Periagoge
Concept
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Pratyahara: Sense Withdrawal to Observe Bias Mechanisms

The practice of withdrawing sensory attention inward to observe how biases operate in the gap between perception and interpretation.

Patan
Why It Matters

Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves deliberately withdrawing attention from external sensory stimuli to observe the mind's internal processing. This creates crucial distance between stimulus and response—the space where cognitive biases operate. When you withdraw from constant environmental input, you can observe how your mind automatically interprets, filters, and distorts information. In daily life, biases operate invisibly within the noise of continuous stimulation. Through pratyahara practice—meditation, introspection, contemplative observation—you create conditions for noticing bias mechanisms. You observe how confirmation bias operates: which information you naturally dismiss and which you amplify. You notice anchoring effects: which initial numbers lodge in your thinking. You see how narrative bias reconstructs past events to create false coherence. Pratyahara is thus a methodological tool: the deliberate reduction of external stimulation creates the clarity needed to observe internal distortion mechanisms. This transforms understanding cognitive biases from intellectual knowledge into lived observation of your own mind's characteristic patterns and filters.

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