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Biographical Note
Sadr al-Din Shirazi (Mulla Sadra) (b. 1571-1640)
One of the most important figures of post-Avicennan Islamic
philosophy, and certainly the most eminent philosopher of the
Safavid era in Iran. Known more commonly as Mulla Sadra, he was
born in Shiraz where he received his early education.
He went to Isfahan to complete his studies in transmitted and
intellectual sciences. In Isfahan, which was then a major center
of learning, Sadra studied such transmitted sciences (al-‘ulum
al-naqliyyah) as Qur’anic exegesis (tafsir) and
jurisprudence (fiqh) with Baha' al-Din Muhammad al-Amili
(d. 1031/1622). Amili, also known as Shaykh-i Baha'i, was the
great theologian of the Safavid era and at once a philosopher,
theologian, jurist, mathematician, architect, and poet.
In the field of intellectual sciences (al-‘ulum al-‘aqliyyah),
Sadra studied with Sayyid Baqir Muhammad Astarabadi, known as
Mir Damad (d. 1040/1631). Mir Damad’s al-Qabasat haqq al-yaqin
fi huduth al-‘alam, known shortly as Qabasat, is a
tour de force philosophical work combining the principles of
Avicennan philosophy with the doctrines of the school of
Illumination (ishraq), founded by Shihab al-Din
Suhrawardi. Sadra had a close relationship with Mir Damad, and
it was through him that he became a master of traditional
philosophical schools. Some sources mention, among Sadra’s
teachers, Mir Abu'l-Qasim Findiriski (d. circa 1050/1640-1), who
was both a Peripatetic philosopher and an ascetic Sufi, and had
traveled to India several times. It was under the intellectual
patronage of these figures that Sadra developed his ideas and
gave one of the most important examples of the unity of the
transmitted and intellectual sciences in Islam.
After completing his formal education in Isfahan, Sadra was
faced with the fierce opposition of some of the akhbaris
in Isfahan, known for their strict literalism. In tandem with
his predilection for spiritual discipline, Sadra refrained from
the public life by withdrawing to a small village called Kahak,
near Qom where he completed the groundwork for the composition
of his major works. After a period of both physical and
spiritual retreat, Sadra returned to Shiraz to teach in the Khan
madrasah whose building is still extant today. In his personal
life, Sadra lived the life of an ascetic, and died in Basra on
the way back from his seventh pilgrimage to Mecca on foot. In
addition to producing ground-breaking works in traditional
philosophy, Sadra also trained a number of notable students,
among whom 'Abd al-Razzaq ibn al-Husayn al-Lahiji (d. 1662) and
Mulla Muhsin Fayd Kashani (d. 1680) are the most important.
Sadra composed works both in the field of transmitted and
intellectual sciences, and they span through the entire spectrum
of traditional philosophy from cosmology and psychology to
metaphysics and Qur’anic commentaries. His monumental 4-part, 9-volume
al-Hikmat al-muta'aliyah fi'l-asfar al-'aqliyyah al-arba'ah
(“The Transcendent Wisdom in the Four Intellectual Journeys”),
known simply as Asfar, can be read as a classical
encyclopedia of philosophy minus the section on logic. His al-Shawahid
al-rububiyyah is a rigorous treatment of some of the most
difficult questions of traditional philosophy. Kitab al-Masha’ir,
a work completed towards the end of his life, is Sadra’s own
summary of his philosophical system, which he calls
‘transcendent wisdom’ (al-hikmat al-muta’aliyah). al-Hikmat
al-‘arshiyyah is Sadra’s most important work on eschatology.
Sadra was particularly interested in eschatology and wrote a
number of treatises on the subject, among which Risalat al-hashr
is to be noted. Sadra’s Qur’anic commentaries have been edited
and published by Muhammad Khwajawi in 7 volumes.
Without doubt, the Asfar is the most important work of
the Sadrean corpus in which every single problem of traditional
philosophy is addressed from the point of view of Sadra’s
transcendent wisdom. Sadra structures the entire Asfar
according to the four journeys of the soul in the path of
spiritual realization. The first journey is from the world of
creation to the Truth and/or Creator (min al-khalq ila’l-haqq)
where Sadra addresses the questions of metaphysics and ontology
known also under the rubric of ‘general principles’ (al-umur
al-‘ammah) or ‘divine science in its general sense’ (al-’ilm
al-ilahi bi’l-ma’na al-a‘am). It is in this part of the
Asfar that Sadra deals with the ontological foundations of
his system including such issues as the meaning of philosophy,
being (wujud) and its primacy (asalah) over
quiddity (mahiyyah), gradation of being (tashkik
al-wujud), mental existence (al-wujud al-dhihni),
Platonic Forms (al-muthul al-aflatuniyyah), causality,
substantial movement, time, temporal origination of the world,
the intellect, and the unification of the intellect with the
intelligible. The second journey is from the Truth to the Truth
by the Truth (min al-haqq ila’l-haqq bi’l-haqq).
