Transcendent wisdom that bypasses analytical reasoning, revealing intelligence dimensions unmeasurable by conventional tests.
Prajna represents direct, non-conceptual knowing that Patanjali identifies as distinct from intellectual analysis. While modern intelligence theory emphasizes logical-mathematical reasoning, prajna describes a mode of knowing that operates without sequential thought—the insight that arrives complete, the pattern recognized instantly. This challenges the myth that intelligence requires analytical process. Patanjali's framework suggests multiple intelligence channels: discursive reasoning versus intuitive comprehension. Creative breakthroughs, systems thinking, and emotional wisdom often emerge through prajna rather than measured IQ processes. By acknowledging prajna as legitimate intelligence, we expand our theories beyond what standardized tests capture. This ancient concept predates modern discoveries about tacit knowledge, pattern recognition, and embodied cognition. Integrating prajna expands intelligence measurement to include wisdom, insight, and direct knowing—dimensions that transform how we evaluate human capability.
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