Knowledge and Interpretation May 9, 2009
Posted by electromagnetic in Fragments.Tags: Edward Said, Media
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My thesis in this book has been that the canonical, orthodox coverage of Islam that we find in the academy, in the government, and in the media is all interrelated and has been more diffused, has seemed more persuasive and influential, in the West than any other “coverage” or interpretation. The success of this coverage can be attributed to the political influence of those people and institutions producing it rather than necessarily to truth or accuracy. I have also argued that this coverage has served purposes tangentially related to actual knowledge of Islam itself. The result has been the triumph not just of a particular knowledge of Islam but rather of a particular interpretation which, however, has neither been unchallenged nor impervious to the kinds of questions asked by unorthodox, inquiring minds.
Edward Said (1935 – 2003). Covering Islam: How the Media and the Experts Determine How We See the Rest of the World. New York: Pantheon Books, 1981, p. 161.
Critical Fertility April 27, 2009
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In the formulation of historico-critical problems it is wrong to conceive of scientific discussion as a process at law in which there is an accused and a public prosecutor whose professional duty it is to demonstrate that the accused is guilty and has to be put out of circulation. In scientific discussion, since it is assumed that the purpose of discussion is the pursuit of truth and the progress of science, the person who shows himself most “advanced” is the one who takes up the point of view that his adversary may well be expressing a need which should be incorporated, if only as a subordinate aspect, in his own construction. To understand and to evaluate realistically one’s adversary’s position and his reasons (and sometimes one’s adversary is the whole of past thought) means precisely to be liberated from the prison of ideologies in the bad sense of the word–that of blind ideological fanaticism. It means taking up a point of view that is “critical”, which for the purpose of scientific research is the only fertile one.
Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937). Selections from the Prison Notebooks of Antonio Gramsci, edited and translated by Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell Smith. New York: International Publishers, 1971, pp. 343-344.
Avicenna on Persuasion April 17, 2009
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Engaging in tafsir of Qur’an 16:125, Avicenna writes:
The Book, which bears no falsehood before or behind it, the revelation of the Allwise and Allpowerful speaks in much the same sense: Call men unto the path of thy Lord [God instructs His prophet] – that is, the true religion – with wisdom – that, by way of proof [burhan, apodeictic demonstration, taken here as philosophical, since "wisdom," is the common term for philosophy] – that is, for those who can handle it – and with fair persuasion – that is, rhetoric, for those who cannot manage philosophic rigor; and engage them in argument with whatever is best – that is, by appeal to the commonly accepted standards of what is praiseworthy and commendable. It mentions dialectic after the other two arts because they are devoted to finding what is beneficial, whereas dialectic is used for criticism. First we must know what is beneficial; only then do we engage in controversy or polemic with those who are committed to opposing it.
Translated by Lenn E. Goodman in Avicenna. London and New York: Routledge, 1992, p. 212. Source in Ibn Sina, Al-Shifa’: La Logique VIII – Rhétorique (Al-Khatabah), ed. M. Salem (Cairo: Imprimerie Nationale, 1954), 1-6.
Ibn Qutayba on Wisdom February 12, 2009
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Ibn Qutayba (d. 276/889), in the introduction to his literary compilation Choice Narratives, says the following:
This book, although not on the subject of the Qur’an and sunna [Prophetic tradition], the religious law or the knowledge of what is lawful and forbidden, yet points to sublime things and shows the correct way to noble character; it restrains from baseness, diverts from the disreputable, and incites to right personal conduct, fair management [of others], mild administration [of government], and to making the land prosperous. For the way to Allah is not one nor is all that is good confined to night prayers, continuous fasting, and the knowledge of the lawful and the forbidden. On the contrary, the ways to Him are many and the doors of the good are wide….
Knowledge is the stray camel of the believer; it benefits him regardless from where he takes it: it shall not disparage truth should you hear it from polytheists, nor advice should it be derived from those who harbor hatred; shabby clothes do no injustice to a beautiful woman, nor shells to their pearls, nor its origin from dust to pure gold. Whoever disregards taking the good from its place misses an opportunity, and opportunities are as transient as the clouds…. Ibn `Abbas [the Prophet's uncle]* said: “Take wisdom from whomever you hear it, for the non-wise may utter a wise saying and a bull’s eye may be hit by a non-sharpshooter.”
