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CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
Metaphysics according to the westerners are the branch of philosophy responsible for the
study of existence. It is the foundation of a worldview; answer the question that
encompasses everything that exists as well as the nature of existence itself. It says
whether the world is real or merely an illusion, and is a fundamental view of the world
around us1
. While in Islamic philosophy, the problem inquired in Islamic metaphysic are
the same as the problems investigated in the study of western metaphysics. Islamic
metaphysics is concerned with finding the truth, the nature of universe, the nature of man
and the purpose of all creation.
The first major work in the history of philosophy to bear the title ―Metaphysics‖ was the
treatise by Aristotle that we have come to know by that name. But Aristotle himself did
not use that title or even describe his field of study as ‗metaphysics‘; the name was
evidently coined by the first century C.E. editor who assembled the treatise we know as
Aristotle's Metaphysics out of various smaller selections of Aristotle's works.2
The term
does not go back to Aristotle; it seems merely to be a title in early edition of his works
meaning ―Appendix to the Physics‖ Aristotle himself describes what we count this head
as ―first Philosophy‖ or ―wisdom‖. There are two tasks he allots to this discipline, which
are the investigations of beings in general, and the investigation of a particular being or
set of beings, namely God or the Gods.3
The Islamic philosophers picked and chose from Aristotle's texts, using him as an
authority when it suited their purposes, and knowing that philosophy was a 'foreign
1
Jeff Landauer, Joseph Rowlands, 2001, Metaphysics, www.importanceofphilosophy.com
2
Cohen, S.Marc, 2000, Aristotle’s Metaphyiscs, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
3
Robert L. Arrington, 2003, The World’s Great Philosophers, Blackwell Publishing Ltd
2
science' in need of an external authority as it lacked an indigenous authority.4
Avicenna‘s
metaphysical system is one of the most comprehensive and detailed in the history of
philosophy. Its ingredients, its conceptual building blocks, so to speak, are largely
Aristotelian.5
Avicenna himself hints at this when in introducing his magnum opus, the
voluminous Sefaʾ (Healing), he writes: ―There is nothing in the books of the ancients but
we have included in this our book. If something is not found in a place where it is
normally found, it would be found in another place where I judge it more fit to be in. I
have added to this what I have apprehended with my thought and attained through my
reflection, particularly in physics, metaphysics and logic‖.6
IbnSina‘s philosophy is an attempt to construct a coherent and comprehensive system that
accords with the religious exigencies of Muslim culture. As such, he may be considered
to be the first major Islamic philosopher. The philosophical space that he articulates for
God as the Necessary Existence lays the foundation for his theories of the soul, intellect
and cosmos. Furthermore, he articulated a development in the philosophical enterprise in
classical Islam away from the apologetic concerns for establishing the relationship
between religion and philosophy towards an attempt to make philosophical sense of key
religious doctrines and even analyze and interpret the Qur‘an.7
Following the initial reception of Hellenistic texts in to Islamic thought, researcher have
found that these academic writings which is particularly underlying on the issues of
Metaphysic and its utilities on Islamic teachings would give us a refreshment on how it is
relevant to discuss some of foreign sciences or to keep in other sources from non-Muslim
environment to be implemented in the circle of Islamic thought, so that we are not just
going to threw out another better understanding which can make our religion go beyond
what we may normally expected it to be happen especially in this kind of field.
4
Kiki Kennedy Day, 1998, Aristotelianism in Islamic Philosophy, Routledge
5
Michael E. Marmura, 1987, Avicenna Metaphysic, Encyclopedia Iranica, http://www.iranicaonline.org
6
Avicenna, translated by Michael E. Marmura, 2004, The Metaphysic of Healing, Bringham Young
University
7
Sajjad H. Rizvi, 2006, Avicenna (c.980-1037), Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy,
http//www/iep.utm.edu
3
1.1 Problem Statement
These studies is set to be done for several interest, first of all, is to examine how
Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysics developed among Muslims and influenced their ways of
thinking. For example, Al-Farabi, he is considered the foremost Aristotelian, and was
indeed known as the second teacher. Some scholars has divided his works into those
which admit Aristotle‘s influence, such as ―Kitab Al-Huruf‖ The Book of Letter, and
more popular work such as ―Kitab Fi Mabadi’ Ara’ Ahl Al-Madina Al-Fadila‖ The Book
of the Principle of the Opinions of the People of the Virtuous City.8
Secondly, these studies are conducted to makes a truth evidence of Aristotle‘s views of
Metaphysics in Islamic philosophy. Thus connected to the second, is to examine how
Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysics could suits the purpose of Muslim philosophers. This is
one of the main features in this work where I would like to take some of any point of
view which may be an important figure to the reader as a ladder to a better understanding
of Islamic philosophy and not to misinterpret any ideologies comes from our Muslim
scholars in this field of study.
