Why Asuras Saw No Wrong in Ravana’s Act: Power, Dharma, and the Ramayana Two Worldviews, One Moral Conflict The Ramayana presents a profound contrast between two systems of values: the Dharma of the Devas and humans, rooted in righteousness, restraint, and duty, and the Asura Dharma, which is driven primarily by power, conquest, and dominance. Ravana’s kidnapping of Sita is not merely a personal crime but a symbolic act that exposes this clash of worldviews. While to Rama and the world of Dharma it was a grave sin, to Ravana and many Asuras it was an expression of strength and entitlement. Asura Dharma: Might Is Right In Asura society, authority flowed from physical and political power. Victory validated action. If one could defeat another, then one had the right to possess whatever the defeated owned, including land, wealth, and even relationships. This mindset did not require moral justification beyond capability. Ravana himself articulates this worldview when he says to Sit...