Patanjali's principle of sustained, consistent effort that transforms initial understanding into automaticity and mastery across Bloom's levels.
Abhyasa means practice performed with conscious intention and unwavering consistency over extended time. Patanjali emphasizes that understanding alone cannot produce transformation; only repetition embeds knowledge into the nervous system. This principle directly addresses Bloom's progression: remembering facts requires minimal practice, but application and analysis require sustained engagement. Through abhyasa, neural pathways strengthen, making complex cognitive operations increasingly effortless. The Yoga Sutras teach that without abhyasa, insight remains intellectual rather than embodied. A student might understand calculus theoretically but cannot apply it until thousands of practice problems integrate the knowledge. Patanjali's genius lies in recognizing that all five mental modifications—even correct knowledge—require abhyasa to stabilize. This framework elevates repetition from rote memorization to a sacred practice of progressive mastery.
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