
named

George

Psalmanazar.
Hehadarrivedfrom

whatwastomost

Englishmen

afantastical
land:
theislandofFormosa

(now Taiwan),

off the coast of China. Oxford

University

engaged

Psalmauazartoteachtheisland’s

language;

afew
years

laterhetranslated

theBibleinto
Formosan,

thenwroteabool<—ar:immediatebestseller--on

Formosa’s

history

and

geography.Englishroyalty

winedanddinedthe

young
man,
and

everywhere

hewentheentertainedhishostswith
won-

drousstoriesofhis
homeland,
anditsbizarrecustoms.

AfterPsalmanazar
died,however,
hiswillrevealedthathewasinfact

merely

aFrenchmanwitharich

imagination.Everything

hehadsaidabout

Formosa——-its


alphabet,

its

language,

its
literature,

itsentireculture-—hehad

invented.Hehadbuiltonthe

Englishpuhlic’signorance

of
the

place

to

concoctanelaborate
story

thatfulfilledtheirdesirefortheexoticand

LAW 32
‘.767
Free download pdf