The three reliable sources for forming accurate beliefs: direct perception, logical inference, and credible testimony.
Patanjali identifies pramana—means of valid knowledge—as the three reliable sources through which accurate beliefs should form: perception (what you directly experience), inference (logical reasoning from observation), and testimony (information from trustworthy sources). False beliefs often arise from accepting invalid sources: hearsay, projection, emotional reactivity, or cultural assumption without verification. This framework offers practical discernment for evaluating which beliefs deserve commitment. A belief about your capabilities should primarily rest on direct perception (what you've actually accomplished) and inference (patterns you've observed), not merely on others' opinions or internalized doubts from childhood. Patanjali's insight is liberating: you can systematically audit your belief-system by asking which pramana supports each conviction. Beliefs lacking grounding in direct perception, logic, or credible authority are likely avidya-distorted. This practice cultivates what might be called 'epistemic hygiene'—taking responsibility for the quality of sources informing your convictions. Over time, this disciplined approach to belief-formation naturally eliminates many false convictions while strengthening those rooted in valid, verifiable evidence.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.