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Buddhi Pravritti: Discriminative Intelligence in Learning

The yogic cultivation of buddhi—discriminative wisdom—to navigate authentic from false knowledge in Islamic texts.

Patan
Why It Matters

Patanjali distinguished between knowledge that arises from sensory perception, conceptual inference, and direct meditative insight—revealing that not all apparent knowledge carries equal truth-value. This illuminates the Islamic scholar's crucial task of discrimination: distinguishing between Quranic revelation, authentic hadith, weak hadith, scholarly opinion, and cultural habit. Buddhi—cultivated through yoga practice—is the refined faculty that perceives subtle distinctions through direct insight rather than mere intellectual analysis. The scholar with developed buddhi can recognize when a hadith authentically reflects prophetic teaching versus when interpretation has distorted it, can distinguish the Quran's eternal principles from time-specific applications, can sense when scholarly consensus reflects genuine understanding versus when it protects institutional power. This faculty deepens through the very practices that strengthen yoga—meditation, sense-withdrawal, mental discipline—making them not optional enhancements but foundational to authentic Islamic learning. Buddhi-pravritti thus ensures that the knowledge pursued as spiritual duty aligns with reality, serving truth rather than becoming instrument of confusion or domination.

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