Patanjali's principle of abhyasa (consistent practice) provides the mechanism for rewiring deeply embedded cognitive biases through sustained mental discipline.
Abhyasa means sustained, dedicated practice over an extended period—Patanjali emphasizes this as essential for mental transformation. This principle directly applies to bias correction: cognitive biases are deeply grooved neural pathways requiring not intellectual understanding but repeated practice to rewire. Abhyasa teaches that knowing a bias exists intellectually is insufficient; we must practice alternative perspectives consistently until they become natural. This framework explains why awareness alone fails to correct biases—we need systematic rehearsal of corrected thinking patterns. For example, recognizing availability bias intellectually requires practicing statistical thinking repeatedly until it becomes automatic. Patanjali's abhyasa provides structure for long-term bias mitigation programs, moving beyond one-time training sessions to sustained practice regimens. The concept emphasizes that bias correction is fundamentally a training discipline requiring patience, repetition, and progressive refinement.
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