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Concept
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Asteya: Non-Stealing Knowledge and Proper Attribution

The ethical principle of honoring intellectual property and proper attribution as respect for knowledge's sacred source.

Patan
Why It Matters

Asteya, the principle of non-stealing, extends beyond material goods to intellectual and spiritual property. In Islamic knowledge-seeking, this means scrupulously crediting sources, acknowledging teachers, and avoiding plagiarism—recognizing that knowledge comes through transmission chains (isnad) that must be honored. To steal credit for ideas or to misrepresent sources severs the sacred link between scholar and those who came before. Asteya teaches that knowledge is held in trust, not owned, and must be passed forward with integrity intact. This ethical stance protects knowledge from corruption and honors both the sources from which wisdom flows and the community receiving it. By practicing asteya, the Islamic scholar becomes a faithful custodian of transmitted wisdom rather than an ambitious individual seeking personal glory. This integrity is inseparable from spiritual authenticity; knowledge pursued with intellectual honesty carries blessing, while knowledge stolen or misrepresented becomes spiritually empty.

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