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Glossary›Sutras Of Patanjali

Glossary

Sutras Of Patanjali

A collection of 196 aphorisms on yoga philosophy compiled in India around 400 CE, offering a systematic eight-limbed path to mental stillness and spiritual liberation.

What is Sutras Of Patanjali?

The Sutras of Patanjali, formally known as the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali (Patañjali yogasūtram), is a compilation of 195 or 196 Sanskrit aphorisms (the count varies by tradition) that systematize the theory and practice of yoga. The text defines yoga as yogaś-citta-vṛtti-nirodhaḥ—“the cessation of the fluctuations of the mind”—and presents a structured method for achieving kaivalya (spiritual liberation) through mental discipline, ethical conduct, and meditative absorption. Unlike modern postural yoga, Patanjali’s system prioritizes psychological transformation; only three sutras address physical posture (asana), while the majority concern the mind’s patterns, afflictions, and techniques for stilling its activity.

The sutras are organized into four chapters (padas): Samadhi Pada (51 sutras on meditative absorption), Sadhana Pada (55 sutras on practice, including the eight limbs), Vibhuti Pada (55 sutras on supernatural powers and mastery), and Kaivalya Pada (34 sutras on liberation). Each sutra functions as a condensed “thread” of wisdom—sutra literally means “thread”—intended to be memorized, chanted, and unpacked through study with a teacher and commentary.

Origins & lineage

Scholars date the Yoga Sutras to approximately 400 CE, though debates continue. Philipp A. Maas places the text around 400 CE based on synchronisms with the Buddhist philosopher Vasubandhu (4th–5th centuries CE) and analysis of commentary traditions. Earlier estimates ranged from 500 BCE to 200 CE, but the consensus has shifted toward the later Common Era dating. The text was likely composed in Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit rather than classical Sanskrit, suggesting cross-pollination with Buddhist meditation traditions.

Patanjali himself remains enigmatic. Virtually nothing is known about his biography with historical certainty. Tradition conflates him with the grammarian Patanjali who authored the Mahābhāṣya (2nd century BCE), but linguistic analysis by scholars like Louis Renou shows these are different authors. By the 11th century, King Bhoja identified Patanjali as an incarnation of the serpent deity Ananta, though this reflects hagiography rather than history. Modern scholarship suggests Patanjali was a compiler who synthesized older yoga traditions from Samkhya philosophy, Buddhism, and earlier ascetic practices, rather than an originator of the techniques.

The text’s most important early commentary, the Yogabhāṣya (traditionally attributed to Vyasa), is now understood by many scholars to have been written by Patanjali himself as part of a unified work called the Pātañjalayogaśāstra. This composite text—sutras plus commentary—fell into obscurity from the 12th to 19th centuries, overshadowed by texts like the Bhagavad Gita and Yoga Vasistha. Swami Vivekananda revived the Yoga Sutras in the late 19th century through his lectures in the West, and the text gained prominence as a “classic” only in the 20th century. By the medieval period, it had been translated into over 40 Indian languages plus Old Javanese and Arabic.

How it’s practiced

The Yoga Sutras are not “practiced” in a physical sense but studied as a philosophical manual. Practitioners typically work with a translation and commentary—dozens exist, reflecting different interpretive traditions. The text is designed to be discussed, questioned, and contemplated over a lifetime, not read once and set aside. Traditional study involves memorizing sutras, reciting them aloud, sitting with a single aphorism for extended periods, and dialoguing with teachers or study groups.

The most widely practiced element is the eight limbs (ashtanga) outlined in the Sadhana Pada: yama (ethical restraints like non-violence and truthfulness), niyama (observances like contentment and self-study), asana (steady posture), pranayama (breath regulation), pratyahara (sensory withdrawal), dharana (concentration), dhyana (meditation), and samadhi (absorption). Modern yoga classes often emphasize the first five “external” limbs (Hatha Yoga), while the final three “internal” limbs (Raja Yoga) are pursued through meditation practice.

Study approaches vary. Some read sutras sequentially; others use thematic study guides that cluster related aphorisms. The text assumes a background in Samkhya metaphysics (the dualism of purusha, pure consciousness, and prakriti, material nature), so beginners often benefit from commentaries that bridge conceptual gaps.

Sutras Of Patanjali today

Today, the Yoga Sutras appear in nearly every 200-hour yoga teacher training curriculum worldwide. They are studied in philosophy courses, meditation retreats, and satsangs (spiritual gatherings). Online platforms offer sutra-by-sutra breakdowns; apps provide daily aphorisms. Yet many practitioners encounter the text as intimidating—dense with Sanskrit terminology and metaphysical assumptions alien to secular Western contexts.

Translations and commentaries shape contemporary reception. Swami Satchidananda’s The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali (1978) offers devotional interpretation; Edwin Bryant’s academic translation (2009) provides extensive philological notes; Mukunda Stiles presents a poetic rendering. Each reveals different dimensions of the text. Some teachers contextualize the sutras within Hindu philosophy; others extract “universal” principles applicable across traditions.

The text also influences somatic and psychological modalities. The concept of vrittis (mental fluctuations) informs contemporary mindfulness practices; the kleshas (afflictions like ignorance and attachment) parallel cognitive-behavioral models of suffering.

Common misconceptions

The Yoga Sutras are not the oldest yoga text—the Bhagavad Gita, Upanishads, and other scriptures predate Patanjali. They did not dominate Indian yoga practice for most of history; their modern centrality is a 20th-century phenomenon. The text is not primarily about physical postures; modern postural yoga draws more from early 20th-century gymnastics and bodybuilding than from Patanjali. The sutras are not a universal manual for all yoga styles—they represent one school (Raja Yoga) within a vast ecosystem.

Patanjali’s goal—kaivalya, the isolation of consciousness from matter—differs from the union (yoga as “yoking”) emphasized in tantric and devotional traditions. His framework assumes a dualist metaphysics (Samkhya) that many later yoga lineages reject. The text is not easily applicable to modern life without significant reinterpretation; it was written for renunciates pursuing meditative absorption, not householders balancing careers and relationships.

Finally, the sutras are not meant to be accepted uncritically. Traditional pedagogy encourages debate, questioning, and personal discernment—what one teacher calls “sitting with the text” to discover one’s own truth.

How to begin

Start with a translation that matches your orientation. For accessible devotional commentary, try Swami Satchidananda’s The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. For scholarly depth, Edwin Bryant’s The Yoga Sūtras of Patañjali: A New Edition, Translation, and Commentary includes annotations from classical Indian commentators. For poetic brevity, Mukunda Stiles offers concise renderings.

Begin with the first 16 sutras of the Samadhi Pada, which lay the philosophical foundation. Sutra 1.2—“Yoga is the cessation of the fluctuations of the mind”—is the text’s defining statement. Then explore the eight limbs in Sadhana Pada (sutras 2.29–2.55), which provide practical structure.

Join a study group or take a course with a teacher trained in yoga philosophy. The Yoga Institute (Mumbai) and other traditional schools offer systematic programs. Online platforms like Yoga International provide guided courses. Consider pairing study with meditation practice—the sutras describe techniques, but embodied experience illuminates their meaning.

Finally, approach the text with patience. As Patanjali himself notes, practice requires sustained effort over a long time, without interruption, and with sincere devotion (Sutra 1.14). The sutras are not a quick read but a lifelong companion.

Related terms

ashtanga yogasamadhiraja yogayamas niyamassamkhya philosophykaivalya
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