The ego-sense that causes politicians and citizens to fuse identity with ideology, blocking growth and creating destructive polarization.
Asmita, the ego-sense or false identification with the individual self, is one of Patanjali's five klesha (afflictions) that cloud consciousness and perpetuate suffering. In political psychology, asmita manifests as the fusion of personal identity with political ideology, party affiliation, or partisan team. When citizens and leaders identify with 'I am conservative' or 'I am progressive' at the deepest level, they protect those identities as fiercely as they protect their physical bodies, becoming incapable of genuine dialogue or adaptation. This ego-identification makes political discourse fundamentally defensive and distorted. The Yoga Sutras teach that liberation requires recognizing the distinction between the true self and temporary identifications; political maturity similarly requires politicians and citizens to develop the capacity to hold political views without fusing them to identity. A leader practicing this wisdom can advocate passionately for positions while remaining psychologically free from identification with them, enabling course correction and genuine collaboration. Political psychology informed by this concept recognizes polarization not merely as disagreement but as a pathological fusion of ego with ideas. Dissolving asmita in political life creates space for more creative problem-solving and less destructive tribalism.
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