Mental fluctuations that distort political perception and decision-making, requiring disciplined observation to recognize partisan bias.
Patanjali's concept of chitta vritti—the fluctuations and modifications of consciousness—directly applies to how political actors and citizens form beliefs. In political psychology, these mental disturbances manifest as confirmation bias, tribal thinking, and reactive ideological positions. By recognizing that our political views arise from mental patterns rather than objective reality, we can develop metacognitive awareness of our own conditioning. This Yogic insight suggests that genuine political wisdom requires stilling these mental fluctuations through disciplined self-observation, allowing us to perceive political situations with greater clarity and less ego-driven distortion. Rather than being swept by emotional reactions to political events, practitioners cultivate the witness consciousness that observes political dynamics without immediate judgment, enabling more authentic dialogue and less polarized discourse.
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