Patanjali distinguishes between external practices and internal sadhana (disciplined practice), a framework for understanding how learning deepens when directed inward rather than remaining surface-level.
Antaranga sadhana refers to the internal disciplines—meditation, concentration, and introspection—as opposed to external physical practices. This distinction illuminates a critical dimension of Bloom's Taxonomy often overlooked: progression through learning levels requires increasingly internal work. Surface learning (remembering and understanding) can happen through external exposure and repetition. But higher-order thinking—analysis, synthesis, evaluation—demands internal work: examining assumptions, questioning frameworks, creating meaning. Patanjali's framework shows that intellectual understanding without internal practice remains incomplete. A student can comprehend a principle externally while remaining unchanged internally. True mastery requires turning attention inward to observe how knowledge transforms consciousness. This internal work develops the metacognitive awareness essential for genuine evaluation and synthesis. Learners who engage only with external material remain at lower levels; those who commit to antaranga sadhana, examining how understanding shifts their mind and perspective, access the profound transformation that Bloom's highest levels promise. Internal practice thus becomes the gateway to cognitive transformation.
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