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Index
Cover Half Title Title Page Copyright Page Table of Contents Acknowledgement Notes on the Contributors Introduction Part I: Philosophical Issues in Islamic Revelation and Theology
1. God and Creation in al-RāzĪ’s Commentary on the Qurʾān
Introduction Al-Rāzī and His Conception of the Creation of the World Creation in al-Rāzī’s al-Tafsīr al-Kabīr How Did God Create the World? The Creation of Human Beings Conclusion Further Reading References
2. Reasoning in the Qurʾān
Introduction Commands Rules Legal Arguments Comparison Contrast Categorical Syllogisms Conditional Syllogisms Disjunctive Syllogisms Conclusion Further Reading References
3. Ethical Issues in the Qurʾān and ḤadĪth
Introduction Qurʾān and Ḥadīth Humanity: Moral Reasoning and Choice Personal Ethics Ethics and Learning Wealth and its Ethical Purposes The Elderly Those in Need Right and Wrong Differences between People Religious Pluralism Women and Men Ultimate Values and Global Responsibility Planet Earth and Ecology Conclusion Further Reading References
4. Human Reason in Islamic Theology
Introduction Reason, Revelation, and the Kalām Mu‘tazilite Monotheism and Theodicy The Ash‘arites and the Problem of the Three Brothers Al-Ghazālī’s Contributions Conclusion Further Reading References
5. Jurisprudence and Political Philosophy in Medieval Islam
Introduction Islamic Jurisprudence in Medieval Muslim Society Islamic Political Philosophy in Light of Jurisprudence Al-Fārābī on Virtuosity and the Virtuous City Conclusion Further Reading References
Part II: Logic, Language, and the Structure of Science
6. Logic and Language
Introduction Logic Logic and Language Language Conclusion Further Reading References
7. Rhetoric, Poetics, and the Organon
Introduction The Inclusion of the Rhetoric and the Poetics in the Organon Rhetoric Poetry Conclusion Further Reading References
8. Demonstration and Dialectic in Islamic Philosophy
Introduction Plato and Aristotle Greek Teachings on Dialectic and Intuition (noûs) in the Islamic Philosophical Tradition Ibn Sīnā on Dialectic and Demonstration Ibn Rushd on Dialectic and Demonstration Conclusion Further Reading References
9. The Structure and Methods of the Sciences
Introduction From Late Antique Prolegomena to Classifications of the Sciences Construing the System: First Principles, Subject Matter and Subordination Innovating Methods: Induction vs. Experimentation Conclusion Further Reading References
Part III: Philosophy in the Natural Sciences
10. The Establishment of the Principles of Natural Philosophy
Introduction The Cosmos of Ancient and Medieval Natural Philosophy The Concept of Nature Principles of Nature: Privation, Matter, and Physical Bodies Principles of Nature: Form Natural Causation Conclusion Further Reading References
11. Causality in Islamic Philosophy
Introduction Ibn Sīnā on Causality Al-Ghazālī and the Criticism of Causality Conclusion Further Reading References
12. The Eternity of the World
Introduction Eternal Movement and the Eternity of the World: Aristotle’s Three Demonstrations Eternity of the World and Eternal Movement According to al-Fārābī Radical Eternalism: Ibn Rushd against Ibn Sīnā on Natural Necessity and Providence Conclusion AcKnowledge Further Reading References
13. Arabic Cosmology and the Physics of Cosmic Motion
Introduction Classical Greek Cosmology and the Questions it Raises for Arabic Philosophy Al-Kindī and the Neoplatonica Arabica Al-Fārābī and the Baghdad School Ibn Sīnā Ibn Rushd Conclusion Further Reading References
14. Body, Soul, and Sense in Nature
Introduction Ibn Sīnā’s Conception of the Soul and its Relationship to the Body Ibn Rushd’s Conception of the Soul and its Relationship to the Body Conclusion Further Reading References
Part IV: Metaphysics
15. Establishing the Science of Metaphysics
Introduction Metaphysics as an Aristotelian Science: the Model of the Posterior Analytics The Centrality of Ibn Sīnā’s Account of Metaphysics The Success of Ibn Sīnā’s Model Conclusion Further Reading References
16. Forms of Hylomorphism