1.2 Objective of the Study
The aim of these studies to be conducted firstly is to analyze how Aristotle‘s Metaphysics
could give a wide influence among Muslim Philosophers, secondly how Muslim
Philosophers makes truth evidence of Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysics. In addition,
8
Al-Farabi became an expert in philosophy and logic, and also in music: one of his works is entitled Kitab
al-musiqa al-kabir (The Great Book of Music). However, perhaps the book for which he is best known is
that whose title is abbreviated to al-Madina al-fadila (The Virtuous City), and which is often compared,
misleadingly in view of its Neoplatonic orientation, to Plato's Republic. Other major titles from al-Farabi's
voluminous corpus included the Risalafi'l-'aql (Epistle on the Intellect), Kitab al-huruf (The Book of
Letters).
4
researcher also wanted to examine how Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysic suited the
thinking approaches of Muslim Philosophers with Islamic purposes and nature. Lastly,
these studies will examine the major work of those Muslim philosophers that connoted
Aristotle‘s influences in Metaphysics.
1.3 Research Question
1- How Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysics influence Muslims Philosophers?
2- What does Muslim Philosophers do in conjoining the ideas of Metaphysics in
Islamic thought of Philosophy?
3- How Aristotle‘s Metaphysics suits with the teachings of Islam?
4- What is the major work of Muslim Philosophers that connotes Aristotle‘s
influence in Metaphysics?
1.4 Significance of the Study
These studies serve to makes better improvement for several previous studies that have
been conducted in the field of philosophy studies. This writing also aimed to avoid and
made up better clearance and further explanation on any confusion and negative
perception made by nowadays scholars who accused our previous Muslim philosophers
on receiving any sciences and ideas from non-Muslims thinkers. Researcher intend to
prove that our previous peripatetic philosophers such as Al-Kindi, Ibn-Sina, Al-Farabi
and Ibnu Rushd are not blindly imitating the ideas of the ancient Greek philosopher,
Aristotle, and put it at one‘s pleasured onto the teachings of Islamic philosophy.
5
1.5 Literature Review
There are plenty of works regarding the influences of Aristotle‘s Metaphysics on Muslim
Philosophers.
Metaphysics or 'beyond physics' is the study of philosophy examining the true nature of
reality, whether it is visible or not. Metaphysics also studies the concepts of being and
knowing; essence and existence. Many famous philosophers such as Aristotle, Plato, Al-
Kindi, Al-Farabi and ibn Sina have defined metaphysics and tried to contradict theories of
each other.
In the work, Islam and Metaphysic, by Jaafar Hassan, the writer tried to define God by
comparing the concepts of those ancient philosophers and other philosophers who agreed
with one or the other. For example, According to Aristotle, God must be the first cause or
the first principle of all the substances. Aristotle agrees that theology is an integral part of
metaphysics since God is the principle of being. In his epistle, On the Aims of Aristotle's
Metaphysics, Farabi explains metaphysics as a universal science comprising general
concepts as being, unity, species, accidents etc. From this writings researcher made a
conclusion how our Muslim philosophers could agreed with the ideas of Aristotle in this
field of studies and harmonizing without neglecting our religious views.9
While according to Isaac Husik, ―Averroes on the Metaphysic of Aristotle‖, mentioned
there are plenty of commentaries wrote by Averroes based on Aristotle‘s works, which
are divided into three different type of commentaries, ―Great‖, ―middle‖ and ―brief‖,
commentaries on Aristotle‘s text with detailed discussion, first few words of each
paragraph of Aristotle‘s works and the abandoned of original order with an exposition of
Averroes‘s own method and words.
9
Jaafar Hassan, 2011, Islam and Metaphysics, http//www.islamicinsight.com
6
These connote not only those Muslim philosophers takes Aristotle‘s ideas directly
without any hesitation, but elaborated and suited those ideas they picked using their own
methodology and views.10
Through the writings of Abu Rida, in Rasail Al-Kindi Al-Falsafiyya (vol1) said, when Al-
Kindi tries to make an engagement with Aristotle‘s views on metaphysics he found that
those ideas of Aristotle are quite ambivalent and by presenting Aristotle‘s work as the
culmination of a four-fold division of philosophy into mathematics, logic, physics and
metaphysics, Al-Kindi then made up an opposition views with Aristotle.11
Al-Kindi in his metaphysics, insists on offering a consistent opposition to the Aristotelian
metaphysics, especially the philosophical issue of the eternity of the world. Aristotle
thought the world and its motion and time are eternal; though he himself did not offer
adequate arguments to prove his point. Aristotle thought that infinity could not exist in
actuality; however, he contradicted himself and stated that the actual existent world is
eternal and thus is infinite.
