Patanjali's principle of consistent experimentation and verification through sustained practice, establishing empiricism as an active discipline rather than passive observation.
Abhyasa, or devoted practice, is one of the two pillars of yoga transformation in Patanjali's system. It represents systematic, repeated engagement with experience—not once-and-done observation but iterative verification. This concept transforms empiricism from passive watching into active experimentation: the yogi deliberately practices postures, breathing, and meditation repeatedly to gather reliable data about consciousness and mind. Abhyasa embodies the scientific method's requirement for reproducibility. Yet Patanjali also emphasizes that repetition alone fails without rational discernment (viveka); mindless repetition perpetuates error. Abhyasa resolves the empiricism-rationalism divide by insisting that knowledge comes through engaged practice informed by reason. Each iteration refines both empirical understanding and rational insight. This framework explains why genuine learning requires effort: we cannot simply think our way to knowledge, nor can we observe passively. Understanding reality demands disciplined, repeated engagement with experience, continuously refined by rational reflection.
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