Introduction Ibn Sīnā’s Neoplatonized Aristotelian Hylomorphism: On Prime Matter, Corporeal Form and Simplicius Ibn Sīnā’s Neoplatonized Aristotelian Hylomorphism: On Plotinus, Proclus, and the Emanation of Bodies from Intellect Ibn Sīnā’s Neoplatonized Aristotelian Hylomorphism: On the Aristotelian Aspects of His View Avicennian Hylomorphism and Negative Matter Association Hylomorphism in Shahrastani Ps. Empedoclean Hylomorphism: Primal Matter as Love + Strife in Corporeal and Spiritual Beings The Impetus Behind the View: Neoplatonic Emanation, Pure Unspecified Being, and the Dependence of Beings Upon their Source Ps. Empedoclean Tradition in Jewish and Islamic Contexts Greek Backgrounds to Islamic Ps. Empedoclean Hylomorphism Ps. Empedoclean Hylomorphism and Positive Matter Associations Ps. Empedoclean v. Avicennian Conceptions of Matter: On the Locus of Desire, and the First Reality After God Conclusion Further Reading References
17. Essence and Existence in Ibn SĪnā
Introduction Metaphysics and “Science” Metaphysical “Definitions”: “Thing” and “Quiddity” Metaphysical “Definitions”: “Being” and “Existence” Metaphysical “Definitions”: “Necessary,” “Possible,” “Impossible” Metaphysical “Suppositions”: “Necessary Existence” and “Possible Existence” Metaphysical Conclusions: Substances and Accidents Metaphysical Conclusions: The Causes Metaphysical Conclusions: Angels or Intelligences Conclusion Further Reading References
18. Primary and Secondary Causality
Proclus as Source of the Doctrine of Primary and Secondary Causality Primary and Secondary Causality as Creation in the Kalām fī maḥḍ al-khair Primary and Secondary Causality in the Metaphysics of Ibn Sīnā Conclusion Further Reading References
19. Metaphysics of God
Introduction Ibn Sīnā’s “New” Metaphysics Conclusion Further Reading References
20. Creation in Islam from the Qurʾān to Al-FārābĪ
Introduction Creation in the Qurʾān Creation in the Kalām: Mu‘tazilites vs. Ash‘arites Creation in al-Kindī Creation in John Philoponus Creation in the Neoplatonica Arabica Creation in Ismā‘īlī Thought Creation in the Brethren of Purity Creation in al-Fārābī Conclusion Further Reading References
Part V: Ethics and Political Philosophy
21: External and Internal Human Senses
Introduction The Extension of the Domain of Perception Knowing the World: Sensible and Non-Sensible Entities The Value and Signification of Knowledge Gained Through the Senses Conclusion Further Reading References
22. The Epistemology of Abstraction
Introduction al-Fārābī (d. 950/951) Ibn Sīnā (d. 1037) Ibn Rushd (d. 1198) Conclusion Further Reading References
23. Human Knowledge and Separate Intellect
Introduction Interpreting Aristotle The Philosophical Context Al-Kindī and the First Theories Al-Fārābī Ibn Sīnā Conclusion Further Reading References
24. Intellect and the Intelligible in Unity
Introduction Intellection as Unity Knowledge of Concepts vs. Knowledge of Things as They Are Being in This World Ṣadrā and His Sources Conclusion Further Reading References
Part VI : Ethics and Political Philosophy
25. The Ethics and Metaphysics of Divine Command Theory
Introduction Al-Ashʿarī’s DCT Criticisms of DCT Divine Purposes Theory (maqāṣid al-Sharīʿa) Conclusion Further Reading References
26. Freedom and Determinism
Introduction Theological Positions Philosophical Positions Logical, Metaphysical, and Physical Determinism Conclusion Further Reading References
27. Principles of the Philosophy of State
Introduction Philosophical Soteriology and Religion Language, Meaning, and Metaphysics Conclusion Further Reading References
28. Natural and Revealed Religion
Introduction The Roadmap: Ibn Ṭufayl The Model: al-Fārābī A First Comparison: Philosophical Perspectives The Solitary Alternative: Ibn Bājja From a Different Angle: Theological Perspectives Conclusion Further Reading References
29. Law and Society
Introduction The Place of Religion in the City Laws Conducive to the Well-Being of the City The Place of the Philosopher in the City and the Virtuous Regime Conclusion Further Reading References
30. The Ethical Treatment of Animals
Introduction Al-Rāzī Ikhwān al-Ṣafā’ Ibn Ṭufayl Conclusion Acknowledge Further Reading References
Part VII: Philosophy, Religion, and Mysticism
31. Philosophy and Prophecy
Introduction Aristotle’s Psychology and the Corrupted Arabic Version of the Parva Naturalia Al-Kindī on Prophecy Al-Fārābī on Prophecy Ibn Sīnā on Prophecy Al-Ghazālī on Prophecy Conclusion Further Reading References
32. Philosophical Sufism
Introduction Ontology Theology Cosmology and Anthropology Conclusion Further Reading References
33. Religious Readings of Philosophy
Introduction Before Ibn Sīnā Post-Avicennian Approach Conclusion Further Reading References
Index
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