Strategic dispassion from partisan outcomes that enables clearer political judgment and reduces polarization-driven tribalism.
Vairagya, or non-attachment, represents liberation from compulsive investment in political outcomes—a psychological stance that paradoxically enables more effective political engagement. Patanjali's vairagya doesn't mean apathy or withdrawal; rather, it means holding political convictions without grasping, defending, or identifying self-worth with electoral victory or ideological dominance. In political psychology, excessive attachment to 'winning' creates the desperation that fuels extremism, conspiracy thinking, and dehumanization of opponents. Leaders and citizens practicing vairagya can advocate passionately for their values while remaining flexible, collaborative, and capable of genuine dialogue. This detachment dissolves the psychological need to prove opponents wrong, which dominates toxic political discourse. Vairagya cultivates what psychologists call 'secure attachment'—confidence in one's values without requiring external validation through political dominance. For political psychology, this offers a revolutionary approach: citizens and leaders grounded in vairagya naturally exhibit lower polarization, greater empathy, and more creative problem-solving capacity.
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