Avidya or ignorance is the fundamental misperception that generates all false beliefs; recognizing it is the gateway to transforming conviction itself.
Patanjali identifies avidya—often translated as ignorance or misperception—as the primary cause of suffering and the soil from which all false beliefs grow. Avidya is not mere lack of information; it is active misidentification, particularly the confusion of the permanent with the temporary and the self with the ego-mind. This foundational misconception generates cascading false beliefs about identity, security, and reality itself. In the Yoga Sutras, avidya underlies all other klesas (afflictions) including attachment, aversion, and fear. To transform beliefs, one must address this root confusion rather than simply replacing one belief system with another. Patanjali suggests that through direct perception and the systematic practice of yoga, avidya gradually loses its grip, allowing beliefs to reorganize around clearer understanding of what actually is.
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