*The translator identifies Ibn `Abbas, may God be pleased with him and his father, as “the Prophet’s uncle” in parentheses above. This is an error. He was a paternal cousin of the Prophet, peace be upon him.
Ibn Qutayba, `Uyun al-akhbar, Cairo, 1923-30 (repr. 1973), vol. 1, pp. 10.11-15 and 15.11-17. English translation found in Dimitri Gutas, Greek Thought, Arabic Culture: The Graeco-Arabic Translation Movement in Baghdad and Early `Abbasid Society (2nd-4th/8th-10th centuries), New York: Routledge, 1998, p. 159.
Abu Hanifah’s Schedule September 6, 2008
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After fajr prayer, the Persian Muslim scholar from Iraq named al-Nu`man ibn Thabit al-Taymi known best as Abu Hanifah (d. 150 H/769 CE) would take his class in the masjid and then reply to requests for fatwa which came from near and far. That was followed by a workshop of fiqh compilation, in which his leading students took part. Decisions reached unanimously were recorded. After zuhr prayer the Imam would go home and, if it was summer, have a siesta. The `asr prayer was followed by a session of teaching, after which the Imam would go around the city meeting friends, visiting the sick, condoling the bereaved and helping the poor. After maghrib prayer, there was another teaching session which continued until the `isha prayer, after which he would spend the whole night performing the tahajjud prayer. On Fridays he would invite friends over to visit and on Saturdays he would observe seclusion.
His week was divided between managing his business, teaching students law and jurisprudence, serving his family and community, and private time.
His business partner Hafs ibn Abdur-Rahman reported that Abu Hanifah gave charity everyday. He habitually fasted and offered night prayers. Every three days and nights, he used to finish the Qur’an.
Abu Hanifah (rahimuhullah) used to say that peace of mind can be acquired by reducing attachment and that this is accomplished by taking what is essential and leaving what is not.
Excerpted in part from Shibli Numani’s Sirat-i Nu’man translated by M. Hadi Hussain as Imam Abu Hanifah: Life and Work. Lahore: Institute of Islamic Culture, 1988.
Qushji on the Earth’s Rotation August 22, 2008
Posted by electromagnetic in Fragments.Tags: Astronomy, Jamil Ragep, Ptolemy, Qushji, Shirazi, Tusi
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Qushji [d. A.D. 1474] was the son of Prince Ulugh Beg’s falconer and grew up in or close to the Timurid court in Samarqand in the fifteenth century. Samarqand at the time, with its observatory, large scientific staff, brilliant individuals, and scientifically accomplished patron Ulugh Beg, was without a doubt the major center of science in the world and certainly could rival its thirteenth-century predecessor that had been established by [Nasir al-Din] Tusi [d. A.D. 1274] in Maragha under Mongol patronage. After the assassination of his patron Ulugh Beg, Qushji traveled through Iran and Anatolia and eventually assumed a chair in astronomy and mathematics at the college (madrasa) of Aya Sofia in the newly Islamic city of Istanbul. It should be emphasized that the teaching of science in the religious schools, and later the establishment of an observatory in Istanbul, were opposed, sometimes bitterly, by the religious establishment. Qushji, writing his commentary on Tusi’s “Epitome of Belief” after the assassination but before assuming his chair, was no doubt mindful of this religious opposition and sought to answer the objection to astronomy that I have previously quoted from him.
Let us summarize some of the key points he makes. (The entire Arabic text, with my translation, is in the Appendix.) Qushji is clearly sensitive to the Ash’arite position on causality, and he makes the interesting observation that part of their objection to it, at least as regards astronomy, has to do with the astrological contention of a causal link between the positions of the orbs and terrestrial events (especially “unusual circumstances”). To get around such objections, Qushji insists that astronomy does not need philosophy, since one could build the entire edifice of orbs necessary for the astronomical enterprise using only geometry, reasonable suppositions, appropriate judgments, and provisional hypotheses. These premises allow astronomers to
conceive {takhayyalu} from among the possible approaches the one by which the circumstances of the planets with their manifold irregularities may be put in order in such a way as to facilitate their determination of the positions and conjunctions of these planets for any time they might wish and so as to conform with perception {hiss} and sight {‘iyan}.
