The Kleshas are five fundamental psychological afflictions that generate and perpetuate false beliefs; understanding them reveals the root dynamics of belief-formation.
Patanjali's framework of five kleshas (afflictions or obstacles) identifies the psychological mechanisms generating false beliefs: avidya (ignorance), asmita (ego-identification), raga (attachment), dvesha (aversion), and abhinivesha (fear of death). These aren't moral failings but natural patterns of consciousness that create distorted beliefs about reality. Avidya, the root klesa, is fundamental misunderstanding of reality's nature; from this ignorance flow all other false beliefs. Asmita generates beliefs rooted in ego-identity. Raga creates beliefs supporting attachment to desired objects. Dvesha generates beliefs justifying avoidance of feared situations. Abhinivesha produces beliefs denying mortality, driving denial and defensive thinking. Understanding the kleshas provides deep insight into why you hold particular beliefs: each serves a psychological function within the klesa-system. Belief transformation becomes possible by addressing the underlying klesa rather than arguing with surface beliefs. For example, if fear (abhinivesha) generates a belief in scarcity, confronting scarcity-thinking directly fails; instead, working with the fear-klesa beneath it allows the belief to naturally release. This framework explains why rational argument rarely changes beliefs: they serve klesa-driven psychological needs. Genuine transformation addresses these underlying needs through yoga practice.
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