The principle of not grasping reveals how unchecked desire drives unethical behavior and how conscious restraint liberates moral choice.
Aparigraha—non-grasping or non-attachment—is often misread as asceticism, but Patanjali presents it as essential moral psychology. The person controlled by grasping—for wealth, status, pleasure, security—will inevitably compromise ethics when these desires are threatened. Grasping creates desperation; desperation produces unethical choices. Conversely, the person who has consciously examined their attachments and learned to be content with what is sufficient experiences profound moral freedom. Without the constant inner pressure of unsatisfied wanting, ethical choices become natural rather than costly. Aparigraha also addresses a subtle ethical problem: the ways we appropriate others' autonomy and resources for our needs. It asks us to examine our relationships honestly—where do we grasp for control, validation, or service? Where do we take more than our share? This ethical principle develops generosity naturally: when we're not desperately grasping, we become naturally open-handed. In practical moral psychology, aparigraha means cultivating enough contentment that our ethics aren't compromised by fear of scarcity or deprivation.
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