What this will allow us to do is make presumptions that best explain or “save the phenomena.” Of course God might, by His will, cause the phenomena directly; Qushji gives the example of God darkening the Moon without the Earth’s shadow and causing an eclipse. But just as we go about our everyday lives using what he calls ordinary (‘adiyya) and practical (tajribiyya) knowledge, thus should we proceed in science. Here he allows himself a bit of sarcasm, arguing that we could (for example) claim that after we had left our house one day, God turned all the pots and pans into human scholars who took to investigating the sciences of theology and geometry; insofar as we feel confident in assuming that this has not happened, so also should we have confidence that the heavens normally follow a regular pattern that we have the capacity to explain. We do not, however, need to make the further claim that our explanation represents the only possible one; in this way, Qushji believes he has made astronomy independent of philosophy.
What makes Qushji’s position especially fascinating are some of the repercussions it had for his astronomical work. Since he claims to be no longer tied to the principles of Aristotelian physics, he feels free to explore other possibilities, including the Earth’s rotation. Clearly within the tradition of the debate that we outlined earlier, he agrees with Tusi, thus countering Ptolemy and [Qutb al-Din] Shirazi [A.D. 1236-1311], and argues that the question of the Earth’s motion cannot be determined by observation. But unlike Tusi, he refuses to settle the matter by appealing to Aristotelian natural philosophy. Instead he states that “it is not established that what has a principle of rectilinear inclination is prevented from [having] circular motion.” He then ends with a startling conclusion: “Thus nothing false (fasid) follows [from the assumption of a rotating Earth].
Ragep, Jamil F. and Ali al-Qushji. “Freeing Astronomy from Philosophy: An Aspect of Islamic Influence on Science” (p. 61-62) in Osiris, 2nd Series, Vol. 16, Science in Theistic Contexts: Cognitive Dimensions, University of Chicago Press on behalf of The History of Science Society, 2001, pp. 49-64+66-71. Note: I have removed Ragep’s footnotes and diacritics. Square brackets [...] are mine.
Islamicate Imagination August 8, 2008
Posted by electromagnetic in Fragments.Tags: Hinduism, Indian Cinema, Islamicate
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The discussion [a previous chapter] shows that there is clearly an Islamicate imagination, a depiction of a culture where the Muslim figure is in the centre of the world while God is also present, not just in Sufi shrines and sacred objects, but also has agency and can cause miracles to occur. Even when Muslims appear in ‘non-religious’ films, they are shown as religious and often devout figures, who belong to this world. The complex relationships between the communities are often alluded to in the films. Hindus are shown to be respectful to Islamicate culture and even to worship at Muslim shrines. Muslims can pay their respects to Hinduism, and some Muslim rulers were known for giving grants to Hindu temples, but they cannot worship the images.
The media have played a major part in forming this Islamicate imagination, of image, text and music, drawing from sources as diverse as Mughal art to Parsi theatre and chromolithographs to popular stories. The Islamicate films have built on these images and created their own representations of beauty, architecture, religiosity and music. The figure of the courtesan has been central to this and now every courtesan’s song and dance will have to reflect this world, where even a Hindu, such as Chandramukhi in Devdas (2002, dir. Sanjay Lella Bhansali), has to present herself as part of this culture. The beauty and elegance of the ‘lost world’ of Lucknow is contrasted with a supposed Hindu – and colonial -lack of refinement.
Dwyer, Rachel. “Filming the Gods: Religion and Indian Cinema” in The Religion and Film Reader. Ed. by Jolyon Mitchell and S. Brent Plate. New York and London: Routledge, 2007, pp. 140-41.
Vision and Light in Kindi July 10, 2008
Posted by electromagnetic in Fragments.Tags: Aristotle, Euclid, Kindi, Optics
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Although he [Kindi, d. ca. 870] accepts that we perceive visible forms, he is always neutral about the mechanism by which we perceive them* [Footnote 19: Consider, for example, this passage from On First Philosophy: "our perception through the senses, upon direct contact (mubashara) of sense with its object is not in time" (AR 106.8). Here al-Kindi's statement is consistent with Aristotle, but emphasizes only the fact that sensation is through contact, which as previously mentioned is common to all ancient theories of vision. By the same token, al-Kindi does not try to bring together the Aristotelian doctrine of visible forms with his extramissionist mechanics]. Nowhere does al-Kindi imply that we must perceive forms through some sort of intromission view. In any case, al-Kindi may, like modern scholars, have been troubled by Aristotle’s own inconsistency on the question of the mechanism of vision. In the Meteorology and De Caelo he adopts an extramission theory like that of Plato, Euclid and al-Kindi* [Footnote 20: ... ]. Still, it is clear that [Kindi's] De Aspectibus considers and rejects an identifiably Aristotelian theory of vision.
