Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Pratyahara: Sensory Bias Awareness Protocol

Pratyahara (sensory withdrawal) reveals how selective attention biases operate by training awareness of which sensory inputs we habitually ignore or amplify.

Patan
Why It Matters

Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves withdrawing attention from external stimuli and becoming aware of the sensory filtering process itself. This practice illuminates attentional biases—how we selectively perceive reality based on expectations and interests. Our brains automatically amplify certain sensory signals while suppressing others; this selective attention creates consistent blind spots in our perception. By practicing pratyahara, we develop meta-awareness of this filtering mechanism. We notice which sounds we habitually ignore, which visual details we miss, which sensations we override. This heightened awareness reveals the mechanisms of availability bias (we remember vivid, emotionally charged events), inattentional blindness (we miss what we don't expect), and anchoring effects (we notice information confirming initial impressions). Patanjali's sensory training becomes a laboratory for studying how biases shape perception. By mastering pratyahara, we gain the ability to deliberately shift our perceptual filters, moving beyond automatic bias patterns toward intentional, unbiased awareness.

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