Beyond the Ego's Game: Hindu Wisdom on Manufactured Differences and True Unity The human tendency to create and magnify differences, even where none fundamentally exist, reveals one of the most persistent patterns of conditioned consciousness. This phenomenon, deeply analyzed in Hindu philosophical traditions, emerges from the ego's desperate need to establish superiority, maintain separation, and justify its own existence. The ancient seers of Hindu spirituality identified this pattern thousands of years ago, recognizing it as a fundamental obstacle to spiritual realization and social harmony. The Ego's Need for Differentiation Hindu philosophy recognizes the ego, or ahamkara, as the faculty that creates the sense of "I" and "mine." This identification necessarily requires creating boundaries between self and other, between "us" and "them." The Bhagavad Gita addresses this when Krishna explains to Arjuna: "The soul can never b...