The Fitrah: our original disposition

Islamic Psychology  ·  Explained

The Fitrah: our original disposition.

The innate disposition toward goodness we are each born with, and what developmental science says about it.

The fitrah is the original, innate disposition every human being is born with, inclined by nature toward goodness and the recognition of God. The Qur’an speaks of it as the natural pattern on which humanity was created (30:30), and the Prophetic tradition teaches that every child is born upon the fitrah, before life writes over it.

In the tradition

The fitrah describes a clean original state, a kind of inner compass, which is then overlaid and obscured by experience, conditioning and harm. Importantly, it is never destroyed, only covered. Much of the spiritual life is understood as a returning, a clearing away of what has accumulated so the original disposition can show through again.

The modern parallel

Developmental psychology has found that infants arrive with surprising early inclinations toward fairness, empathy and social connection, long before they are taught them. We also know that a person’s core temperament is then profoundly shaped by environment and experience. The tradition’s picture of an original nature, later overlaid by life, is strikingly consistent with this.

Why it matters

The fitrah offers a deeply hopeful frame for healing. It says that beneath the defences, the wounds and the patterns, the core of a person is sound. Therapy and tazkiyah, in this light, are not about manufacturing a better self from scratch but about removing the distortions over the self that was always there.

Part of the Mentscape encyclopedia of Islamic psychology. Educational writing, not personal clinical advice.

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Islamic psychiatry and modern neuroscience, for Muslims who want to heal without leaving their faith at the door.

Written and overseen by a practising psychiatrist and psychotherapist.