The doctrine of non-self becomes psychologically operative when practitioners recognize that even the witness consciousness Patanjali cultivates is a construction, not a permanent observer.
Patanjali's yoga seeks to establish the witness consciousness (sakshi or purusha)—the transcendent awareness that observes the mind's fluctuations without being affected by them. This is a powerful practice for creating psychological distance from reactive patterns. However, Abhidharma reveals a profound deeper layer: this very 'witness' is itself constructed from consciousness (vijnana) arising in conjunction with specific mental factors. Anatta (non-self) does not negate the usefulness of the witness perspective; rather, it shows that this witness is impermanent, dependent on conditions, and without inherent substantial identity. When a practitioner fully investigates consciousness through Abhidharma's framework, they discover that awareness itself arises and passes away moment-to-moment, with no unchanging entity 'behind' the process. This realization completes Patanjali's yoga: the witness-self, so skillfully cultivated as a tool for liberation, is itself recognized as a useful fiction rather than ultimate reality. The psychological freedom this generates far exceeds mere detachment; it is the direct insight that consciousness itself is a process, not a possession, and the final dissolution of the imagined observer-observed duality.
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