Change, Permanence & Identity
The Complete UPSC Essay Theme Guide
Everything for every essay on this theme — concepts, 12 PYQs mapped, 6 anecdotes, 5 dimensions with India examples, 8 quotes explained, Jaishankar Prasad poem, 3 books, 4 ready conclusions, essay lines, and 6 mistakes to avoid. By the Legacy IAS Research Team.
Legacy IAS Research Team | UPSC CSE Mains 2026 | Essay Paper — Section A & B
What Are Change, Permanence & Identity?
This theme explores how individuals, societies, and civilisations evolve. The simplest entry point: We feel like the same person over time, yet we are constantly changing. That tension — between flux and continuity — is at the heart of every essay this theme generates.
Your sense of being a continuous “self” — the “I” connecting who you were ten years ago to who you are today and who you will be tomorrow.
For nations: the shared history, values, and narrative that makes a people feel they belong to one continuing story.
Key question: What makes us us across time, across change?
The idea that beneath all change, a stable, enduring core persists — the anchor of identity. It is what allows a river to be named and an institution to be trusted.
Examples: A river’s course changes, but it remains a river. India’s political systems changed, but its civilisational continuity persisted through invasion, colonisation, and partition.
Key question: What endures when everything else transforms?
The undeniable reality that everything is in flux: bodies, beliefs, memories, cultures, technologies, and power structures all evolve constantly.
Examples: India’s digital revolution; Constitutional amendments; the shift from colonial identity to democratic republic.
Key question: How do we adapt without losing ourselves?
Every UPSC Essay on This Theme — Mapped and Categorised
This theme appears in both Section A (abstract-philosophical) and Section B (applied India) of the UPSC Essay paper. You must be ready for both. Notice how the philosophical topics ask about the concept itself, while applied topics ask how it plays out in Indian or global reality.
- 2022You cannot step into the same river twice
- 2021History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as a farce
- 2020Culture is what we are; civilisation is what we have
- 2018“The past” is a permanent dimension of human consciousness and values
- 2016The true is rational and the rational is true — G.W.F. Hegel
- 2013Science and religion are not necessarily opposed to each other
- 2021The process of self-discovery has now been technologically outsourced
- 2019South Asian societies are woven not around the state but around plural cultures and plural identities
- 2019Rise of AI — threat of a jobless future or better opportunities through reskilling?
- 2017Fulfilment of the “new woman” in India is a myth
- 2017Has the Non-Alignment Movement lost its relevance in a multipolar world?
- 2013Is the colonial mentality hindering India’s success?
Ready-to-Use Anecdotes — Each With a Specific UPSC Connection
These are your opening weapons. Each anecdote is specific enough to impress an examiner and grounded enough to build an argument. The UPSC angle shows you exactly how to connect it to the theme’s keywords.
Athenians preserved Theseus’s legendary ship by replacing each decayed plank with a new one over centuries. Eventually, none of the original material remained — yet it was still called the Ship of Theseus, and Athenians still revered it.
The paradox: If every part has changed, is it still the same ship? Equally: if your thoughts, beliefs, body, and personality all evolve across decades — are you still the same person?
In 1975, Kodak engineer Steve Sasson invented the world’s first digital camera. Kodak’s leadership rejected the innovation, fearing it would disrupt their profitable film business. For decades, Kodak clung to its identity as a film company.
By the time they tried to enter the digital market, it was too late. The company filed for bankruptcy in 2012 — a monument to the peril of confusing permanent identity with a specific method of expressing it.
Think of a single wave crossing the ocean. It has a clear shape and seems like a single thing. But the wave is not a “thing” — it is the ocean’s water rising and falling in a continuous process. Only the energy and the pattern move; the water itself doesn’t travel.
Buddha taught that our “self” is exactly like that wave — a temporary pattern of changing thoughts, feelings, and perceptions. Not a permanent, solid “I.” We cause our own suffering by thinking of ourselves as separate and solid, when in reality, we are the entire, ever-changing ocean.
Mahatma Gandhi underwent a transformation (change) from a young, status-conscious barrister in Durban — who was humiliated when thrown off a first-class train — to a global leader in homespun khadi who deliberately chose the life of a peasant. His appearance, lifestyle, and political method all changed radically across fifty years.