Aristotle‘s first cause is a pure intellect that is self-centered. It has no concern about the
rest of the universe and is busy in intelligizing itself. Then how can everything in this
universe function? How is the first cause controlling this world? These and other
questions are very hard to answer within the Aristotelian scheme. Al-Kindi did not find
Aristotelian metaphysics appealing at all, in spite of the fact that he greatly admired
Aristotle as a man of wisdom. Al-Kindi was a mathematician and Aristotelian cosmology
lacks mathematical foundations and suffers from inconsistency; al-Kindi‘s opposition to
Aristotle‘s metaphysics reflects al-Kindi‘s independent philosophical reasoning and
unique identity. The core emphasis of al-Kindi‘s philosophy is Islamic in essence, and
reflects the teachings of the Qur‘an and the traditions of the Prophet.
10
Isaac Husik, 2002, Averroes and the Metaphysic of Aristotle, The Philosophical Review, Cornell
University
11
Abu Rida, 1950, Rasaʼil al-Kindi al-falsafiyya (vol. I), Dar al-Fikr al-‘Arabi, Cairo
7
In ―Avicenna Metaphysic‖, by Michael E. Marmura, mentioned that Avicenna‘s
metaphysical system is one of the most comprehensive and detailed in the history of
philosophy. Its ingredients, its conceptual building blocks, so to speak, are largely
Aristotelian.12
Avicenna himself hints at this when in introducing his magnum opus, the
voluminous Sefaʾ (Healing).
Avicenna's original adaptation of the Metaphysics can be best appreciated in the
metaphysical sections of his summae of philosophy, which approach Aristotle's work
according to a perspective that combines taxonomy, exegesis and adaptation. In virtue of
their format as a collection of the different branches of philosophy, these works give
metaphysics a specific position in the system of the philosophical disciplines. At the same
time, they provide an explanation of Aristotle's text by incorporating it, according to a
modified formulation and arrangement, into Avicenna's own discourse. Finally, they
enrich the doctrine of the Metaphysics with theories that are taken from other authors and
works within the Aristotelian tradition, or from the fruits of Avicenna's own mind.13
With all these works, researcher found that whenever it came to define particularly on the
subject metaphysic, Aristotle can be said as the most significant figure and reference to
our Muslim philosophers. Being the most influential men, Aristotle bring those Muslim
philosophers to the new evolution in the world of thinking and sciences, make them
happened to carried out the secret of our creator through creation. Although, they are not
completely followed Aristotle in their studies and methodologies and even criticizing it in
order to make it relevance in Islam, indeed, those philosophers make Aristotle as one of
their initial references in understanding this knowledge. Through these writings,
researcher would like to carry out any ideas of Aristotle‘s in regards to Metaphysics use
by those previous Muslim philosophers in finding the truth and how it influenced their
thinking and methods.
12
Michael E. Marmura, 1987, Avicenna Metaphysic, Encyclopedia Iranica, http//www.iranicaonline.org
13
Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N.Zalta, 2013, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy
8
1.6 Theoretical Consideration
The first known work containing the term metaphysics in its title, or at least an ancestor
of that term, was a work belonging to Aristotle. This particular work was distinguished
from his other treatises or other tracts, so it seems, by an editor in the first century CE,
commonly thought to be Andronicus of Rhodes14
. At that time, the work in question was
called "ta meta ta physika", or the stuff after the stuff on physics. The stuff on "physic"
would be contained in Aristotle's treatise known to us as Physics. Thus Aristotle's
Metaphysics seems to have been thought of as a work that comes after, in some sense of
the term Physics. Aristotle's Metaphysics concerns a number of wide-ranging topics about
reality as a whole. Therein, he is concerned among other things, with the nature and
varieties of causation, the nature of substance and property, the existence of an unmoved-
mover, and the nature of possibility and actuality. And, to this day, these are perennial
issues that will be taken up in almost any survey of metaphysics.15
1.7 Research Method
In order to complete these study, researcher used to implement a historical approaches,
which is to study the history of Metaphysics, Aristotle, and several of Muslim
Philosophers who responsible to take Aristotle‘s metaphysics as one of their sources in
studying philosophy in Islam. Besides there are also a critical approaches had been used
14
Andronicus of Rhodes (fl. c. 60 BC) was a Greek philosopher from Rhodes who was also the head
(scholarch) of the Peripatetic school. He is most famous for publishing a new edition of the works of
Aristotle which forms the basis of the texts which survive today. by Falcon, Andrea, Edward N. Zalta, 2012,
Commentators on Aristotle, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Stanford University)
15
Jeremy Kirby, 2008, Aristotle's Metaphysics: Form, Matter and Identity, Continuum International
Publishing Group.
9
to examine or analyzing how Muslim Philosophers responds towards the ideas of
Aristotle‘s Metaphysics, views, and what they said about the ideas.
