Patanjali's five afflictions reframed as the psychological mechanisms that poison political judgment and perpetuate cycles of harm.
Patanjali identifies five kleshas (afflictions): ignorance, ego-sense, attachment, aversion, and fear of death. These operate as psychological poisons within political consciousness. Ignorance manifests as genuine misunderstanding of political consequences, systemic dynamics, and human psychology. Ego-sense drives the need for dominance, humiliation of opponents, and refusal to acknowledge error. Attachment creates clinging to failing policies, loyalty to corrupt leaders, or ideological rigidity despite evidence. Aversion generates demonization of opponents, dehumanization, and refusal to understand different perspectives. Fear of death—existential threat—underlies much political violence, scapegoating, and authoritarian appeal. Rather than treating these as character flaws, Patanjali's framework reveals them as systematic psychological patterns. Political transformation requires identifying which kleshas are active in specific political contexts and designing interventions accordingly. A leader addressing fear-driven authoritarianism must work differently than one addressing attachment-driven institutional corruption. This diagnostic precision transforms political psychology from moralistic blame toward systematic understanding and targeted transformation.
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