Friday, March 27, 2026

Power – Fundamental Instinct

 Power – Fundamental Instinct

When we look to nature, we often discover mirrors of ourselves. Animals evolve naturally, guided by instinct and necessity. Humanity, by contrast, has laboured to build civilisation through reflection, discipline, and the establishment of value systems by great leaders and thinkers. Yet beneath the structures of society, primal instincts endure—hidden in the subconscious, rising in moments of crisis.

Among these instincts, power stands out as fundamental. Leadership itself is the social expression of this instinct.  In animals it ensures survival, in humans it shapes civilisations.

Strategic Crow

Consider the old story of the crow and the pot of water. Unable to reach the water at the bottom, the crow drops pebbles in the pot until the level of water rises. This fable, once told as a simple lesson in ingenuity, now finds new interpretations. Today, one might imagine the crow adapting further—picking up a straw from a grocery shop or restaurant, inserting it into the pot, and drinking with ease.

What seems like a playful revision is, in fact, a reflection of how learning and adaptation occur in nature. Animals, without formal training, learn through experience, observation, and necessity. They may not write books or blogs, but their actions embody insight. This is leadership in its rawest form—adaptive, situational, and born of necessity.

Collaborative Leadership in the Wild

Leadership in animals—whether in hunting, decision-making, or social behaviour—shows us that strategies evolve. What worked years ago may be replaced by new methods, born of reflection and adaptation.

In the Kibale forest of Uganda, chimpanzees have been observed raiding banana trucks with remarkable strategic planning and teamwork. One chimpanzee acts as a lookout, warning the group of danger, while another climbs onto the truck to break open crates. As bananas spill onto the road, more chimps rush in to collect them.

This coordinated effort is more than instinct—it demonstrates situational leadership shaped by experience and the demands of the moment. Their collaboration reflects an evolved strategy: leadership that adapts to circumstances, ensuring survival and success through collective action.

The Three Instincts

Philosophers and psychologists often speak of three fundamental instincts that shape both animals and humans: Survival, Reproduction and Power

1.Survival

The instinct for self-preservation manifests as fear, worry, aggression, and the drive to defend oneself against harm. In animals, this is seen in territorial defense or flight from predators. In humans, it surfaces in crises—moments when the thin layer of morality and societal order falls away, and primal reactions take over. Leadership here emerges as a form of protection: guiding the group to safety, ensuring collective survival.

2.Reproduction

Sexuality, once primarily tied to reproduction, has expanded far beyond its biological purpose. Human beings have discovered new ways to express and experience sexuality, often mediated by technology. Artificial intelligence, digital platforms, and virtual realities are reshaping sexual habits, modifying not only behaviour but the very expression of desire.

Sex has also become intertwined with power. Wealth, influence, and networks often display themselves through sexual expression, just as power itself demands such demonstrations. In this sense, sexuality is no longer only about survival of the species—it has become a symbol of status, dominance, and identity. Leadership here is about responsibility: transforming desire into respect, ensuring that relationships uplift rather than exploit.

3.Power

Over thousands of years, the thirst for power in both animals and humans has shifted from instinctive dominance behaviours to more complex, symbolic, and institutional forms.

Power in Animals

  • Dominance hierarchies: Many species (wolves, lions, primates) establish leadership through strength, strategy, or social bonds. Alpha roles ensure survival and order.
  • Territorial control: Power often manifests as control over space, food, or mates.
  • Adaptation over time: While the instinct for dominance hasn’t diminished, strategies have evolved. Primates increasingly rely on cooperation and alliances rather than sheer aggression.
  • Learning and innovation: Experiments show crows, dolphins, and elephants adapt their methods of problem-solving, reflecting a shift from brute force to intelligence as a form of power.

Power in Humans

In humans, power has traveled a long path—from physical dominance to symbolic authority, from survival to civilization.

  • Early survival: In prehistoric times, power was physical—control over food, territory, and protection.
  • Civilization: As societies formed, power shifted to leaders who could organize, inspire, and enforce rules. Kings, chiefs, and priests embodied authority.
  • Institutionalization: Over centuries, power became embedded in structures—governments, religions, economies. It was no longer just physical but symbolic, tied to wealth, knowledge, and legitimacy.
  • Modern transformation: Today, power often lies in technology, information, and influence rather than brute strength. Yet, in crises, primal instincts—fear, dominance, survival—still surface.

Leadership, therefore, is the channel through which power is expressed. In animals, it is instinctive and immediate; in humans, it is reflective and institutional. But in both, it remains rooted in the same primal drive.

Toward Higher Evolution

In essence, animals and humans share the same root instincts. What has changed over millennia is not the drives themselves, but the forms they take. In animals, this is seen in evolving strategies of survival, while in humans it is reflected in the creation of civilisation, institutions, and visions of transcendence.

The true evolution of leadership lies in transforming instincts—turning survival into service, power into vision, and sexuality into love and respect. In this transformation, humanity may rise to a higher form of evolution, making life richer, more compassionate, and more meaningful.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune, March 27, 2026

#ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

 

 

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Power – Fundamental Instinct

  Power – Fundamental Instinct When we look to nature, we often discover mirrors of ourselves. Animals evolve naturally, guided by instinc...