Patanjali's framework that knowledge consolidates through repeated, focused effort rather than passive observation or pure reasoning alone.
Abhyasa—sustained, committed practice—addresses a critical weakness in both empiricism and rationalism: their assumption that knowledge is available through passive reception or intellectual contemplation. Patanjali insists that understanding requires disciplined repetition over extended time. Empirical data points remain scattered without systematic collection; rational insights lack stability without embodied practice. Abhyasa bridges this gap by treating knowledge as something cultivated rather than discovered. Through yoga, practitioners repeatedly observe their mind's patterns, refine their attention, and gradually restructure their consciousness. This active engagement transforms both perception and reasoning. The empiricist gains organizational frameworks through practice; the rationalist gains embodied verification. Abhyasa suggests that the empiricism-rationalism debate misses a crucial third element: disciplined repetition that integrates sensation with comprehension. Knowledge emerges neither from raw experience nor abstract thought, but from committed, structured engagement with both, systematically refined across time.
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