The principle of consistent, purposeful effort required to build critical thinking skills that transcend cultural boundaries and ingrained habits.
Abhyasa, meaning repetitive practice with full attention, is Patanjali's antidote to mental disturbance and conceptual rigidity. This isn't mechanical repetition but conscious, deliberate engagement that rewires both mind and perception. Applied to critical thinking across cultures, abhyasa means systematically studying different philosophical traditions, not passively but with active questioning and comparison. The practice requires sustained effort to overcome the mental inertia that keeps us locked within our cultural framework. Through abhyasa, practitioners develop the mental agility to hold multiple perspectives simultaneously without collapsing into relativism. Patanjali emphasizes that this practice must be grounded in reality and pursued over extended periods to become stable. For cross-cultural thinking, this translates to sustained engagement with unfamiliar ideas, deliberate study of different logical systems, and repeated exposure to worldviews that challenge our assumptions. Abhyasa builds the intellectual stamina necessary for genuine intercultural dialogue rather than superficial comparison.
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