1.8 Scope of the Study
These writings, ―The Influence of Aristotle‘s Metaphysic on Selected Muslim
philosophers‖ would examined thoroughly on Aristotle‘s ideas by using an appropriate
study from our four greatest Muslim philosophers, starting from Al-kindi, Ibn Sina, Al-
Farabi and Ibn Rushd. These four intellectual philosophers chosen by the researcher
based on their contribution towards the development of Islamic sciences, philosophy and
other esoteric knowledge which increased the quality of Muslim civilization.
1.9 Outline and Plan of the Study
These study is going to be done through five division part, the first part are included in
the introduction sections which explain generally the background of the study,
recognizing briefly the term metaphysics from western and Islamic views, the problem
statement, methodology approaches and significance of the study. Overall, the first part
will explain generally how this study should be orderly implemented.
The second part of these studies is to explain the origin of the term Metaphysics, which
are used by Muslim Philosophers in Islamic thought of philosophy, the definition of
metaphysic in details from both westerners and Muslim scholars.
In the third part, researcher will indicate closely the using of Aristotle‘s Metaphysics
among Muslim Philosophers, starting from the very beginning of Al-Kindi‘s ages through
10
the middle age of Avicenna and Al-Farabi until the late period of Ibn Rushd and Ibn
Bajja. This part will also explain how Aristotle‘s Metaphysics influences their thought in
philosophy discussions.
Fourthly, is the part which explains further how Aristotle‘s idea of Metaphysics was
developed in the Muslim worlds by Muslim Philosophers, which, in this part researcher
will expose freely from any sources such as articles and any social networking tools or
any types of books which beneficial in explaining the development of Aristotle‘s
Metaphysics through the Muslim worlds.
Lastly, researcher will make a worthwhile views or an opinions of what had been done
from the study, brief conclusions and requesting any general suggestion for further
studies and development of the studies.
11
CHAPTER 2
The Meaning and Understanding of Metaphysics
Before the readers going onto further discussion on Aristotle and Muslim philosophers in
regards to the metaphysics, researcher would explain briefly on the interpretation of
metaphysics. Since, there a wise man said, if particular are to have meaning, there must
be universals, so before researcher explains particular on this topic, firstly, researcher
would like to go on its definition and meaning. In this chapter, researcher would explain
further on the meaning and understanding of Western and Islamic philosophy towards the
ideas of metaphysics.
2.1 Westerns Understanding of Metaphysics
The Metaphysics is considered to be one of the greatest philosophical works. It is
essentially a reconciliation of Plato‘s theory of Forms that Aristotle acquired at the
Academy in Athens, with the view of the world given by common sense and the
observations of the natural sciences. According to Plato, the real nature of things is
eternal and unchangeable. However, the world we observe around us is constantly and
perpetually changing. Aristotle‘s genius was to reconcile these two apparently
contradictory views of the world16
. The result is a synthesis of the naturalism of empirical
science, and the rationalism of Plato, that informed the Western intellectual tradition for
more than a thousand years.17
16
Bertrand Russell, 1945, A History of Western Philosophy, Stratford Press, New York
17
Hugh Lawson Tancred, 1999, Aristotle, The Metaphysic, Penguin Books Ltd
12
By the time Aristotle was writing, the tradition of Greek philosophy was only two
hundred years old. It had begun with the efforts of thinkers in the Greek world to theorize
about the common structure that underlies the changes we observe in the natural world.
Two contrasting theories, those of Heraclitus and Parmenides, were an important
influence on both Plato and Aristotle.
Heraclitus argued that things that appear to be permanent are in fact always gradually
changing. Therefore, though we believe we are surrounded by a world of things that
remain identical through time, this world is really in flux, with no underlying structure or
identity. By contrast, Parmenides argued that we can reach certain conclusions by means
of reason alone, making no use of the senses. What we acquire through the process of
reason is fixed, unchanging and eternal. The world is not made up of a variety of things in
constant flux, but of one single Truth or reality. Plato‘s theory of forms is a synthesis of
these two views. Given, any object that changes is in an imperfect state. Then, the form of
each object we see in this world is an imperfect reflection of the perfect form of the
object. For example, Plato claimed a chair may take many forms, but in the perfect world
there is only one perfect form of chair.
Aristotle encountered the theory of forms when he studied at the Academy, which he
joined at the age of about 18 in the 360s B.C.18
Aristotle soon expanded on the concept of
forms in his Metaphysics. He believed that in every change there is something which
persists through the change, and something else which did not exist before, but comes
into existence as a result of the change.
The word ‗metaphysics‘ is notoriously hard to define. Twentieth-century coinages like
‗meta-language‘ and ‗metaphilosophy‘ encourage the impression that metaphysics is a
study that somehow ―goes beyond‖ physics, a study devoted to matters that transcend the
mundane concerns of Newton and Einstein and Heisenberg. This impression is mistaken.
