The ego-sense that creates confirmation bias and self-serving bias by filtering reality through personal identity and self-image.
Asmita, or the sense of 'I-am-ness,' is the ego mechanism that selectively processes information to maintain self-identity. This becomes the cognitive bias engine: confirmation bias emerges when ego filters evidence to support self-image, self-serving bias when asmita protects identity by attributing success internally and failure externally. Patanjali identifies asmita as one of the five afflictions (kleshas) that distort experience. The bias appears inevitable because we naturally defend our sense of self. However, Yoga Sutras teach that recognizing asmita as a constructed pattern—not our true nature—creates psychological freedom. Through witness consciousness (sakshi), practitioners observe how ego-identity drives biased interpretation without being captured by it. This distinction transforms bias recognition from intellectual exercise into embodied wisdom that undermines the emotional investment in distorted thinking.
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