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Concept
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Krama: Sequential Political Change

Understanding transformation through sequential stages prevents both utopianism and paralysis in systemic reform.

Patan
Why It Matters

Krama—the principle of sequential unfolding or stages—is fundamental to Patanjali's understanding of how transformation occurs. The yoga sutras teach that consciousness evolves through definite stages; attempts to skip stages create instability. Applied to political psychology, krama suggests that sustainable political change follows developmental sequences that cannot be rushed. Revolutionary movements that ignore krama—attempting to leap to final ideals without building intermediate institutions and consciousness—typically collapse or become authoritarian. Conversely, reformers who understand krama recognize which stage of development is appropriate for particular contexts and work skillfully within those constraints. Krama-informed political analysis asks: what consciousness must develop first? What institutions must be built? What victories must be consolidated before advancing? This prevents both utopian thinking (expecting overnight transformation) and resigned fatalism (seeing no progress). Historical examples demonstrate that lasting change follows stages: awareness-building, coalition-formation, institutional reform, consciousness integration. Krama provides a framework for understanding why certain political moments are ripe and others premature. Political wisdom involves recognizing the sequential nature of change and working with, rather than against, this organic development.

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