The word ‗metaphysics‘ is derived from a collective title of the fourteen books by
Aristotle that we currently think of as making up ―Aristotle's Metaphysics.‖ Aristotle
18
Hugh Lawson Tancred, 1999, Aristotle, The Metaphysic, Penguin Books Ltd
13
himself did not know the word. (He had four names for the branch of philosophy that is
the subject-matter of Metaphysics: ‗first philosophy‘, ‗first science‘, ‗wisdom‘, and
‗theology‘.) At least one hundred years after Aristotle's death, an editor of his works (in
all probability, Andronicus of Rhodes) entitled those fourteen books ―Ta meta ta phusika‖
which mean ―the after the physicals‖ or ―the ones after the physical ones‖, the ―physical
ones‖ being the books contained in what we now call Aristotle's Physics. The title was
probably meant to warn students of Aristotle's philosophy that they should attempt
Metaphysics only after they had mastered ―the physical ones,‖ the books about nature or
the natural world—that is to say, about change, for change is the defining feature of the
natural world.
This is the probable meaning of the title because Metaphysics is about things that do not
change. In one place, Aristotle identifies the subject-matter of first philosophy as ―being
as such,‖ and, in another, as ―first causes.‖ It is a nice and vexed question, what the
connection between these two definitions is. Perhaps this is the answer: The unchanging
first causes have nothing but being in common with the mutable things they cause, like us
and the objects of our experience, they are, and there the resemblance ceases.19
The study of what things are real and unreal, of what is ultimately real, also the study of
the basic constituents of the universe. The metaphysician looks for ontological
dependency as one thing depends on another for its existence for example, roundness
depends upon the existence of a ball. (William Hasker)
The study of the most general concepts used in ordinary language and science.
Metaphysics studies concepts, not the things the concepts are about. This is what Science
does. It studies reality, the physical world. Metaphysicians study our language, the way
we talk about reality. This view is neo-Kantian. It is the study of the concepts of the real,
not the real itself. (Rom Harre)
19
Van Inwagen, Peter, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2012, Metaphysics, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy,
http//www.Plato.stanford.edu
14
Metaphysics is the study of existence and things that exist. Concepts are what confer
reality on something. (W.R Carter)
Metaphysics is a traditional branch of philosophy concerned with explaining the
fundamental nature of being and the world20
, although the term is not easily defined.
Traditionally, metaphysics attempts to answer two basic questions in the broadest
possible terms21
, what is there? and what is it like?22
Prior to the modern history of science, scientific questions were addressed as a part of
metaphysics known as natural philosophy. The term science itself meant "knowledge" of,
originating from epistemology. The scientific method, however, transformed natural
philosophy into an empirical activity deriving from experiment unlike the rest of
philosophy. By the end of the 18th century, it had begun to be called "science" to
distinguish it from philosophy. Thereafter, metaphysics denoted philosophical enquiry of
a non-empirical character into the nature of existence.23
2.2 Western Notions of God and Cosmos
The ultimate reason of things must lie in a necessary substance, in which the
differentiation of the changes only exists eminently as in their source; and this is what we
call God. .. God alone is the primary Unity, or original simple substance, from which all
monads, created and derived, are produced. (Gottfried Leibniz, 1670)
20
Geisler, Norman L, 1999, Baker Encyclopedia of Christian Apologetics, Baker Books
21
Edward N. Zalta, 2012, David Lewis's Metaphysics, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Center for the
Study of Language and Information, Stanford University
22
What is it (that is, whatever it is that there is) like?
23
Peter Gay, 1995, The Enlightenment: The Rise of Modern Paganism Chapter 3, Section II, W. W. Norton
& Company, pp. 132-141,
15
Except God no substance can be granted or conceived. .. Everything, I say, is in God, and
all things which are made, are made by the laws of the infinite nature of God, and
necessarily follow from the necessity of his essence. (Benedict de Spinoza, Ethics, 1673)
The metaphysical God, God of philosophers and mystics. This defines God as the Infinite
beyond (and within) all finites realities. It is the Uncaused Cause, Absolute (totally
independent) Beingness, and eternal Mystery. It is a God about whom little can be said
and then only in a carefully qualified way. This God is outside of time and unchanging,
for time is change, beyond all dependency on any other power and therefore unaffected
by anything that a creature does, although this God may have somehow taken into
account from all eternity the acts of all creatures already.
This god is perfect personness, goodness, truth, beauty and unity, though in a way beyond
conception. This God is actively sustaining the universe in existence for some ultimate
divine purposes, but it is hard to say such a God could intervene to do miracles, and it
would be incorrect to say that this God can have changes of mind. It is experienced by the
mystics, they say, and described metaphorically as a light so pure it blinds human
consciousness. It cannot be grasped by mind, imagination, words or images. This is
incompatible only with metaphysical naturalism, which denies any reality to God at all.24
Metaphysical Cosmology is an area of philosophy that deals with our place in the
universe and the nature of reality beyond its physicality, including understanding and
explaining why everything came to be. Metaphysics seeks answers beyond measurable
matter, energy, space, and time and explores the mysteries and meanings of all that exists.
