Non-attachment to political outcomes and personal gain, enabling leaders to serve collective good without ego-driven decision-making or power corruption.
Vairagya—non-attachment or dispassion—represents a counterintuitive yet powerful principle for political psychology. Rather than advocating indifference, vairagya teaches engagement without clinging to results, a radical reorientation for politics typically driven by ambition and attachment to outcomes. Political leaders who cultivate vairagya maintain commitment to their values and constituencies while releasing desperate attachment to re-election, legacy, or personal vindication. This psychological stance prevents the corruption endemic to power-seeking: the bending of principles, the demonization of opponents, the self-justifying narratives that entrench bad policy. In political psychology, vairagya explains why some leaders can gracefully accept defeat, admit error, or prioritize succession planning. It illuminates how citizens can advocate passionately for causes without losing humanity toward those who disagree. This concept transforms political engagement from zero-sum competition into purposeful service, where success is measured by principled action rather than victory secured through compromise of integrity.
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