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Charak Samhita's of Ayurveda Theory of Personality> Personality Types based on Triguna

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Topics

Estimated time: 14 minutes
  • Introduction
  • The Three Gunas
  • Triguna Types and Subtypes
  • Common Misconceptions
  • Real-Life Application
  • Key Points: Personality Types based on Triguna
CISCE: Class 12

Introduction

The Triguna system, rooted in Indian philosophy (notably the Sankhya tradition and Ayurveda), classifies human personality and behaviour into three fundamental qualities (“gunas”): Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas. These gunas mix in varying proportions to shape every individual’s thoughts, emotions, and actions.

CISCE: Class 12

The Three Gunas

Trait Sattva Rajas Tamas
Key Traits Purity, harmony, wisdom, clarity, calm, truth Activity, passion, drive, ambition, restlessness Inertia, heaviness, ignorance, negativity, confusion
Metaphorical Color White Red Black
Function in Mind Increases light, knowledge, emotional balance Drives achievement, change, desire Brings stability, sometimes dullness or apathy
CISCE: Class 12

Triguna Types and Subtypes

CISCE: Class 12

Common Misconceptions

  • “Sattva is perfection”—in reality, all three gunas are necessary; Sattva just brings balance.
  • Rajas and Tamas are not “bad”—they provide energy and stability but are problematic in excess.
  • Anyone can shift their guna balance with lifestyle changes.
CISCE: Class 12

Real-Life Application

During a school project:

  • Sattva-dominant students organise fairly, mediate, and keep teamwork positive.
  • Rajas-dominant students want to lead or push results fast, sometimes being impatient.
  • Tamas-dominant students prefer to be quiet observers or need reminders to participate.
CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Personality Types based on Triguna

  • Triguna classifies personality into Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas from Indian philosophy (Sankhya & Ayurveda).
  • Sattva = purity, calm, wisdom; rajas = action, ambition; tamas = inertia, confusion.
  • Sattva balances the mind; Rajas drives action; Tamas brings stability but causes dullness in excess.
  • All three gunas are necessary — none is completely good or bad.
  • Guna balance is not fixed — lifestyle changes can shift your dominant guna.

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