In the light of the Qur'an and Hadith
in both of which the term hikmah has been used,1 Muslim
authorities belonging to different schools of thought have sought over the ages
to define the meaning of hikmah as well as falsafah, a term which
entered Arabic through the Greek translations of the second/eighth and
third/ninth centuries. On the one hand what is called philosophy in English
must be sought in the context of Islamic civilization not only in the various
schools of Islamic philosophy but also in schools bearing other names,
especially kalam, ma`rifah, usul al-fiqh as well as the awa'il sciences,
not to speak of such subjects as grammar and history which developed particular
branches of philosophy. On the other hand each school of thought sought to
define what is meant by hikmah or falsafah according to its own
perspective and this question has remained an important concern of various
schools of Islamic thought especially as far as the schools of Islamic
philosophy are concerned.
1
Philosophy (al
falsafah) is the knowledge of all existing things qua existents (ashya'
al-maujudah bi ma hiya maujudah).8
2
Philosophy is
knowledge of divine and human matters.
3
Philosophy is taking
refuge in death, that is, love of death.
4
Philosophy is
becoming God-like to the extent of human ability.
5
It [philosophy] is
the art (sind'ah) of arts and the science (ilm) of sciences.
6
Philosophy is
predilection for hikmah.
With Suhrawardi we
enter not only a new period but also another realm of Islamic
philosophy. The founder of a new intellectual perspective in Islam, Suhrawardi
used the term hikmat al-ishraq rather than falsafat al-ishraq for
both the title of his philosophical masterpiece and the school which he
inaugurated. The ardent student of Suhrawardi and the translator of Hikmat
al-ishraq into French, Henry Corbin, employed the term theosophie rather
than philosophy to translate into French the term hikmah as understood
by Suhrawardi and later sages such as Mulla Sadra, and we have also rendered al-hikmat
al-muta aliyah of Mulla Sadra into English as "transcendent
theosophy"t6 and have sympathy for Corbin's translation of the
term. There is of course the partly justified argument that in recent times the
term "theosophy" has gained pejorative connotations in European
languages, especially English, and has become associated with occultism and
pseudo-esoterism. And yet the term philosophy also suffers from
limitations imposed upon it by those who have practised it during the past few
centuries. If Hobbes, Hume and Ayer are philosophers, then those whom
Suhrawardi calls hukama' are not philosophers and vice versa. The
narrowing of the meaning of philosophy, the divorce between philosophy and
spiritual practice in the West and especially the reduction of philosophy to
either rationalism or .empiricism necessitate making a distinction between the
meaning given to hikmah by a Suhrawardi or Mulla Sadra and the purely
mental activity called philosophy in certain circles in* the West
today. The use of the term theosophy to render this later understanding
of the term hikmah is based on the older and time-honoured meaning of
this term in European intellectual history as associated with such figures as
Jakob Bohme and not as the term became used in the late thirteenth/nineteenth
century by some British occultists. Be that as it may, it is important to
emphasize the understanding that Suhrawardi and all later Islamic philosophers
have of hikmah as primarily al-hikmat al-ildhiyyah (literally
divine wisdom or theosophia) which must be realized within one's whole
being and not only mentally. Suhrawardi saw this hikmah as being present
also in ancient Greece before the advent of Aristotelian rationalism and
identifies hikmah with coming out of one's body and ascending to the
world of lights, as did Plato.17 Similar ideas are to be found
throughout his works, and he insisted that the highest level of hikmah requires
both the perfection of the theoretical faculty and the purification of the
soul.'8
NOTES
1 For the use of hikmah in the
Qur'an and Hadith see S. H. Nasr, "The Qur'an and ,Hadith as
Source and Inspiration of Islamic Philosophy", Chapter 2 below.
2 Alayka bilhikmah fa inna'l--khayr
f 1-hikmah.
3 See Muhyi al-Din Ibn Arabi, The
Wisdom of the Prophets, trans. T. Burckhardt, trans. from French A.
Culme-Seymour (Salisbury, 1975), pp. 1-3 of Burckhardt's introduction; and M.
Chodkiewicz, Seal of the Saints - Prophethood and Sainthood in the
Doctrine of Ibn Arabi, trans. S. L. Sherrard (Cambridge, 1993):
47-8.
