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Glossary›Yoga Sutras Patanjali

Glossary

Yoga Sutras Patanjali

A collection of 195–196 Sanskrit aphorisms systematizing classical yoga philosophy and the eight-limbed path, composed around 400 CE by the sage Patanjali.

What is Yoga Sutras Patanjali?

The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali is a foundational Sanskrit text consisting of 195 or 196 aphorisms (the count varies among scholars and commentators) that codifies the theory and practice of classical yoga. Composed by the sage Patanjali, the text organizes pre-existing yogic knowledge into a systematic framework centered on the eight-limbed path (ashtanga yoga): yama (ethical restraints), niyama (observances), asana (posture), pranayama (breath control), pratyahara (sense withdrawal), dharana (concentration), dhyana (meditation), and samadhi (absorption). The Sutras define yoga in the famous second aphorism as yogas chitta vritti nirodha—the cessation of the fluctuations of consciousness—and present a path toward kaivalya, the liberation of pure awareness from material entanglement.

Divided into four chapters (padas)—Samadhi Pada (on meditative absorption), Sadhana Pada (on practice), Vibhuti Pada (on powers), and Kaivalya Pada (on liberation)—the text draws from Samkhya philosophy, Buddhist meditation techniques, and earlier ascetic traditions. The aphorisms are terse by design, requiring commentary for full comprehension, and have been accompanied since ancient times by extensive explanatory texts.

Origins & Lineage

Scholars generally date the Yoga Sutras to around 400 CE, though estimates range from 500 BCE to 450 CE, with later dates now more widely accepted. Philipp A. Maas places the text at approximately 400 CE based on parallels with the Buddhist philosopher Vasubandhu and the manuscript history of commentaries. The identity of Patanjali remains contested: he may have been a single author or a name representing multiple compilers. A grammarian named Patanjali authored the Mahabhashya (a commentary on Panini’s grammar) around the 2nd century BCE, but modern scholars—following linguist Louis Renou—note that the Yoga Sutras differ significantly in vocabulary and style, making common authorship unlikely. Before the 11th century, no text conflates the two figures; later commentators like King Bhoja merged them into a mythologized persona.

The earliest known commentary on the Sutras is the Yogabhashya, attributed to Vyasa (4th–5th century CE), though some scholars argue Patanjali himself wrote it. Subsequent major commentaries include Vachaspati Mishra’s Tattvavaisharadi (9th century), King Bhoja’s Raja-Martanda (11th century), and Vijnanabhiksu’s Yogavarttika (16th century). The text was translated into Arabic and Old Javanese in the medieval period, then fell into relative obscurity from the 12th to 19th centuries. It was revived in the late 19th century through the efforts of Swami Vivekananda, who lectured on it in the United States, and British colonial scholars who translated it into English.

How It’s Practiced

The Yoga Sutras are not practiced in the way one might practice asana; rather, they are studied, memorized, chanted, and contemplated as a guide to living and inner development. Traditionally, students learned the sutras orally under a teacher who would expand upon each aphorism with commentary and personal instruction. The text describes yoga as an internalized discipline focused on mental mastery, not the postural sequences common in contemporary studios.

Practicing according to the Sutras involves cultivating the eight limbs in a sequential yet interwoven manner. Ethical conduct (yama and niyama) forms the foundation; physical posture (asana) is meant to be stable and comfortable to support meditation, not an athletic end in itself. Pranayama regulates the breath and nervous system; pratyahara trains withdrawal from sensory distractions. The final three limbs—dharana, dhyana, and samadhi—constitute an internal progression from focused concentration to effortless meditative absorption to the ultimate state of liberation (kaivalya), where the seer abides in its own nature, separate from the material world.

Chanting the sutras in Sanskrit, studying them with classical or modern commentaries, and reflecting on their application to daily life are common practices. The text emphasizes abhyasa (sustained practice) and vairagya (detachment) as twin pillars of progress.

Yoga Sutras Patanjali Today

Today, the Yoga Sutras are widely studied in yoga teacher trainings, philosophy courses, and retreats. They are cited as the philosophical backbone of modern yoga, though the connection between Patanjali’s meditative, internalized system and the postural emphasis of contemporary hatha yoga is a 20th-century synthesis, not an ancient pairing. Edwin Bryant, Georg Feuerstein, and B.K.S. Iyengar have produced influential English translations and commentaries accessible to Western audiences.

Seekers encounter the Sutras through weekend intensives, online courses, and book study groups. Recordings of Sanskrit chanting (often 195 or 196 sutras in sequence) are available for memorization and contemplation. The text is frequently referenced in discussions of mindfulness, ethical living, and meditation practice, even among those who do not practice postural yoga. Scholars continue to debate translation choices—Sanskrit’s flexibility allows a single sutra to carry multiple meanings—making the study of multiple commentaries essential for depth.

Common Misconceptions

The Yoga Sutras are not a manual for the physical yoga practiced in most studios today. Asana occupies a single sutra (2.46: sthira sukham asanam—posture should be steady and comfortable) and is intended as preparation for meditation, not as the primary practice. The text does not describe specific postures or sequences; these come from later hatha yoga traditions, particularly 20th-century innovations.

Patanjali did not invent yoga; he systematized existing teachings. The Sutras draw heavily from the older Samkhya philosophy and do not represent the only or original yogic path. Texts like the Bhagavad Gita and Yoga Vasishtha were more influential in India for centuries; the Sutras were relatively obscure from the 12th to 19th centuries and were elevated to canonical status by modern yoga’s global spread.

The Sutras are not easy or self-explanatory. Their aphoristic style demands commentary and teacher guidance. Translating them is complex: the Sanskrit root yoga can mean union, yoking, or discipline, and Patanjali’s own usage emphasizes samadhi (meditative absorption) over union. The goal is not union of self with a higher power but kaivalya—the isolation or liberation of pure consciousness (purusha) from matter (prakriti), a dualistic framework distinct from non-dual Vedantic teachings.

How to Begin

Start with a reliable translation and commentary. Edwin Bryant’s The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali: A New Edition, Translation, and Commentary is scholarly and accessible. B.K.S. Iyengar’s Light on the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali offers a practitioner’s perspective. Swami Satchidananda’s The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali is widely used in teacher trainings and presents a devotional interpretation.

Begin with Book 1 (Samadhi Pada) and read slowly, a few sutras at a time, consulting multiple translations to grasp nuances. Consider studying with a teacher trained in yoga philosophy or attending a Sutras study group. Listening to Sanskrit chanting of the sutras can aid memorization and deepen connection to the text’s sonic dimension. Online platforms like Yogic Studies and the Luminescent podcast offer structured courses.

Approach the text with patience: it is dense, technical, and rooted in a worldview that may differ from your own. Treat it as a guide for contemplation rather than dogma, and recognize that centuries of commentators have disagreed on interpretation. The Sutras reward sustained study and are best understood through lived practice of the eight limbs.

Related terms

ashtanga yogasamadhipranayamayamas niyamasdharanasamkhya philosophy
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