“Because,” Dr. Vikas continued, walking slowly between the benches, “ethics is not a chapter. It is the moment when your career and your character collide. And in that collision, something either breaks or becomes unbreakable.”
At Drishti IAS centers (Mukherjee Nagar, Prayagraj, etc.) for direct interaction.
There were moments when his patience thinned. A bright scholar once argued that rules were inefficient, that bending them was necessary for greater good. The debate grew heated until Dr. Divyakirti stopped it with an almost invisible smile and a question that felled arrogance: “Who bears the cost when decisions go wrong?” The room fell silent. The student’s certainty wavered; it was replaced by an uneasy awareness of consequences.
The course is meticulously designed to cover the entire UPSC syllabus. Here is how it is typically segmented:
Dr. Vikas Divyakirti holds a PhD in Psychology (from DU) and is an alumnus of Kirori Mal College and the Faculty of Management Studies (FMS). His academic background in psychology gives him a razor-sharp edge. While other teachers focus on "what to write," Dr. Divyakirti focuses on "how to think."