The five fundamental obstacles that obscure inherent intelligence, suggesting measurement must identify what blocks rather than what exists.
Patanjali identifies kleshas—ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, and fear of death—as fundamental obstructions to clear knowing. These aren't character flaws but structural blocks that distort perception and cognition. Ignorance prevents accurate knowledge; egoic identification clouds judgment; attachment limits objectivity; aversion creates avoidance of difficult thinking; fear constrains intellectual risk-taking. This framework revolutionizes intelligence psychology by shifting focus from measuring capacity to identifying obstruction. A person with high IQ but significant klesha activity demonstrates less actual intelligence than their scores suggest. Conversely, someone systematically removing klesha obstruction shows expanding cognitive clarity regardless of test scores. This explains why test performance varies dramatically with psychological state, emotional maturity, and spiritual development. By centering klesha removal rather than ability measurement, we develop intelligence practices that actually increase human capability rather than merely quantifying limited expressions of it.
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