Yet his core principles — Ahimsa (non-violence) and Satya (truth) — remained entirely unchanged. The man changed; the values were permanent.
The house sparrow (Passer domesticus), called Gauraiya in Hindi, was once the inseparable companion of every Indian household — its dawn chirping as permanent a feature of Indian life as the sound of the morning prayer. Over two decades, modern architecture (no crevices for nests), pesticide-laden food chains, electromagnetic radiation, and unplanned urbanisation have driven it to near-disappearance in Indian cities.
The State of India’s Birds Report 2023 confirms significant urban population drops, particularly in Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, and Bengaluru.
Around 500 BCE, the Greek philosopher Heraclitus stood at a riverbank and made an observation that has not been resolved in 2,500 years: “You cannot step into the same river twice.” Why? The river is constantly flowing — new water, new sediment, new temperature every moment. And you are also different — older by one step, changed by one moment of experience.
Yet we name the river. We return to it and call it the same river. We trust it to be there. That trust — in the face of constant flux — is what identity means.
How This Theme Unfolds Across Every Dimension
UPSC examiners reward multidimensional essays — those that show the same theme through political, economic, social, environmental, and technological lenses. Pick two or three dimensions most relevant to your specific topic. Each entry below gives you a complete India example with the three keywords applied.
The proposed shift to simultaneous state and national elections strikes at India’s political identity. For decades, the permanence of India’s federal character was expressed through staggered elections — each state asserting its distinct democratic rhythm on its own political calendar. The proposed change to a single national poll cycle would create a new identity of administrative efficiency, but at a potential cost to federal diversity. It forces the question: is India’s core identity a diverse union of distinct peoples, or a single national polity that has been allowing its parts to behave as if they were distinct?
Also connect: The Emergency (1975–77) as the moment India’s democratic identity faced its most severe test of permanence — and survived because the people’s sense of who they were proved stronger than one government’s will to redefine it.
For a century, companies like Tata Motors had a permanent identity synonymous with the internal combustion engine — the roar of a motor was their industrial soul. The electric vehicle revolution forces radical change: shutting engine plants, investing billions in battery technology, redesigning the entire manufacturing identity. The identity question: as these companies replace their mechanical hearts with silent, electric ones, are they still “motor” companies — or have they become technology and battery companies that are forced to change their very essence to survive?
India angle: India’s IT sector faces the same identity crisis. Built on routine cognitive work (software services, BPO), it faces AI automation of its core product. The sector must either find a new identity (high-value, non-routine, creative) or watch its permanent identity — low-cost, high-volume tech services — become obsolete. Kodak’s ghost walks the corridors of Indian IT.
For centuries, marriage in India carried a permanent identity — a heterosexual, lifelong, religiously sanctioned union for procreation and social order. Today, that definition is being fundamentally challenged: the rise of same-sex union advocacy, live-in relationships, solo parenting, and the Supreme Court’s recognition of non-traditional family forms reflects a fluid reimagining of what family and commitment mean. This social change forces the question: what is the core identity of “marriage” if its most long-standing, defining features are being changed or replaced?
Patriarchy and the “new woman” (PYQ 2017): The Hindu Succession Act (2005) granted equal inheritance rights to women — legal change. Yet the World Inequality Report 2022 showed men earn 82% of labour income while women earn 18% — structural permanence. The law changed. The patriarchal identity of labour markets endured. Change is not transformation when the deep structures remain intact.
The house sparrow (Gauraiya) symbolised ecological permanence and emotional identity in every Indian household for millennia. Over two decades, modern architecture, pesticide-laden food chains, and unplanned urbanisation drove its near-disappearance from Indian cities. The State of India’s Birds Report 2023 confirms the crash.
The Ganga — India’s most sacred river — carries a permanent civilisational identity as the mother of Indian culture. Biologically, its oxygen levels in several stretches are insufficient to support fish. We have maintained the cultural permanence (the name, the ritual, the pilgrimage) while allowing the ecological reality to undergo catastrophic change. This is the theme’s most uncomfortable version: claiming permanence while allowing the substance of that permanence to disappear.