In the second journey, we find a full account of Sadra’s natural
philosophy and his critique of the ten Aristotelian categories.
Among the issues discussed extensively are the categories,
substance and accidents, how physical entities come to exist,
hylé and its philosophical significance, matter and form
(hylomorphism), natural forms, and the roots of the hierarchy of
the physical order.
The third journey is from the Truth to the world of creation
with the Truth (min al-haqq ila’l-khalq bi’l-haqq) where
Sadra goes into his reconstruction of theology, which is
discussed under the name of ‘metaphysics’ or ‘divine science in
its particular sense’ (al-‘ilm al-ilahi bi’l-ma’na’l-akhass).
It is in this section of the Asfar that the theological
dimension of Sadra’s thought and his relentless attacks on the
theologians (mutakallimun) come to the fore. Among the
issues Sadra addresses are the unity and existence of God and
the previous kalam proofs given of it, the ontological
simplicity of the Necessary Being, the Names and Qualities of
God, God’s knowledge of the world, His power, Divine providence,
speech (kalam) as a Divine quality, good and evil
(theodicy), procession of the world of multiplicity from the
One, and the unity of philosophy (‘wisdom’, hikmah) and
the Divine law (shari’ah).
The fourth and final journey is from the world of creation to
the world of creation with the Truth (min al-khalq
ila’l-khalq bi’l-haqq) where the great chain of being is
completed with psychology, resurrection, and eschatology.
The concept of “journey” (safar) has two closely related
meanings in Sadra’s thought. First, the intellectual journey of
the traveler (salik) comes to an end in the present and
posthumous state of human beings. Second, the material and
spiritual journey of the order of existence, which begins with
the creation of the world and the reality of being, is brought
to full completion in its ultimate return to God. This part of
the Asfar provides a thorough investigation of
traditional psychology with material culled from the Peripatetic
psychology of Ibn Sina and the gnostic views of Ibn al-‘Arabi.
As in the other parts of the Asfar, Sadra presents a
critical history of the ideas and theories on the human soul
from the Greeks to the Muslim philosophers and theologians.
Among the issues discussed are the soul and its states, various
powers of the soul in its interaction with the physical and
intelligible world, sense perception, imagination (takhayyul)
and the imaginal world (‘alam al-khayal), his celebrated
doctrine that the soul is bodily or material in its origination
and spiritual in its subsistence’ (jismaniyyat al-huduth
ruhaniyyat al-baqa’), impossibility of the transmigration of
souls (tanasukh), spiritual and bodily resurrection, and
the reality of heaven and hell.
Mulla Sadra stands at the crossroads of four major intellectual
perspectives in Islam, which are the Illuminationist school (ishraq)
established by Surawardi, Peripatetic school (mashsha’i)
represented chiefly by Ibn Sina and Nasir al-Din Tusi, and the
gnostic (‘irfan) school of Ibn Arabi with such prominent
members as Sadr al-Din al-Qunawi and Dawud al-Qaysari, and
Islamic theology (kalam). In many ways, the Sadrean
corpus is an attempt to synthesize these major philosophical
perspectives within the context of Sadra’s ontology. This was a
natural result of Sadra’s concern to reconcile
theoretical/discursive thinking with realized knowledge.
The tension between the purely theoretical, discursive and
analytical thinking and metaphysical/intuitive knowledge, which
is a ubiquitous fact across the world civilizations, had already
been noted and described by Suhrawardi as an impediment on the
way to realized knowledge. To overcome this dichotomous
relationship, Suhrawardi proposed the unification of discursive
mode of thinking (bahth), represented primarily by the
Peripatetics, and realized or tasted knowledge (dhawq)
exemplified by the metaphysician Sufis (‘urafa’). For
Suhrawardi, the ideal philosopher or sage is the one who
combines analytical thinking and intuitive knowledge, through
which one reaches illumination (ishraq).
