The state of absorption where the distinction between knower and known dissolves, transcending the subject-object split that divides empiricism and rationalism.
Samadhi, the eighth and final limb of Patanjali's yoga, represents a state of consciousness where the boundaries between observer and observed collapse into unified awareness. This concept fundamentally challenges the empiricism-rationalism debate by moving beyond both frameworks: it neither privileges external observation nor internal reason, but rather dissolves the very distinction that creates this conflict. Patanjali describes samadhi as the goal of yoga practice, where the mind achieves such stability that knowledge arises directly from the nature of reality itself, unmediated by conceptual filtering. This state cannot be reached through reason alone nor through sensory data accumulation; it requires systematic practice, ethical preparation, and mental discipline. Samadhi suggests that complete understanding emerges when both empirical observation and rational analysis become transparent, revealing a unified field of consciousness. For modern practitioners, this indicates that transformative knowledge transcends the limitations of either empirical or rationalist approaches, accessible instead through integrated practice that develops both perception and understanding simultaneously.
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