It can include speculation about what type of god might exist. In metaphysics, it often
involves questions of how a god operates and how a god might have created the universe.
Metaphysical Cosmology is the branch of cosmological discussion that deals with
the world as the totality of all phenomena in space and time. Historically, it has had quite
24
Michael Horace Barnes, 2010, Understanding Religion And Science, Introducing the Debate,
Continuum International Publishing Group
16
a broad scope, and in many cases was founded in religion. The ancient Greeks did not
draw a distinction between this use and their model for the cosmos. However, in modern
times it addresses questions about the Universe which are beyond the scope of the
physical sciences. While Physical cosmology is the scholarly and academic study that
seeks to understand the origin, evolution, structure, and ultimate fate of the universe at
large, as well as the natural laws that keep it in order. The subject matter of this field is
studied using scholarly methodology, including the scientific method and reason. It is
studied by scientists, such as astronomers, and theoretical physicists; and
academic philosophers, such as metaphysicians, philosophers of physics,
and philosophers of space and time.
The most suitable example could be taken to make a better understanding is the issue
emerging among the later scientist which is the Big Bang Theory. The Big Bang
Theory is the prevailing scientific theory for the beginning of the universe. The theory
states that all matter in the universe was at one point held together in a very dense, hot
form (composed of elementary particles).
At some point, this condensed matter began to cool, and as the elementary particles clung
together to form protons and neutrons, the mass exploded into smaller objects and the
universe began to expand (and still is expanding today.)
This explosion is estimated to have occurred some fifteen to twenty billion years ago.
Some scientists theorize that the expansion of the universe would eventually slow down
and that the gravity of its matter would eventually cause the universe to collapse on it (the
force of the explosion would run out and would be overtaken by the forces of
gravity, slowly pulling the matter together again).
However, in recent studies, some scientists separately performed tests on the speed of the
expansion of the universe. By looking at the light emitted by supernovas at varying
distances from the earth, they hoped to determine the rate at which the universe's
expansion is slowing. The results: it isn't. Their research showed that the universe was
17
actually speeding up in its expansion, which has led to several speculations. As of yet, no
complete explanation exists.25
Physics and astrophysics have played a central role in shaping the understanding of the
universe through scientific observation and experiment. What is known as physical
cosmology shaped through both mathematics and observation the analysis of the whole
universe. It is generally understood to begin with the Big Bang, followed almost
instantaneously by cosmic inflation – an expansion of space from which the universe is
thought to have emerged 13.798 ± 0.037 billion years ago.26
Metaphysical cosmology has also been described as the placing of man in the universe in
relationship to all other entities. This is exemplified by the observation made by Marcus
Aurelius of a man's place in that relationship: "He who does not know what the world is
does not know where he is, and he who does not know for what purpose the world exists,
does not know who he is, nor what the world is."27
2.3 Metaphysics in Islamic Philosophy
Metaphysics is generally accepted as a branch of philosophy, concerned with the nature
of ultimate reality (Syed Naquib Al-Attas)
Metaphysics strive to define the subject matter. Metaphysics or beyond physics is the
study of philosophy examining the true nature of reality whether it is visible or not.
Metaphysics also studies the concepts of beings and knowing, essence and existence.
25
Philosophy Index, Copyright 2002-2013, Colin Temple. All Rights Reserved, www.philosophy-index.com
26
Planck Collaboration, "Planck 2013 results. XVI Cosmological Parameters, Submitted to Astronomy &
Astrophysics
27
Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, edited by George Long, 2005, Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
www.gutenberg.net
18
The problems inquired in Islamic Metaphysics are the same as the problems investigated
in the study of western Metaphysics. Islamic Metaphysics is concerned with finding the
truth about the nature of God, the nature of truth, the nature of universe, the nature of man
and the purpose of all creations. The difference between Islamic Metaphysics and
Western Metaphysics is Islamic Metaphysics recognizes the existence of the spiritual or
unseen realities.
Metaphysics is variously designated in Arabic philosophical literature by the expressions
“ma ba’d (fawq, wara’) al-tabi’ah (what is after (above, beyond) nature), al-falsafat al-
ula (first philosophy), ilahiyyat (theology, divinity) or even hikmah (wisdom). All these
terms except the last derive historically from Greek equivalents and their use, in the first
stages of philosophical reflection in Islam, seems to have been dictated by the usage of
the respective Greek sources or model of the Muslim authors more than by their literal
meaning or their correctness.28
Thus, at the beginning of his treatise ―On First Philosophy‖ (fil falsafat al-ula), Al-Kindi
explains that first philosophy is so called because it is the science of the first reality
(haqq) which is the cause of all reality, and knowing a thing requires knowing its cause.
