Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Four Limbs of Ethical Action

A framework showing how moral decisions require simultaneous mastery of restraint, discipline, inner work, and wisdom.

Patan
Why It Matters

Patanjali's eight limbs of yoga (Ashtanga) provide a psychological architecture for ethical development. The first two limbs—Yama (ethical restraints) and Niyama (observances)—form the foundation: abstaining from harm, dishonesty, and theft while cultivating purity, contentment, and study. However, Patanjali's genius is recognizing these aren't isolated virtues but interconnected limbs supporting the whole being. True moral psychology requires that we simultaneously work on external behavior (restraint), internal habits (discipline), meditative clarity (pranayama and concentration), and wisdom cultivation (samadhi). When we attempt ethics through willpower alone, we create internal conflict. By developing all four limbs together—restraining harmful impulses while building positive practices, stilling the mind while deepening self-knowledge—our ethical choices become natural expressions of an integrated, transformed self rather than forced compliance.

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