Patanjali's abhyasa (consistent practice) reveals how repeated thought patterns solidify cognitive biases into rigid mental structures.
Abhyasa, meaning continuous practice or effort, is Patanjali's principle for building mental patterns through repetition. This concept illuminates why cognitive biases are so persistent: they're reinforced every time we apply them, becoming deeper neural grooves. Each confirmation bias instance strengthens the bias; each anchoring effect reinforces our reliance on that anchor. Understanding abhyasa explains the self-perpetuating nature of biased thinking—we don't just think biased thoughts once, we practice them daily. However, Patanjali's framework also offers a solution: if negative biases are built through repetition, positive mental patterns can replace them through the same mechanism. By consciously practicing unbiased observation and critical thinking, we use abhyasa therapeutically. This transforms cognitive bias work from passive awareness into active mental conditioning, making sustained effort the key to transformation rather than momentary insight.
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