The yogic principle of releasing attachment to rigid beliefs and previous conclusions, enabling flexible progression through Bloom's levels toward deeper, more nuanced understanding.
Vairagya, the complementary principle to abhyasa, teaches non-attachment and releasing identification with fixed ideas. Patanjali emphasizes that mental rigidity prevents evolution; learners must constantly release outdated understandings to grow. In Bloom's framework, progression often requires unlearning: comprehension must yield to analysis, which challenges previous assumptions; evaluation demands releasing comfortable positions for nuanced complexity. Vairagya enables this psychological flexibility. Many learners become attached to surface-level knowledge, defending it rather than evolving it. Vairagya cultivates the maturity to recognize that understanding is progressive—what is true at one level becomes partial truth at higher levels. This non-attachment doesn't mean abandonment but rather holding knowledge lightly, remaining curious and open. Students practicing vairagya move more freely through Bloom's hierarchy, willing to deconstruct and reconstruct their knowledge, achieving genuine transformation rather than mere accumulation.
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