The root ignorance that distorts perception and creates foundational false beliefs about reality, self, and causation.
Avidya—fundamental misunderstanding or ignorance—is the bedrock upon which all false beliefs rest in Patanjali's system. It's not mere lack of information but active distortion: seeing permanence in impermanence, purity in impurity, self in non-self, and pleasure in pain. This root ignorance isn't overcome by intellectual knowledge alone but through direct perception cultivated by consistent practice. Avidya operates like a lens that filters all incoming experience, ensuring false beliefs feel completely real and justified. Most belief-change efforts fail because they address symptoms (specific wrong beliefs) without addressing avidya itself. Patanjali's approach suggests that sustainable belief transformation requires penetrating this fundamental distortion through yogic practice—meditation, ethical refinement, and systematic inquiry—that gradually clarifies perception itself, allowing new beliefs to emerge from clearer seeing rather than replacing one misconception with another.
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