Background: Tabi'at is the cornerstone of Unani medicine, defined as the intrinsic self-regulating and healing force (Quwwat-e-Mudabbira-e-Badan). Classical physicians such as Hippocrates, Galen, Ibn Sina, and al-Razi described it as the governing principle that maintains physiological balance, sustains innate heat, preserves humoral equilibrium, and defends against disease. The functional dynamics of Tabi'at involve the continuous monitoring of the Mizaj to initiate Nuzj of Ghayr-Tabi'i Akhlat when balance is lost. This is followed by the mobilization of Quwwat-e-Dafia to achieve Tanqiya of morbid matter, thereby restoring the body to its state of I'tidal. While extensively elaborated in classical texts, its integration with contemporary biomedical concepts remains underexplored. Objective: This paper critically analyses the philosophical and physiological foundations of Tabi'at in Unani medicine, highlights its parallels with modern principles such as immunity, homeostasis, and resilience biology, and proposes its potential relevance in contemporary preventive and personalized medicine. Methods: This study adopts a conceptual-narrative comparative review methodology. Classical descriptions of ṬabīʿBat were thematically analysed to extract functional domains including morphogenetic, preservative, defensive, regulatory, and adaptive aspects. Contemporary biomedical constructs were identified through structured literature exploration of peer-reviewed databases including PubMed and Scopus using keywords such as homeostasis, immunity, neuroendocrine regulation, psychoneuroimmunology, and resilience biology. Correlations were categorized as (i) physiological parallels, (ii) conceptual parallels, and (iii) interpretative or metaphorical analogies. These associations are heuristic in nature and are intended to facilitate interdisciplinary dialogue rather than assert direct empirical equivalence. Results: Findings indicate that Tabi'at is an active governing faculty that maintains equilibrium of humors, conserves innate moisture, initiates morphogenesis, regulates temperament, and combats morbid matter (Madda-e-Marz). Its descriptions correspond with modern physiological mechanisms including innate immunity, inflammatory responses, neuroendocrine regulation, and adaptive resilience. The concept of Tabiyat-e-Saniyah (second nature) further emphasizes environmental and habitual adaptation, echoing principles of lifestyle medicine. Conclusion: Tabi'at represents a holistic model of self-healing and regulation that transcends descriptive physiology, offering a valuable framework for integrative medicine. Aligning its classical functions with measurable modern parameters such as immune markers, heart rate variability, and resilience indices can provide new avenues for research and reposition Unani medicine within contemporary health discourse.
Hussain et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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