Starting from what has been said over the years, Napoleon compensated for the short stature with his success in the war. How to prove this all, a recent study states that short-lived men are much more aggressive than their long counterparts.
Observation was conducted by scientists at the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta where a connection was found between centimeters and aggressiveness. Sixty men from 18 to 50 years of age were considered and it was found that the lack of manhood caused the feeling of lack of manhood and the fewer men felt, 3 times more violent would result in tested individuals (including criminal acts or violent attacks). Scientists explain that all this is related to the stress of masculine mismatch, which makes this cluster more fierce.
Because of social stereotypes, one of the reasons that self-confesses men consists when they think their length is below the average. Thus shorter men than the rest act violently as to secure themselves against the threat of dignity, known as the Napoleon complex, which was identified in 1926 by the autistic psychiatrist Alfred Adler.
The compound in question was also backed by 2018 by revolutionary psychologist Mark van Vugt and his team at the University of Amsterdam, whereby short-lived men behave more fierce than long ones, experience more powerful things, and enjoy higher levels of paranoia.