A little further on he mentions the study of the things above nature (fawq al-tabi’ah),
which is immaterial things, the relation between the first cause and immaterial things in
general remaining so far unexplained. What is clear, however, is the contrast between
natural things, which have both matter and motion, and immaterial ones, which have
neither. 29
28
Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman, 1996, History of Islamic Philosophy Part 2, Routledge, London and
New York
29
Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman, 1996, History of Islamic Philosophy Part 2, Routledge, London and
New York
19
2.4 Islamic Metaphysical views on the Study of God and Cosmos
The fullest treatment of the problem of determining the exact subject-matters of
Metaphysics is, as expected that of Ibn sina (Avicenna). The term he favors to designate
this discipline is that of “ilahiyyat‖, which is the title of the metaphysical part of his main
philosophical encyclopedia ―al-shifa‖. But he is careful to accommodate the other
traditional denominations of metaphysics and attempts a synthesis of the different views
taken of the matter, showing them to be but different ways of envisaging the same
discipline. Thus theology (ilahiyyat) inquires into the things which are separate form
matter, the first cause of natural beings and the cause of causes and principle of principles
which is God. There is in addition a ―first philosophy‖ which provides the principles of
the other sciences, it is also properly called ―wisdom‖(hikmah), the object of this science
is variously describes as, firstly, the best science of the best object of science, secondly,
the truest and most certain science and thirdly, the knowledge of the first causes of the
universe. But these are merely three different descriptions of the same science.30
Ibn sina (Avicenna) introduces a distinction between a science‘s subject-matter (mawdu‘)
and its object, or goal (matlub). The subject-matter of any one science is taken for granted
(musallam) in that science which merely investigates its modes (ahwal). God is the goal,
not the subject-matter, of this science, and so are the ultimate causes (asbab quswa).
While in Al-Farabi‘s works of god existence and essence, he stated that to deny that
existence is a property is to deny that existence can appear in the description of anything,
and if the description of anything, and if the description is of the nature or essence of
something, then this is to deny, as Farabi does, that existence can be part of the essence of
anything. Here essence and existence are kept logically distinct in the case of god an
30
Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman, 1996, History of Islamic Philosophy Part 2, Routledge,
London and New York
20
exception is made, and necessary or uncaused existence is precisely what makes god the
being he is and different from all else.31
Metaphysical principles of Islamic cosmology are divided into two, which are the duality
and teleology. Duality discussed on how Islamic thought categorizes the entire cosmos
into two domains: the Unseen Universe (Aalam-ul-Ghaib), which is imperceptible to
mankind in general, has properties unknown to us, and includes Allah
(metaphorically), angels, Paradise, Hell, heavens, and Al-Arsh (the Divine Throne)32
, and
the Observable Universe (Alam-ul-Shahood), perceptible through the five senses
(possibly enhanced by means of instruments). The Qur'an says: "Allah is He, Who is the
only God, the knower of the Unseen and the Observed.33
There is a general consensus among the Muslim Philosophers about the existence of two
realms, which are the material world of nature, of the things subject to generation and
decay, and an immaterial, separate world. One of the main problems of Islamic
philosophy is to determine the kind of relationship linking the two realms together.
Aristotle has admitted the existence of such link in vague and tantalizing allusions, but
apart from the obvious fact that the yearly motion of the sun along the ecliptic, by causing
the seasonal differences, is the source of the life cycle of generation and decay, his view
on the subject remained programmatic.
The basic idea that the heavenly bodies and especially the planets occupy an intermediate
position between the wholly immaterial being, normally identified with God, and the
natural world of generation and decay appears in different guises in all the philosophical
system of classical Islam.
31
Fadlou Sehadi, (1982), Metaphysic In Islamic Philosophy, Caravan Books, Delmar, New York
32
Surah Al-Baqarah, (V.2:3): Al-Ghaib: literally means a thing not seen. But this word includes vast
meanings: Belief in Allâh, Angels, Holy Books, Allâh’s Messengers, Day of Resurrection and Al-
Qadar (Divine Pre-ordainments). It also includes what Allâh and His Messenger ‫لى‬ ‫ص‬ ‫هللا‬ ‫يه‬ ‫ل‬ ‫ع‬ ‫لم‬ ‫س‬ ‫و‬
informed about the knowledge of the matters of past, present, and future e.g., news about the creation of
the heavens and earth, botanical and zoological life, the news about the nations of the past, and about
Paradise and Hell.
33
Surah Al-Hasr,(V.59,22), He is Allah , other than whom there is no deity, Knower of the unseen and the
witnessed. He is the Entirely Merciful, the Especially Merciful.
