The practice of purifying intention before acquiring knowledge, aligning Patanjali's focus on mental discipline with Islam's requirement that all acts begin with sincere intention.
In Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, the mind must be disciplined and focused before true knowledge (vidya) can be attained. Similarly, Islamic scholarship demands that niyat—pure intention—precedes all learning. This concept bridges both traditions by treating intention as a psychological foundation. Before studying Qur'anic science, hadith, or jurisprudence, the seeker must examine their mental state and motivations. Are you learning for ego, status, or worldly gain? Or for spiritual transformation and service to Allah? Patanjali teaches that mental fluctuations (vritti) obscure reality; similarly, impure intentions obscure divine wisdom. By cultivating niyat as a deliberate mental discipline—observing thoughts without judgment, redirecting attention toward sincere purpose—the knowledge-seeker transforms learning from mere information gathering into spiritual practice. This alignment creates psychological conditions where knowledge becomes transformative rather than merely accumulative.
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