Patanjali's samadhi (absorption) represents the ultimate stage where the observer, observation process, and observed become unified, transcending subject-object biases.
Samadhi, the eighth limb of yoga, is a state of unified consciousness where the distinction between observer and observed dissolves. While samadhi is a profound meditative state, it illuminates a critical insight about cognitive biases: many biases arise from the fragmented subject-object duality where the observing mind stands apart from and judges what it observes. This separation creates opportunities for projection, rationalization, and distortion. In samadhi, the observing consciousness and the observed phenomenon unite, eliminating the interpretive space where bias occurs. While achieving true samadhi requires deep practice, the principle reveals that biases are fundamentally products of dualistic perception. This reference framework suggests that moving toward less fragmented, more integrated perception naturally reduces the psychological mechanisms generating bias. Practitioners working toward samadhi-like states of unified presence report decreased reactivity and bias-driven behavior. The concept positions bias-transcendence not as intellectual achievement but as a deepening of consciousness itself.
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