In his grand synthesis, Sadra incorporates Suhrawardi’s model
and takes it even a step further by articulating the unity of
revelation (qur’an), demonstration (burhan) and
metaphysical or realized knowledge (‘irfan). He subjects
nearly all of the major problems of traditional philosophy to
the triple scrutiny of Qur’anic teachings, logical analysis and
intuitive knowledge. In culling material from the four major
intellectual perspectives, Sadra does not create a syncretic
synthesis but rather integrates them into a coherent whole under
the rubric of his transcendent wisdom. This is where Sadra
becomes particularly important in the history of Islamic thought
as the tradition of integrating the revealed and human knowledge
reaches a remarkable peak in his system.
Sadra’s
synthetic perspective leads him to the unity of what is
called the transmitted and intellectual sciences. The
transmitted sciences (al-‘ulum al-naqliyyah) comprise
such disciplines as Qur’anic commentary (tafsir),
hadith, and grammar (nahw), and their methodology is
based on the literal transmission and analysis of the text under
investigation. In contrast to the intellectual sciences, the
study of transmitted sciences does not require rational analysis
because the subject matter is not constructed like a
philosophical or logical problem even though one can certainly
develop a systematic discourse about it.
The study of Arabic grammar, for instance, is based on the
simple fact that we learn it from others, and there is no
logical reason, or lack thereof, for the use of Arabic verbs at
the beginning rather than at the end of a sentence. The only
source to which we can turn for an explanation is those who have
used the Arabic language in this way, and the justification for
this is to be found nowhere other than in the subject-matter
itself.
By contrast, the intellectual sciences (al-‘ulum al-naqliyyah)
are based not on imitation (taqlid) or mere transmission
but on rational and intellectual analysis, which includes
metaphysical intuition. The justification of a philosophical
argument derives not from the received authority of a text or
person but from its cogency and rationality. In this sense, the
intellectual sciences require an intellectual effort or exertion
(ijtihad) on the part of the philosopher or simply the
seeker of knowledge. It would be absurd, for instance, to cite
the authority of one’s teacher or a text to prove that two plus
two is four or that A cannot be both A and non-A at the same
time. In a broad sense, the aim of this methodological
distinction between the transmitted and intellectual sciences,
whose earliest formulation goes back to Muslim philosophers
before Sadra, is to show the complementary nature of the two
kinds and sources of knowledge, viz., the knowledge sent by God
through His books and messengers and the knowledge acquired by
the unaided human intellect. Sadra insists on this point
throughout his writings both in the field of transmitted and
intellectual sciences. In fact, it would not be a stretch to say
that Sadra is the most notable Muslim philosopher to have
devoted a large number of works to the study of the Qur’an. This
is especially true when we consider his Qur’anic commentaries
that take up a conspicuous space in his corpus, and his
hermeneutics of Qur’anic exegesis, which presents an interesting
blend of purely Qur’anic terminology with a strictly
philosophical vocabulary.
Sadra’s unifying perspective runs through his entire corpus, and
it is against this background that we should understand Sadra’s
insistence on maintaining the close relationship that
traditional thought had established between philosophy and
sciences of nature. To translate this into the language of
contemporary philosophy of science, the context of justification
and the context of experiment were kept intimately close to one
another, and this has prevented the separation of metaphysical
and ethical considerations from the operation of physical
sciences. This approach enables Sadra to move easily between
physics and metaphysics. In fact, his natural philosophy is an
application of his metaphysical principles to the order of
nature.
Sadra was certainly not a scientist in the ordinary sense of the
term. His writings on cosmology and nature, however, present one
of the most articulate examples of natural philosophy. But it is
extremely important to keep in mind the centrality of Sadra’s
ontology for his natural philosophy as he reformulates nearly
all branches of knowledge in the light of the all-inclusive
reality of being (wujud). Sadra defines wujud,
which can be translated as both existence and being depending on
the context in which it is used, as the principal reality by
which everything exists. As opposed to the views of the
Illuminationists and the theologians, he defends the primacy or
principiality of being (asalat al-wujud) against quiddity
(mahiyyah), and defines it as the source of all existence
and intelligibility. In contrast to the mental representation of
being (mafhum al-wujud) which is abstract, conceptual,
and static, the reality of being (haqiqat al-wujud) does
not lend itself to mental analysis (i’tibar ‘aqli) except
as a second order concept. But once formulated as an abstract
concept, wujud no longer remains as a reality in
concreto which defies all conceptualization.
