team. As Zappos CEO Hsieh told me by email, Studies have shown that perceived control is an important component of one’s happiness. However, what people feel like they want control over really varies, so I don’t think there’s one aspect of autonomy that’s universally the most important. Different individuals have different desires, so the best strategy for an employer would be to figure out what’s important to each individual employee.”
Still, however those individual desires express
themselves on the surface, they grow from common roots. We’re born to be players, not pawns. We’re meant to be autonomous individuals, not individual automatons. We’re designed to be
Type I. But outside forces—including the very idea that we need to be
“managed”—have conspired to change our default
setting and turn us into TypeX. If we update the environments we’re in—not only at work, but also at school and at home—and if leaders recognize both the truth of the human condition and the science that supports it, we can return ourselves and our colleagues to our natural state.
“The course of human history has always moved in the direction of greater freedom. And there’s a reason for that—because it’s in our nature to push for it,”
Ryan told me. If we were just plastic like some people think, this wouldn’t be happening. But somebody stands in front of a tank in China. Women, who’ve
been denied autonomy, keep advocating for rights. This is the course of history.
This is why ultimately human nature, if it ever realizes itself, will do so by becoming more autonomous.”