Strategic non-attachment to political outcomes and personal power that enables clearer ethical judgment.
Vairagya—non-attachment or dispassion—creates psychological freedom from the fear and craving that corrupt political judgment. Leaders and citizens often pursue power obsessively, clouding their perception and ethics. Patanjali's teaching suggests that genuine effectiveness emerges when we act without desperate clinging to specific outcomes. In political psychology, vairagya allows leaders to make unpopular decisions based on principle rather than popularity-seeking, and citizens to advocate without personal ambition distorting their values. This doesn't mean indifference, but rather passionate commitment combined with acceptance of outcomes beyond control. Political actors practicing vairagya develop reputation for integrity and become less susceptible to bribery, flattery, or fear-based manipulation. This detachment paradoxically increases authentic influence and trust.
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