The practice of repetition that either reinforces cognitive biases through habit or systematically dissolves them through deliberate cultivation.
Abhyasa means sustained practice or effort repeated without interruption. Cognitive biases become entrenched through abhyasa—repeated neural pathways and habitual interpretations strengthen bias patterns until they feel like objective reality. The same principle that locks biases in place can reverse them. Patanjali teaches that abhyasa paired with vairagyam (non-attachment) progressively weakens mental modifications. When practitioners deliberately practice noticing bias patterns, questioning automatic assumptions, and choosing alternative interpretations, they reshape cognitive habits. The critical insight: biases aren't permanent character flaws but reinforced patterns that respond to sustained counter-practice. This reframes cognitive bias work from analysis into systematic habit-reversal practice. By understanding how repetition works, practitioners become architects of their own mental conditioning, deliberately cultivating clarity over confusion through the same mechanism that originally created the distortion.
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