The concept of fundamental ignorance as the root of misinterpretation, showing how cultures systematically misunderstand each other through different layers of avidya.
Avidya, often translated as ignorance or misunderstanding, is the fundamental condition from which all other mental disturbances arise in Patanjali's psychology. Critically, avidya isn't mere lack of information but active misperception—seeing things as permanent when they're temporary, pure when they're mixed, external when they're internal. When examining critical thinking across cultures, avidya manifests as systematic misinterpretation rooted in different worldview foundations. Each culture develops particular forms of avidya that feel like obvious truth from within but appear as profound misunderstanding from outside. Recognizing avidya in cross-cultural dialogue requires humility about our own blind spots. Patanjali suggests that avidya operates at deep layers—we can't simply think our way out of it; we must cultivate direct perception through sustained practice. For intercultural critical thinking, this framework acknowledges that disagreements often reflect genuinely different perceptual structures, not just different conclusions from shared premises. Understanding avidya transforms cross-cultural criticism from accusation into collaborative investigation of shared human limitations.
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