Rumi's practice of spiritual surrender as prerequisite for true knowledge, suggesting that personal ambition and certainty obstruct both scientific discovery and religious understanding.
Rumi advocates fana—the annihilation or dissolution of the separate self—as essential to experiencing divine truth. This mystical death of ego removes the filters of personal desire, fear, and attachment that distort perception. Applied to the religion-science relationship, this concept challenges how ego manifests in both domains: the scientist's attachment to proving a hypothesis, the believer's need for certainty and control. Rumi's tradition suggests authentic inquiry requires relinquishing defensive attachment to conclusions. This resonates with scientific humility—acknowledging limitations of current knowledge—and religious openness—remaining available to mystery beyond doctrine. The annihilation of ego is not anti-intellectual; rather, it clears space for authentic discovery by removing ego's distorting filters. In dialogue between religion and science, practitioners from both traditions might recognize that their deepest insights emerge when personal investment in being right diminishes, allowing reality itself to reveal its nature.
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