"Three lenses through which Vallalar's philosophy, the Tamil philosopher Ramalinga Swamigal (1823–∞), can be considered epistemologically are: (1) as a distinctive non-Western epistemology grounded in direct luminous experience (Suddha Sanmarga), (2) as a provocation and critique of Western rationalist epistemology, whose exclusion of embodied, compassionate knowing constitutes a structural impoverishment of what counts as knowledge; or (3) as a generative frame for investigating perennial questions, the nature of consciousness, the relationship between knower and known, through the radical claim that light of absolute compassion is not merely metaphor but the fundamental substrate of both being and knowing.
This paper will argue that Vallalar's epistemological claim, that compassion (Jeevakarunyam) is not merely an ethical disposition but the very condition of possibility for direct knowing. The purification of the body, mind, soul and spirit through compassionate practice opens faculties of perception unavailable to the detached rational subject, constitutes a direct challenge to the Cartesian separation of knower from known that underwrites modern Western epistemology. Where Kant forecloses the noumenal, Vallalar proposes a phenomenology of light of absolute compassion in which the noumenal is progressively disclosed through transformed perception."
How can resistance to wrongful action be justified within ethical traditions that do not accept the intrinsic value of individual rights? This paper develops the concept of virtue-protective resistance: resistance justified, at least in part, by the aim of preventing the wrongdoer from suffering moral self-harm, damage to their own moral integrity through wrongdoing. I argue that this justificatory structure is conceptually distinct from rights-based and consequentialist alternatives. It operates on a different normative input (the wrongdoer’s moral integrity rather than the resister’s rights or aggregate consequences) and contains an irreducibly relational element grounded in the resister’s structural position within the wrong. Taking an initial cue from early Chinese philosophical texts but developing the argument independently, I defend the moral self-harm thesis and show that virtue-protective resistance scales from self-removal to power-restriction under graduated conditions of necessity and proportionality. Because the moral self-harm thesis is accepted across a wide range of independent ethical traditions, such as Aristotelian, Confucian, Stoic, Christian, Islamic, Buddhism, the framework supplies a justification for moral reform that is internal to traditions where rights-based critique lacks traction, addressing wrongdoers in a normative language they already speak.