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POWER 50 is fifty capsules across fifty days — the whole PSIR syllabus revised once, in the order the syllabus is actually built. One topic a day: read the capsule, write the same day, and don’t break the chain. Running alongside it are PSIR Dynamics 2026 and the PYQ Vault — 560 PYQs across the fifty days, roughly eleven a day.
Day 11 — Indian Political Thought — Part II
Day 11 holds five makers of modern Indian political thought together as one argument about freedom: Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, Sri Aurobindo Ghosh, M. K. Gandhi, M. N. Roy and B. R. Ambedkar. Each answered the same colonial situation — a defeated polity, an alien modernity, an unequal society — but each placed a different value at the centre: education for Sir Syed, spiritual nationhood for Aurobindo, moral self-rule for Gandhi, rational freedom for Roy, social democracy for Ambedkar. The capsule runs each thinker end to end — signature ideas, key works, the standard contrasts (Gandhi against Marx, Ambedkar against Gandhi, Roy against Lenin) — and closes with the verbatim lines and comparisons that let a 15-marker write itself. Between 2016 and 2025, this chapter carried 4 × 10-markers · 6 × 15-markers · 2 × 20-markers, spread across all five thinkers, with Ambedkar, Gandhi and Aurobindo as the repeat-tested heavyweights.
Write before the evening:
- Sri Aurobindo’s idea of Swaraj has deep significance in the Indian social, political and cultural history. Analyze. (UPSC 2023, 15m)
- Manabendra Nath Roy’s political thought highlighted the humanistic aspects of Marxism. Discuss. (UPSC 2024, 15m)
- “State… does the greatest harm to mankind by destroying individuality, which lies at the root of all progress.” — Mahatma Gandhi. Elucidate. (UPSC 2025, 15m)
If you go blank on a thinker or a comparison, it is covered in full in the Foundation and OGP class notes and handouts — revise it, then write.



