Patanjali's framework of mental fluctuations maps directly onto Bloom's progression from remembering surface impressions to evaluating deeper truths.
Citta vritti—the modifications of consciousness—forms the foundation of Patanjali's psychology and directly parallels Bloom's Taxonomy. Just as Bloom describes ascending levels of cognitive complexity, Patanjali identifies five categories of mental modifications: correct knowledge, misconception, imagination, sleep, and memory. Moving from the base level of remembering raw impressions to higher-order thinking requires mastering these mental patterns. When practitioners understand how citta vritti operates, they develop metacognitive awareness essential for progressing through Bloom's levels. Lower vritti patterns (misconception, imagination) keep us at recall and comprehension stages. Cultivating correct knowledge and refined memory elevates us toward analysis, synthesis, and evaluation. This framework suggests that authentic learning isn't merely intellectual accumulation but transformation of consciousness itself, enabling genuine understanding rather than superficial knowledge.
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