Avidya (fundamental ignorance) in the Yoga Sutras is the primordial bias—mistaking the temporary for the permanent, the painful for the pleasurable, and limitation for freedom.
In Patanjali's framework, avidya is not mere lack of knowledge but active misperception—a fundamental bias about the nature of reality itself. This root ignorance generates all secondary biases: we cling to false beliefs about identity, permanence, and happiness. Avidya explains why cognitive biases persist despite evidence against them; they serve the deeper delusion that individual ego is real and permanent. The Yoga Sutras identify avidya as the source from which all other afflictions (kleshas) flow, including the cognitive distortions we experience. Recognizing avidya doesn't simply add another bias to your reference; it illuminates why humans are biased creatures at all. The teaching suggests that transcending individual biases requires addressing this fundamental misperception. Yoga practice aims to dissolve avidya itself, revealing the discriminative wisdom (viveka) that recognizes reality as it actually is, beyond all projections and distortions.
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