Patanjali's principle of detachment from outcomes that enables authentic evaluation and deeper understanding without ego interference.
Vairagya, or non-attachment, is the counterbalance to abhyasa in Patanjali's system. While practice builds understanding, attachment to results distorts that understanding. In Bloom's Taxonomy, evaluation requires objectivity; bias corrupts analysis. Vairagya teaches students to engage fully in learning without clinging to desired outcomes, grades, or validation. This creates psychological space for genuine evaluation—seeing what actually is rather than what ego wants to see. Patanjali recognized that learners attached to proving themselves right cannot evolve beyond their current understanding. Non-attachment paradoxically accelerates learning because energy previously spent defending ego now fuels insight. A researcher practicing vairagya follows data truthfully even when results contradict initial hypotheses. This principle transforms understanding from confirmation bias toward genuine discovery. Vairagya enables the intellectual humility necessary for reaching and maintaining Bloom's highest levels.
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