It is within the context of this dynamic picture of being that
Sadra introduces the most central concept of his natural
philosophy, viz., substantial motion (al-harakat
al-jawhariyyah). The doctrine of substantial motion is based
on the premise that everything in the order of nature, including
celestial spheres, undergoes substantial change and
transformation as a result of the self-flow (fayd) and
penetration of being (sarayan al-wujud) which gives every
concrete individual entity its share of being. In contrast to
Aristotle and Ibn Sina who had accepted change only in four
categories, i.e., quantity (kamm), quality (kayf),
position (wad’) and place (‘ayn), Sadra defines
change as an all-pervasive reality running through the entire
cosmos including the category of substance (jawhar).
His argument for introducing change into substance, which was
not possible to explain within the confines of Aristotelian
physics, is that change in the accidental qualities of physical
bodies has to come from their substance because accidents can
not have existence independent of the substance to which they
belong. In fact, every accidental change is the result of a
deeper change/motion (istihala, harakah) that
takes place in the very substance and constitution of things. In
both the accidental and essential processes of change, physical
bodies undergo a substantial change. This holds true even for
cases where we do not observe essential transformation in the
physical constitution of things such as in the case of
positional movement, i.e., when the object A moves from point B
to point C. Sadra calls this kind of motions accidental and
describes it as movement-in-movement (harakah fi harakah).
In a nutshell, every accidental change, which is immediately
available to our five senses, can be traced back to substantial
motion. Seen under this light, substantial motion or change is
an intrinsic feature of things, and since every positional
movement, which we take to be the measure of time, is ultimately
a modulation of substantial movement, time should be redefined
in tandem with the existential transformation of physical
substances. Once we take this step, we realize, as Sadra and his
commentators have noted, that time is a dimension of physical
bodies. Furthermore, since the celestial spheres, whose circular
movement the Peripatetics had taken to be the ultimate measure
of time, are themselves subject to substantial motion, we can no
longer turn to them for the measure of linear time.
Sadra applies this theory of substantial motion to a number of
metaphysical problems including the generation of the soul and
temporal origination of the world. He defines the human soul as
a being whose origination is bodily but whose subsistence is
spiritual. To use Sadra’s words, the soul is a bodily or
material substance in its origination and spiritual in its
subsistence (jismaniyyat al-huduth ruhaniyyah al-baqa’).
Through substantial transformation and perfection, the soul
reaches a point where it leaves the domain of material existence
and enters into the abode of spiritual reality. The process of
essential change continues until the soul becomes completely
separate from the limitations of bodily existence. Substantial
motion of the soul, however, continues even after the soul has
left its bodily home as the degrees of perfection for it are
potentially infinite until it becomes re-united with its Divine
origin.
In a similar fashion, Sadra explains the temporal origination of
the world on the basis of substantial motion. If everything in
the cosmos is in constant change, that is, in a different mode
of being at every moment, then it is always different from what
it was before and will be different from what it would be at the
next instance of its existentiation. This suggests that every
physical being is preceded by non-existence (masbuq
bi’l-‘adam), and such an order of being, taken as a whole,
can neither subsist by itself nor, in contrast to the
Peripatetics, could be eternal (qadim). Thus the world of
physical existence is temporally originated and renewed at every
successive phase of its existential transformation. For Sadra,
what makes this existential transformation possible is not an
external agent that acts upon the world of nature antecedently
but what he calls nature (tabi’ah) in a particularly
Sadrean sense. Nature as defined by Sadra signifies the
immediate cause of movement and transformation in physical
bodies. In this sense, nature is the principle of change as an
essential quality of things. Sadra, however, hastens to add that
nature is also the principle of continuity and permanence
because the preservation of natural forms, in spite of the
ceaseless change of the natural realm, is a constant phenomenon
in nature. Thus, in contrast to the modern image of nature as
only the abode of change, Sadra construes nature as an order of
being that carries in itself both the principle of change and
permanence.
