The yogic ethical principle of non-stealing applied to scholarship ensures faithful transmission of Islamic knowledge without distortion, fabrication, or misappropriation of sources.
Asteya, the yogic principle of non-stealing, extends beyond material goods to intellectual and spiritual integrity. In Islamic learning, this means faithfully transmitting knowledge without fabricating hadith, misquoting scholars, or stealing credit for others' intellectual work. The Islamic hadith science developed elaborate authentication methods to prevent corruption of the Prophet's teachings—a direct expression of Asteya's principle. Patanjali's ethical framework recognizes that mental purity and trustworthiness are prerequisites for genuine learning; a mind habituated to deception cannot access deeper truth. Islamic scholars who meticulously cite sources, acknowledge their teachers, and resist the temptation to distort teachings for personal advantage exemplify both Asteya and the Islamic commitment to Amanah (sacred trust). This alignment shows that scholarly integrity is not merely an academic virtue but a spiritual discipline that preserves the purity of transmitted wisdom and protects the seeker's psychological development.
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