Patanjali's principle that transformation requires repeated, methodical practice—combining empirical testing with rational discipline.
Abhyasa, usually translated as "practice" or "effort," is Patanjali's epistemological method—the disciplined repetition required to generate reliable knowledge about the mind. Rather than settling for isolated insights or abstract theory, abhyasa demands systematic, replicable investigation of your own consciousness. This directly bridges empiricism and rationalism: you empirically test practices on yourself (meditation, breath work, ethical disciplines) and rationally refine your approach based on results. The Yoga Sutras emphasize that abhyasa must be sustained for "a long time, without interruption, with sincere devotion." This is scientific method applied to consciousness—hypothesis testing, data collection through experience, iterative refinement. Abhyasa rejects both blind faith (accepting teachings without personal verification) and idle speculation (theorizing without practical grounding). It's empiricism with discipline and rationalism with embodied testing. Modern practitioners recognize abhyasa in habit-formation science: both ancient yoga and contemporary psychology demonstrate that repeated, intentional practice rewires neural patterns and psychological responses.
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