Patanjali identifies false knowledge as a major obstacle requiring systematic correction, paralleling Islamic epistemology's emphasis on verifying knowledge sources and avoiding spiritual misguidance (dhalal).
Viparyaya, defined as false or distorted knowledge, is one of Patanjali's five categories of mental content. It encompasses misperceptions, false beliefs, and incorrect understandings that feel true but lead away from reality. This directly addresses the Islamic concern with knowledge verification (isnad) and sound methodology (manhaj) in sacred learning. The Quran repeatedly warns against following inherited beliefs without verification, and against scholars who lead people astray. In Patanjali's framework, viparyaya must be actively recognized and corrected through rigorous investigation and comparison with reality. For Islamic seekers, this means developing critical discernment, studying reliable sources, and learning from qualified teachers (sheikhs) who can identify subtle spiritual delusions. The process of correcting false knowledge is itself spiritually transformative—it humbles the ego, reveals the limits of personal understanding, and opens the heart to genuine truth. This vigilance against viparyaya ensures that the knowledge-seeker's spiritual progress rests on sound foundations rather than illusion.
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