Cetasika are the 52 mental factors that arise with consciousness, forming Abhidharma's sophisticated psychology of emotion, intention, and ethical capacity.
Abhidharma classifies mental phenomena into wholesome factors (like mindfulness, discernment, and compassion), unwholesome factors (like greed, hatred, and delusion), and neutral factors that serve as conditions for others. This taxonomy is not merely descriptive; it maps the psychological levers of transformation. Patanjali's yoga aligns with this by treating the mind as a malleable field where unwholesome tendencies (viksepa, tamas) can be systematically weakened and wholesome capacities (sattvic clarity, prajna) strengthened. Through sustained yogic practice—asana, pranayama, and concentration—practitioners develop the stability and sensitivity to recognize cetasika as they arise. This granular awareness allows intentional substitution: replacing aversion with equanimity, delusion with clarity, grasping with generosity. Abhidharma's cetasika framework transforms emotional life from reactive habit into conscious choice, making psychological mastery scientifically precise.
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