This system defines strict duties and privileges based on birthright and is arranged in various different castes, going from the very lowest, Untouchables, to the highest, Brahmins (Document 1). Overall, the caste system keeps people in fixed social roles and restricts their ability to move across castes, thus maintaining power dynamics. While the lower castes experienced widespread exclusion and a lower quality of life, the Brahmins at the top, had a great amount of influence and control over the other castes and society as a whole. This social system implemented in India was strict and almost impossible to move around in, keeping the more powerful at the top and making sure that the less powerful stay on the lower side of society. The need for power is a persistent problem that has influenced societies' structures and patterns throughout history. Examples of this conflict continue to exist in multiple instances, from the strict hierarchy of the Indian caste system to Confucius' focus on loyalty to one’s superiors, and the higher power used to manipulate and upkeep dominance in Hammurabi's