This dynamic view of being and cosmos leads Sadra to a world-picture
that is thoroughly teleological, i.e., having a purpose (telos,
ghayah). Sadra states in the Asfar that chance or
accidental coincidences (ittifaqiyyat) are not constant
in nature. On the contrary, everything in nature is directed
towards a ‘universal purpose’ (aghrad kulliyah), and this
is nothing but the existential actualization and perfection of
the cosmos. The ever-continuous ‘intensification’ (tashaddud)
of the order of nature comes about as a result of the self-effusion
(fayd) of Being, which is, so to speak, God’s Face turned
to the world of relative existence. In this regard, it would be
fair to say that the world displays a dual nature: on one hand,
it subsists by and is utterly dependent upon the Command of God
(kun, esto). On the other hand, God has created the world
in such a way that it possesses a remarkable regularity and
constancy. It is thus through the binary relationship of these
two ‘agencies’ that Sadra seeks to establish a harmonious
relationship between the vertical and horizontal lines of
causation. The Islamic occasionalists, especially the Ash’arites,
had come to the radical conclusion that they had to accept
vertical causality at the expense of horizontal causality in
order to make space for miracles. Sadra, being acutely aware of
occasionalism’s intrinsic difficulties and inconsistencies,
defines the two lines of causality as in a perfect accord in
that God sustains the world of creation in such a way that it is
bound to be causal and rule-governed in the most concrete sense
of the term. The great chain of being (da’irat al-wujud),
of which Sadra has given one of the most sophisticated
expositions in the history of philosophy, is thus construed as a
unified structure that allows for a self-regulating dynamism on
the one hand, and the perpetual presence of the creative act of
God, on the other.
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Selected Bibliography
Açıkgenç, Alparslan, Being and Existence in
Sadra
and Heidegger,
(Kuala Lumpur: I.S.T.A.C., 1993).
‘Alawi, Hadi, Nazariyyat
al-Harakah
al-Jawhariyyah ‘ind al-Shirazi,
(Beirut: 1983).
Ashtiyani, Sayyid Jalal al-Din, Sharh-i hal wa aray-i
falsafi-i Mulla Sadra (Mashhad, 1382/1962).
Avens, Robert, “Theosophy of Mulla Sadra”, Hamdard
Islamicus 9:3 (1986), 3-30.
‘Awn, Faysal Badir, Fikrat al-Tabi’ah
fi’l-Falsafat al-Islamiyyah,
(Syria: University of ‘Ayn al-Shams, 1980).
Badur, Salman, “al-Harakat al-jawhariyya fi falsafati Sadr
al-Din al-Shirazi”, Dirasat
‘ulum al-insaniyyah wa’l-turath
11: 4 (1984), 29-40.
- “Mitafiziqa al-wujud fi falsafati Sadr al-Din al-Shirazi”,
Dirasat ‘ulum
al-insaniyyah wa’l-turath
13: 4 (1986), 215-235.
Corbin, Henry, “Le Thème de la résurrection chez Mollâ Sadra
Shirazi (1050/1640) commentateur de Suhrawardi (586/1191)”
in Studies in Mysticism and Religion Presented to Gershom
G. Scholem (Jerusalem, 1967), pp. 71-115.
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1972), Vol. IV, pp. 52-122.
Craig, William L, The Cosmological Argument
from Plato to Leibniz (London: Macmillan Press,1980).
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Izutsu, Toshihiko, The Concept and Reality of Existence
(Tokyo: The Keio Institute of Cultural and Linguistic
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Zen Buddhism’ in Mélanges Offerts a Henry Corbin ed.
S. H. Nasr, (Tehran: 1977).
Nasr, Seyyed Hossein, Mulla Sadra and His Transcendent
Philosophy (Tehran: 1997, 2nd edition).
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- “Mulla Sadra as a Source For the History of Islamic
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Edwards (Editor in chief), Vol.5 (New York: The Macmillan
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- (ed.) Mulla Sadra Commemoration Volume (Tehran,
1380/1960).
- “Sadr al-Din al-Shirazi (Mulla Sadra)” in A History of
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Rahman, Fazlur, ‘Mulla Sadra’ Encyclopedia of Religion,
Vol. 10, (New York: 1987), 149-153.
- ‘Mir Damad’s Concept of Huduth Dahri: A
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in Safavid Iran’ Near Eastern Studies 39 (1980),
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- The Philosophy of Mulla
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- 'Essence and Existence in Avicenna' Mediaeval and
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al-’Arabi, 1981) 9 Vols.
- al-Shawahid al-rububiyyah fi manahij al-sulukiyyah,
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1981).
- Kitab al-Masha'ir,
ed. by H. Corbin as Le Livre des Penetrations
métaphysiques (Tehran: 1982). This edition includes the
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along with Corbin's introduction and commentary.
-Rasa’il
Falsafi, ed. S. J. Ashtiyani (Qom: Markaz-i
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Morris as The Wisdom of the Throne An Introduction to the
Philosophy of Mulla
Sadra (New Jersey: Princeton University Press,
1981).
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al-ilahiyyah
fi
asrar
al-‘ulum
al-kamaliyyah,
ed. by Sayyid Muhammad Khamanei (Tehran: Bunyad-i
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Sadra,
1378).
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