The ego-sense that creates confirmation bias and overconfidence by defending a fixed self-image against contradictory evidence.
Asmita, the sense of 'I-ness' or ego-identity, is identified in the Yoga Sutras as a fundamental source of perceptual distortion. This isn't mere narcissism but the subtle tendency to filter all information through the lens of self-preservation and identity protection. Asmita drives confirmation bias—we seek information that reinforces our self-image and dismiss evidence that threatens it. It generates the Dunning-Kruger effect where limited self-knowledge creates overconfidence. Patanjali understood that our sense of separate identity creates a default bias toward protecting that identity at all costs. By observing asmita without judgment, practitioners recognize how ego-defense mechanisms cloud objective reasoning. The yoga path suggests that loosening rigid identification with a fixed self paradoxically improves decision-making by removing the emotional stakes that fuel biased thinking. This ancient insight directly addresses modern cognitive biases rooted in identity protection.
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