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Klishta and Aklishta Vasanas: Knowledge Impression Types

Understanding afflictive versus non-afflictive mental impressions helps distinguish Islamic knowledge that liberates from knowledge that binds and creates spiritual imbalance.

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Why It Matters

Patanjali distinguishes between klishta vasanas (afflictive impressions that create bondage) and aklishta vasanas (non-afflictive impressions that support spiritual growth). These are subtle mental impressions deposited by experience, shaping future perception and action. In Islamic pursuit of knowledge as spiritual duty, this distinction is crucial: some knowledge acquired actually binds the soul through pride, sectarian rigidity, or intellectual arrogance, while other knowledge liberates through humility, connection to divine will, and surrender. A scholar might memorize vast amounts of Quran and Hadith yet harbor klishta vasanas—subtle impressions of superiority, judgment of others, attachment to being recognized as learned. These impressions, though hidden, corrupt the soul and block divine closeness. Conversely, the simple believer with less formal knowledge but holding aklishta vasanas—impressions of humility, gratitude, and divine dependence—progresses spiritually. Patanjali's framework empowers Islamic scholars to examine the quality of impressions created by their learning practice: Are they studying to transcend ego or strengthen it? Creating vasanas of liberation or bondage? This discernment ensures that Islamic knowledge-seeking genuinely transforms toward ihsan and spiritual maturity.

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