The five afflictions (ignorance, ego, attachment, aversion, fear) that generate political violence and polarization cycles.
Patanjali identifies five kleshas—fundamental psychological afflictions—that generate suffering and distorted perception. In political psychology, these same mechanisms drive polarization, conflict escalation, and atrocity. Avidya (ignorance) manifests as belief in zero-sum politics; asmita (ego) appears as tribal superiority and dehumanization; raga (attachment) drives desperate clinging to losing ideologies; dvesha (aversion) fuels violent opposition to the other; abhinivesha (fear of dissolution) generates existential political threats. Political violence emerges when multiple kleshas activate simultaneously: a nationalist movement may combine ego-driven superiority, attachment to mythological national identity, aversion to outsiders, and fear of cultural dissolution. Understanding klesha dynamics prevents reductive enemy-thinking and enables compassion for afflicted political actors. Patanjali's systematic approach reveals that adversaries aren't evil but suffering from predictable psychological patterns. This shifts political response from punishment to transformation: addressing the ignorance, fear, and ego-defensiveness that fuel conflict. Recognition of klesha patterns enables political psychology to move from blame toward healing.
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