I would like to add that certain types of people might be predisposed towards power seeking (and succeeding at power seeking), rather than just being corrupted by power, status, money, or fame.
Social Dark Matter offers some interesting takes on this; it’s more nuanced than it appears e.g. neurotic people might even be more reputation-obsessed but also potentially more likely than the median human to internalize moral values (or, in the case of EA, commit to internalizing moral values in a lasting way). This is purely speculative food for thought to illustrate the complexity of this situation (empirically researching the psychology of different kinds of powerful people is difficult due to nonresponse bias making samples disproportionately stacked towards people who aren’t as powerful as they look).
I would like to add that certain types of people might be predisposed towards power seeking (and succeeding at power seeking), rather than just being corrupted by power, status, money, or fame.
Social Dark Matter offers some interesting takes on this; it’s more nuanced than it appears e.g. neurotic people might even be more reputation-obsessed but also potentially more likely than the median human to internalize moral values (or, in the case of EA, commit to internalizing moral values in a lasting way). This is purely speculative food for thought to illustrate the complexity of this situation (empirically researching the psychology of different kinds of powerful people is difficult due to nonresponse bias making samples disproportionately stacked towards people who aren’t as powerful as they look).