The ethical precepts that form the foundation for legitimate political authority and trustworthy governance.
Yama and niyama—the ethical restraints and observances that begin Patanjali's eight-fold path—establish that political psychology must rest on ethical foundation. Yama includes ahimsa (non-harm), satya (truthfulness), asteya (non-theft), brahmacharya (integrity), and aparigraha (non-grasping). Niyama includes saucha (purity), santosha (contentment), tapas (disciplined effort), svadhyaya (self-study), and ishvara pranidhana (service beyond ego). In political psychology, these aren't merely personal virtues but prerequisites for legitimate governance. Leaders embodying yama and niyama build trust and followership; those violating them create psychological toxicity throughout institutions. Societies grounded in these principles—where leaders practice truthfulness, non-harm, and non-grasping—develop healthier political cultures with lower psychological reactivity and greater civic engagement. Conversely, political systems built on deception, coercion, and exploitation generate pervasive distrust that corrupts even well-intentioned reforms. Patanjali's framework reveals that political psychology is fundamentally ethics-based: the character and commitments of leaders and institutions shape the psychological health of entire populations.
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