Al-Kindi’s fidelity to Euclid is also less than complete. De Aspectibus diverges from the Optics on a number of points. This is done more in a spirit of charity than criticism: al-Kindi says in De Aspectibus, Prop. 11, II. 79-81, that we should not be eager to attribute error to a figure like Euclid, but instead “we should think well of him and shift what he says to the right path (convertamus eius sermonem ad semitam bonam).” In the rest of this section I want to present three such shifts:
(A) Euclid presents visual rays as one-dimensional lines emitted to form a cone. Al-Kindi argues that the rays must in fact be three-dimensional.
(B) Euclid also believed that as the lines emitted from the eye spread out, there will be gaps between them; this is why we do not see things clearly when they are far away. Al-Kindi denies this, and holds that the visual cone is continuous.
(C) Finally there is the aforementioned account of how light is propagated: along straight lines, but having an instantaneous effect over the whole extent of its path (in other words, light does not travel).
Adamson, Peter. “Vision, Light and Color in al-Kindi, Ptolemy and the Ancient Commentators” in Arabic Sciences and Philosophy. Vol. 16, No. 2, September 2006, pp. 213-14. Note: I have left out Adamson’s diacritics.
Religion is a Secular Concept? July 9, 2008
Posted by electromagnetic in Fragments.Tags: Religion, Secularism, Wilfred Cantwell Smith
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Secularism…has become an ideology that holds that there is nothing higher in the universe than we. Many of its victims have not only believed this, but have even felt it. Some, to the devastation also of their neighbours, have even begun to live in terms of it. In a milder version, even if one feels that there is more to human life and to the world than objectively appears, yet one is not allowed to think it. Especially, one is not allowed to think it publicly. Most people do feel it, except that growing number of the alienated and despairing, for whom the world and especially their own lives are bleak.
This brings us to the secular-religion polarity. As remarked, ’secularism’ began as anti-religious, tacitly meaning anti-Christian and anti-Jewish. Thus we come to the ‘religious’ issue in our topic. Let us note first of all that it was the rise of the secular movement in the West that led to the development of the concept of a ‘religion’ and of the adjective ‘religious’. ‘Religion’ as the name of a particular system of ideas, practices, outlooks and institutions was not merely a Western term, and a recent one, but also a secularist one. The notion of secularism inherently presupposes something called ‘religion’ from which it advocates that we should be free. If there were no religion, there would and could be no concept ’secularism’. Similarly, however, though this fact has been less clearly noticed, if there were no secularism there would be and could be no concept ‘religion’. The term ‘religion’ was developed by secularists in order to belittle it.
‘Religion’ is a secular concept.
Smith, Wilfred Cantwell. Modern Culture from a Comparative Perspective. Edited by John W. Burbidge. Albany, New York: SUNY Press, 1997, pp. 72-73.
Walk on Water July 7, 2008
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Once someone asked Jesus, “How are you able to walk on water?”
Jesus replied, “With certainty.”
Then someone said, “But we also have certainty!”
Jesus then asked them, “Are stone, clay, and gold equal in your eyes?”
They replied, “Certainly not!”
Jesus responded, “They are in mine.” (Ahmad)Jesus said, “You will never obtain what you desire except through patience with what you despise.” (Ghazali)
Jesus, the son of Mary said, “God has given me the power to give life to the dead, sight to the blind, sound to the deaf; but He did not give me the power to heal the fool of his foolishness.” (Razi)
“Walk on Water: The Wisdom of Jesus” translated by Hamza Yusuf. Excerpted in Seasons Vol. 3, No. 2, Spring 2007, pp. 85-88.
An Infinite Regress of Proofs June 8, 2008
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If we reflect, contemplate and investigate, and if following this reflection a conviction arises, then our knowledge that this conviction constitutes knowledge cannot be immediate; for truth frequently turns out to be contrary to it. If it is [said to be] discursive, it will need another proof; and infinite regress will follow, which is inconceivable.
Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī (1149-1210) contends in Dhamm ladhdhāt al-dunyā, that any criterion for certainty requires another criterion to prove it, ad infinitum. Translated by Ayman Shihadeh in his work The Teleological Ethics of Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī (Leiden: Brill, 2006), pp. 211-65, at pp. 255-6.