hindu-liberationfeatured in 1 work
Non-Violence (Ahiṃsā)
To harm no living being — in deed, word, or thought — the first and deepest of yoga's vows.
Ahiṃsā is non-violence — the refusal to harm any living being, not only in deed but in word and thought. Patañjali lists it first among the restraints, and the tradition treats it as the root from which the other virtues grow: where non-harming is firmly established, the yoga texts say, hostility itself ceases in one's presence. Shared across Hindu, Jain, and Buddhist ethics, it became, in the modern era, the moral core of Gandhi's politics — though that is a later development built on an ancient principle.
How it traveled
- Yoga-sūtraKāśī (Varanasi) · 375explains
Key passages(9)
Very high
High
High
High
High
Moderate
Moderate
Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad · Vedic Revelation (śruti)
Moderate
Moderate