The yogic ethical disciplines as essential foundation ensuring knowledge-seeking becomes morally and spiritually authentic.
Patanjali placed Yama (restraints) and Niyama (observances) before all other yoga practices because ethics form the essential foundation; similarly, Islamic knowledge-seeking requires the moral framework of the character. Yama includes non-violence, honesty, non-stealing, and energy-conservation; Niyama encompasses purity, contentment, heat, self-study, and surrender. These aren't rules imposed externally but recognitions that a mind corrupted by dishonesty, greed, or violence cannot perceive divine truth clearly. Islamic tradition similarly establishes that knowledge without akhlaq (character) becomes destructive—the scholar without compassion becomes arrogant, the learned but unjust become instruments of harm. By practicing these preconditions, the scholar establishes the psychic and moral integrity that makes the knowledge-pursuit genuine. This framework rescues Islamic learning from becoming mere credential-collecting and restores its dimension as spiritual duty requiring the whole person's ethical transformation. Knowledge pursued from such foundation bears fruit in both understanding and righteousness, making the scholar a living testimony to truth rather than merely someone who knows about it.
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