Science and traditional yoga as knowledge systems are much more similar than most people realise. To start with the most obvious, yoga and science are both considered difficult, and rightly so. They require not only the utmost sincerity, intellectual rectitude and effort of the individuals involved, but in all likelihood also some special talents which not everybody has. Besides this, they also involve a number of social support structures that consist of the same basic elements. It does happen, for example, that individuals take up science or yoga entirely on their own, but much more typically they do it in small groups, whether these are universities and laboratories, or gurukuls and ashramas. The idea is clearly that to have some chance of success, the often considerable efforts of the individual need to be supported by a surrounding that shares the same ideals and objectives. Both endeavours are furthermore supported by an extensive body of literature; there is a largely implicit common understanding on what within the specific discipline or school of yoga is accepted as 'true', what can legitimately be doubted, and what can be fruitfully explored; there are well-established techniques, procedures and 'best practices'; and finally, both in science and in yoga, young (re)searchers are guided by a more or less complex network of peers and elders.
Another important area of similarity is that of the assessment of the quality of the work. Though yoga tends to be done in a very different atmosphere and assessment is not always as formalised as it is in the scientific setting, in principle, the same elements that help to assess the quality of research in the objective sciences are also used to assess the quality of work in the field of yoga. When we would use yoga as a subjective research methodology, we could, for example, assess the quality of the work in terms of:
Both in science and in yoga, the quality of research is to quite an extent dependent on the quality of the instruments. The big difference is of course, that in subjective research the most important instruments are the cognitive faculties of the researcher. The demands on these are, however, largely the same as what can be expected from researchers in any field. They could be listed as:
The people who can assess the quality of the work, are again largely the same:
It may be noted that all these processes and safeguards contribute and yet are fallible: in spite of one's best efforts, sometimes poor work will be praised and sometimes good work will not be recognized. But this is true for all types of research (and for human endeavour in general). The important issue here is that the difficulties that the two types of research encounter in the areas mentioned so far, are not essentially different, neither in type, nor in degree.
There are no doubt also differences, some of them substantial. In the next section, we will look at some of these differences in more detail, and discuss the problems they produce and how they can be resolved.
1Newness is not normally associated with work in the field of yoga, where it is widely held that the ancients knew everything worth knowing, but if we look at the great yogis that history remembers, then we see that they actually are remembered for the new elements they introduced. We will see later how 'newness' can be a factor even in research in yoga by relative beginners.
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