Systematic questioning of beliefs to examine their foundations, distinguishing between beliefs based on direct experience and those based on assumption.
Vitarka means 'reasoning' or 'inquiry'—the faculty of deliberate investigation. In Patanjali's framework, vitarka is the practice of examining beliefs through questioning: Where did this belief originate? Is it based on direct experience or inherited assumption? What evidence supports it? What evidence contradicts it? Vitarka is not skepticism that dismisses everything; it's rigorous questioning that separates beliefs grounded in actual perception from those rooted in vritti (mental modification). This practice reveals that many beliefs operate invisibly, never questioned or examined. By bringing vitarka to your convictions—creating space for genuine inquiry—you interrupt automatic belief acceptance. Vitarka also prevents the common trap of replacing old limiting beliefs with new limiting ones without investigation. This makes vitarka an essential practice: belief change without inquiry often substitutes one unexamined conviction for another.
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