Surrender to purpose beyond personal ego prevents the narcissistic pathologies that corrupt political power.
Ishvara pranidhana—surrender to a power greater than oneself—is central to Patanjali's framework and directly counters the ego-inflation that characterizes political pathology. Political psychology identifies narcissism, megalomaniac tendencies, and god-complex behavior as endemic to power structures. Patanjali suggests these arise from the fundamental illusion that the individual ego is the primary actor. By consciously surrendering to a purpose transcending personal ambition—whether understood as dharma, the common good, or truth itself—political actors reorient their psychology away from self-aggrandizement. Leaders practicing ishvara pranidhana can accept electoral defeat, acknowledge failure, and serve something beyond themselves. This doesn't mean passivity; rather, it channels effort toward genuine service. Historical political movements with longevity and moral authority—from the civil rights movement to independence struggles—often drew power from spiritual surrender to justice itself. Patanjali's framework suggests this surrender is not weakness but the psychological prerequisite for durable, non-corrupting political power.
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