Identity was once rooted in consciousness and memory — internal, singular, irreproducible. The emergence of AI Digital Twins — virtual, data-driven avatars that mimic human preferences, speech, and decisions — is challenging that foundational assumption. Advanced models now assist CEOs, political leaders, and celebrities with AI-based communication bots that act and sound like them, making decisions on their behalf. This creates the identity tension of our era: who is the “real” decision-maker when the AI twin acts first?
The film Her (2013) explored a man falling in love with an AI — blurring the line between emotional intimacy and artificial presence. The 2021 UPSC topic — “The process of self-discovery has been technologically outsourced” — is this same question asked politically: if algorithms define your information environment, curate your identity, and predict your choices with 87% accuracy, has the “self” been outsourced to a server in another country?
Eight Quotes — Each Explained, Each Connected to India
Every quote below is explained in terms of the three keywords and connected to a specific India example or PYQ. Never use a quote in UPSC without connecting it to something real and specific — a quote dropped as decoration is worse than no quote at all.
“You cannot step into the same river twice. For it is not the same river and you are not the same man.”
— Heraclitus, 500 BCE“The world as we have created it is a process of our thinking. It cannot be changed without changing our thinking.”
— Albert Einstein“The more things change, the more they stay the same.”
— Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr“Culture is what we are; civilisation is what we have.”
— UPSC Essay Paper 2020 (the topic itself, attributed to varied sources)“History repeats itself, first as tragedy, second as a farce.”
— Karl Marx, The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte“Ekam sat vipra bahudha vadanti — Truth is one; the wise call it by many names.”
— Rig Veda (c. 1500 BCE)“The present moment is all we ever have. True change is within.”
— Eckhart Tolle, The Power of Now“Finding one’s personal legend leads to the realisation of one’s true self.”
— Paulo Coelho, The AlchemistIndia’s Identity in Verse — Ready for Conclusion or Introduction
A poem-based conclusion or introduction is one of the highest-scoring techniques in UPSC essays — when the poem is directly relevant, accurately attributed, and connected to the argument. This poem is the best available for the Change, Permanence & Identity theme.
Svayam prabha samujjvala swatantrata pukaarti. हिमाद्रि तुंग श्रृंग से प्रबुद्ध शुद्ध भारती,
स्वयं प्रभा समुज्ज्वला स्वतंत्रता पुकारती।
Change-Permanence-Identity reading: The poem captures India’s permanent identity — rooted in its ancient wisdom (Himalayas as civilisational anchor), spiritual purity, and geographical soul. Despite historical changes (invasions by Alexander, the Mughals, the British, Partition, seventy years of post-colonial experimentation), this poem says India’s core identity remains unyielding. The Himalayas do not change. The call for freedom that emanates from them — the call to be fully, authentically Indian — does not change. Only the political form of that freedom changes.
How to use it in UPSC: Always provide: (1) Roman transliteration, (2) plain English translation, (3) two sentences of analysis connecting it to your essay’s argument. Use at the conclusion of any essay on Indian national identity, colonial mentality, or the spirit of India theme. Also powerful for: “The past is a permanent dimension of human consciousness” (2018) · “South Asian societies woven around plural cultures” (2019).
One Book Per Keyword — Used Correctly, Never Just Named
Use a book reference in UPSC only if you can state its argument correctly and connect it to India. A book named without its argument scores nothing. A book whose argument is precisely stated and connected to a real India example scores significantly.
Introduction, Body & Conclusion Lines — Models to Adapt
These are models, not templates. Read each one, understand why every sentence is there, then write your own version using a different anecdote or example. The structure is the lesson.
Four Conclusion Types — Each for a Different Essay Approach
Each of these conclusions takes a different final position on the theme. Choose the one that matches your essay’s body argument — a conclusion that contradicts the body loses marks regardless of how well-written it is.
How to Write This Theme Without Sounding Like Everyone Else
These six mistakes appear in the majority of average-scoring essays on this theme. Each mistake is paired with the specific fix. Read, internalise, and check your own practice essays against this list before submission.
Know the Theme. Write the Essay. Score the Marks.
Legacy IAS integrates theme-based preparation like this into structured essay writing practice — so every anecdote, dimension, quote, and conclusion becomes an argument that works under timed exam conditions. Join the Sadhana Mains Mentorship.
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