Knowledge transmitted through listening and oral recitation, forming the foundation of Vedic wisdom before written texts.
Shruti, meaning 'that which is heard,' represents knowledge revealed through direct auditory transmission rather than written documentation. In Patanjali's framework, this oral tradition develops the listener's capacity for concentrated attention and memory refinement. The Yoga Sutras themselves were preserved through recitation lineages, demonstrating how profound philosophical understanding flows through voice and ear rather than page and eye. This concept emphasizes that wisdom requires active listening engagement, not passive reading. For oral traditions, Shruti validates that knowledge preserved through human voice carries transformative power precisely because it demands mental presence. The practitioner must develop acute hearing, both literal and metaphorical, cultivating the psychological attention necessary for genuine learning. This practice strengthens the mind's capacity to absorb, retain, and embody teachings through direct sensory engagement.
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