Samskara (mental impressions) explains how past experiences create grooves in the mind that predispose us toward specific biases and automatic thinking patterns.
Samskara represents the deep imprints or grooves created by repeated thoughts and experiences. These impressions exist below conscious awareness but powerfully influence perception and behavior, making them a crucial mechanism in understanding persistent cognitive biases. Your samskaras shape what you notice, what you remember, and how you interpret ambiguous information—classic bias territory. The Yoga Sutras teach that samskaras are responsible for vasana (latent tendencies) that drive habitual thinking. A person with samskaras of criticism develops negativity bias; someone with samskaras of trauma develops threat-detection bias. Unlike momentary mental states, samskaras are deeply grooved patterns requiring sustained practice to transform. Recognizing your cognitive biases as samskaras—not as rational errors but as deep mental grooves—explains their persistence and resistance to logical argument. Yoga practice directly addresses samskaras through meditation, pranayama, and ethical discipline, gradually rewiring the mind's fundamental patterns. In your cognitive bias reference, samskara provides the bridge between individual bias instances and the underlying mental architecture that generates them.
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