Five afflictions—ego, attachment, aversion, fear, clinging—that perpetuate political conflict and dysfunction through unconscious psychological patterns.
Patanjali identifies five kleshas or afflictions: asmita (ego), raga (attachment), dvesha (aversion), abhinivesha (fear of loss), and ignorance (avidya). These five psychological mechanisms create the suffering cycles that dominate political psychology. Political conflict intensifies through asmita when leaders attach identity to policy positions, raga when constituencies cling to favored candidates or ideologies, and dvesha when opponents are demonized. Abhinivesha—existential fear—drives zero-sum political competition where one side's loss feels like annihilation. Patanjali's genius is recognizing that these afflictions are not moral failings but habitual psychological patterns that can be observed and transformed. In political psychology, recognizing the kleshas explains intractable conflicts: they persist not primarily because policy disagreements are genuine but because unconscious psychological mechanisms have captured political actors. By identifying which klesha dominates a particular conflict, political psychologists can design interventions targeting root causes. A leader driven by asmita needs ego-transcendence practices; a movement gripped by dvesha requires compassion cultivation. This framework transforms political problem-solving from argumentation into psychological transformation.
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