4 See S. H. Nasr, "Fakhr al-Din
Razi", in M. M. Sharif (ed.), A History of Muslim Philosophy, 1 (Wiesbaden,
1963): 645-8.
5 'Abd al-Razzaq
Lahiji, the eleventh/seventeenth-century student of Mulla Sadra who was however
more of a theologian than a philosopher, writes in his kalami text Gawhar-murdd,
"Since it has become known that in acquiring the divine sciences and
other intellectual matters the intellect has complete independence, and does
not need to rely in these matters upon the Shari `ah and the proof of
certain principles concerning the essence of beings in such a way as to be in
accord with the objective world through intellectual demonstrations and
reasoning ... the path of the hukamd, the science acquired through this
means is called in the vocabulary of scholars hikmah. And of necessity
it will be in accord with the true Shari `ah for the truth of the Shari`ah
is realized objectively through intellectual demonstration" (Gawhar-murad
(Tehran, 1377): 17-18). Although speaking as a theologian, Lahiji is
admitting in this text that hikmab should be used for the intellectual
activity of the philosophers and not the mutakallimun, demonstrating the
shift in position in the understanding of this term since the time of Fakhr
al-Din al-Razi. There is considerable secondary material on this subject in Arabic
as well as in European languages. See Abd al-Halim Maimed, al- Tafkir al
fahaft f:l islAm (Cairo, 1964): 163-71; Mustafa Abd al-Raziq, Tamhid
li-ta'rikh al falsafat alislamiyyah (Cairo, 1959), chapter 3: 48ff.; G. C.
Anawati, "Philosophie medievale en terre d'Islam", Melanges de
l'Institut Dominicain d'Etudes Orientales du Caire, 5 (1958): 175-236; and
S. H. Nasr, "The Meaning and Role of 'Philosophy' in Islam", Studia
Islamica, 37 (1973): 57-80.
7. See Christel Hein,
Definition and Einleitung der Philosophie - Von der spdtantiken
Einleitungsliteratur zur arabischen Enzyklopddie (Bern and New York, 1985):
86.
8 This is repeated with only a small
alteration by al-Farabi in his al Jam' bayn ra ay al-hakimayn. According
to Ibn Abi Usaybi'ah, al-Farabi even wrote a treatise entitled Concerning
the Word Philosophy' (Kalam fr ism al falsafah) although some have doubted
that this was an independent work.
9. See S. Strouma, AlFarabi and
Maimonides on the Christian Philosophical Tradition", Der Islam, 68(2)
(1991): 264; and Aristoteles - Werk and Wirkung, 2, ed. J.
Weisner (Berlin, 1987). Quoted in Ahmed Fouad El-Ehwany, "Al-Kindi",
in M. M. Sharif (ed.), A History of Muslim Philosophy, 1 (1963):
424.
10 Kitab al-Huruf, ed. M. Mahdi
(Beirut, 1969): 153-7.
11 KitAb jam' bayn ra ay al-hakimayn
(Hyderabad, 1968): 36-7.
12 Fontes sapientiae (Uyun
al-bikmah), ed. Abdurrahman Badawi (Cairo, 1954):16.
13 On Ibn Sina's "Oriental
philosophy" see Chapter 17 below.
14 Kitab al-Ta{xil ed. M.
Mutahhari (Tehran, 1970): 3.
15 Rasail 1 (Cairo, 1928): 23.
16 See S. H. Nasr, The Transcendent
Theosophy of Sadr al-Din Shirdzi (Tehran, 1977).
17 See his Tawihdi, in H. Corbin
(ed.) Oeuvres philosophiques et mystiques, 1 (Tehran, 1976): 112-13.
18 See S. H. Nasr, Three Muslim
Sages (Delmar, 1975): 63-4.
19 Al Asfar al-arba ah, ed.
Allamah Tabataba i (Tehran, 1967): 20.
20 Mulla Sadra, al-ShawAhid
al-rububiyyah, ed. S. J. Ashtiyani (Mashhad, 1967).
21 See the Introduction of the Asfar.
22 Muhammad Khwajawi, Lawami'
al-arifrn (Tehran, 1987): 18ff., where many quotations from the different
works of Mulla Sadra on the relation between authentic hikmah and
revelation and the spiritual power and sanctity of the Imams (waldyah) are
cited.
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