S
smithm29
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I’m working on a project on Isma’ili Neoplatonism at Holy Apostles College and Seminary. Part of the project requires that I track my progress with a blog, which I’m keeping at arabicphilosophy.wordpress.com (the name is a bit of a misnomer, as the primary philosophers I’m working on are not Arabs, but Persians). These are some of the guys whose work led to the development of Aquinas’ philosophy, even if in a roundabout way. If anybody is interested in the Islamic Neoplatonism of the Ismai’li (specifically al-Sijistani, but also al-Kirmani to a lesser extent), I invite you to my blog to follow my progress, comment when I get something wrong, and maybe point out resources that I’m unaware of.
Here I’ve copied the text from my “about” page so that you can have an idea what I will be writing about over the next two months or so.
Here I’ve copied the text from my “about” page so that you can have an idea what I will be writing about over the next two months or so.
It seems that what I am searching for has changed since I first wrote this “about” page. A detailed thesis will follow in a week or two, but here is a brief outline of what I intend to do, as I initially posted on another forum when I was looking for information.
According to the early “Islamic” neoplatonists like al-Farabi and ibn Sina, God did not create the world. (I put Islamic in scare quotes because I do not believe most Muslims would consider that an acceptable view.) Instead, it emanated from him by necessity, the same way that heat emanates from me by necessity. al-Sijistani and al-Kirmani maintained the emanationist viewpoint, but they understood the need for God to create, so in their system, God created the first intellect. When the first intellect contemplated its perfection, the rest of the universe emanated from it. For them, God is so separate from all of creation that we cannot even contemplate him, and instead contemplate the first intellect. Prophets also receive prophecy by participating in the first intellect- and after death, we return to the first intellect. All of this is demanded in their system because of their strict formulation of Tawhid.
Having said all of that, no- I don’t believe that al-Sijistani and al-Kirmani are in the mainstream. In fact, I think the consequences of their formulation of Tawhid and subsequent cosmology sets up an alternate god in the form of what they call the “First Intellect”. In their system, his sole purpose is to create the first intellect, who is then responsible for the entire history of the universe. I want to show how they reduce God to an impotent being, more comparable to Anaxagoras’ nous than to God as understood by Muslims, and how their system requires that the true object of worship is the first intellect, not the creator.