The five mental distortions (correct knowledge, misperception, imagination, sleep, memory) that shape how citizens and leaders process political information and form beliefs.
Patanjali's concept of vritti—the fluctuations and modifications of the mind—directly illuminates how political actors distort reality. In political psychology, citizens and leaders operate through five primary mental filters: pramana (verified knowledge), viparyaya (misperception based on bias), vikalpa (imaginative narratives disconnected from fact), nidra (collective apathy or sleep), and smriti (reactive memory-based judgments). Understanding these vritti helps political psychologists recognize that political disagreement rarely stems from access to identical facts, but from fundamentally different mental operations processing reality. By identifying which vritti dominates a political actor's consciousness, practitioners can design interventions targeting the actual cognitive distortion rather than merely arguing facts. This framework transforms political conflict from a simple information problem into a sophisticated understanding of consciousness itself.
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