Avidya (fundamental ignorance) is the primordial misperception that generates all false beliefs, making belief change a process of dispelling ignorance itself.
Patanjali identifies avidya—often translated as ignorance or misperception—as the root cause of all suffering and false beliefs. Avidya is not mere lack of information; it's an active distortion of perception, a fundamental misreading of reality. It manifests as seeing the impermanent as permanent, the painful as pleasurable, and the non-self as self. All our limiting and false beliefs grow from this root avidya. Understanding this is liberating because it reveals that belief change isn't about collecting more information; it's about correcting fundamental perception. Patanjali teaches that avidya can be directly counteracted through knowledge (vidya) developed through yoga practice and meditation. When we begin to perceive reality more clearly—seeing impermanence, understanding interconnection, recognizing the constructed nature of ego—false beliefs naturally dissolve like mist in sunlight. This framework positions belief transformation as awakening from a kind of perceptual trance, making the goal not just changing specific beliefs but fundamentally clarifying how we perceive existence itself.
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