Fundamental misunderstanding of human nature and social systems that perpetuates ineffective or harmful political ideologies and policies.
Avidya, or fundamental ignorance, represents the root psychological error underlying much political dysfunction. In political psychology, avidya manifests as false beliefs about human motivation, power dynamics, and social causation. Leaders operating from avidya implement policies based on illusions rather than accurate understanding of human nature. This ignorance perpetuates cycles of conflict because it prevents recognition of shared needs underlying competing interests. Patanjali's framework suggests that political wisdom begins with dispelling avidya—recognizing what we truly don't understand about human behavior and social systems. Political psychology informed by this principle emphasizes epistemic humility, evidence-based policymaking, and willingness to revise beliefs when confronted with reality. Addressing avidya in political thinking transforms governance from reactive blame-assignment to problem-solving grounded in genuine human understanding.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.