21
For Al-kindi the only real cause is God who created the world ―ex nihilo‖, all other
causes are so called only metaphorically (bil-majaz). This real cause, or first cause, is also
called ultimate (ba’idah) cause, as opposed to the proximate (qaribah) cause. The
heavenly world, from the moon to the ultimate sphere is entirely devoid of the primary
qualities (hot, cold, moist and dry) as well as of generation and decay which are found
only in the sublunary world composed of the four elements (fire, air, water and earth).
While Al-Farabi begins with a description of the First Cause, or more simply the first, and
it‘s main attributes. The First is the source of all further being.
Every event must have a cause, and each cause must in turn have its own cause, and so
forth. Hence, there must either be an infinite regress of causes or there must be a
starting point or first cause. Al-Kindi rejects the notion of an infinite regress and insists
that there must be a first cause, and the first cause must be God, the only uncaused being.
The world consists of the unity of the unified whereas the Divine Independence resides in
the Unity of the Unique (Ibn Arabi)
The question of the Unity of the Divine Principle and the consequent unicity of Nature is
particularly important in Islam where the idea of Unity (al-Tawhid) overshadows all
others and remains at every level of Islamic civilization the most basic principle upon
which all else depends. But it must not be thought that this goal of finding and displaying
the unicity of nature is dependent upon a particular method to the exclusion of others. The
Muslims used many ways of knowing to formulate sciences based on the idea of the
unicity of nature which is itself derived from the twin source of revelation and intellectual
intuition.34
In the light of a detailed description of the creation of the Universe drawn from the Qur'an
and Sunnah, the purpose of existence is for God to become known, to be discovered by
human beings. Before the creation, Allah was known only to himself, because nothing
34
Seyyed Hossein Nasr, 1993, An Introduction to Islamic Cosmological Doctrine, State University of New
York Press Albany
22
existed but He. It was part of his grand design that through created beings the Attributes
of Allah were to be fulfilled.
Allah may be known in two ways: through revelation and by means of reasoning. In the
former case, he has conveyed his presence to humankind by sending messengers.
Individuals also may become aware of Allah's existence through personal revelations,
much as a schoolchild learns from teachers and books. Reasoning may lead to awareness
of God's existence through formal logic, rational arguments, or deductions from the
results of scientific or historical research, according to the individual's interests,
education, and aptitudes. Those who choose to study the Qur'an and Hadith may obtain
further understanding of Allah, his rights, and his judgment of the beings in both the
unseen and observable universes.35
From this chapter, our reader may independently understand, what would comes after the
discussion of this topic and what is the main discussion on metaphysic, digging out
several question and may be an interesting views on what is metaphysics. Generally,
metaphysic is a study of beings and what is there before the beings or what is the cause of
all beings. From this chapter the reader may also know metaphysics from the westerners
and Islamic point of view, how those westerners view in regards to God and cosmos, and
what those Muslims know when it come to the discussion of beings.
35
Surah Al-Baqarah, (V.2:164), “In the creation of the heavens and earth, in the alternation of night and
day, in the ships that sail the seas with goods for people, in the water which God sends down from the sky
to give life to the earth when it has been barren, scattering all kinds of creatures over it, in the changing of
the winds and clouds that run their appointed courses between the sky and earth: there are signs in all
these for those who use their minds.”
23
CHAPTER 3
Historical Background on the Coming of Greek’s Metaphysical Ideas into Islamic
Philosophy
Michael Crichton36
used to said, ―if you don‘t know history, then you don‘t know
anything, you are a leaf that doesn‘t know it is a part of a tree‖, while in this chapter,
researcher would not let our readers to be those ―leaf‖, thus, this chapter would elaborate
roughly on the history of metaphysics and its significant figure on Muslim philosophers.
Among the philosophical disciplines transmitted to the Arabic and Islamic world from the
Greeks, metaphysics was of paramount importance, as its pivotal role in the overall
history of the transmission of Greek thought into Arabic makes evident. The beginnings
of Arabic philosophy coincide with the production of the first extensive translation of
Aristotle‘s Metaphysics, within the circle of translators associated with the founder of
Arabic philosophy, Al-Kindi, the so-called ―early or ―classical‖ phase of falsafa ends with
the largest commentary on the Metaphysics available in western philosophy, by Ibn
Rushd. The following ―golden‖ age of Arabic thought continues to be primarily
concerned with metaphysics, turning from the effort of interpreting the intricacies of
Aristotle‘s canonical text towards the process of assimilating the model of metaphysical
science first outlined by Al-Farabi and then implemented by Ibn Sina.
This impression of centrality is confirmed by the large number and great variety of works
pertaining to metaphysics written in Arabic translations of the basic Greek texts, different
kinds of commentaries on the translated material, original works with various degrees of
comprehensiveness and doctrinal depth, all of which provide clear evidence of the
intellectual vivacity and the productive energy of this philosophical area. Such an
intensive reflection on metaphysics leads to what represent the specific Arabic
36
John Michael Crichton (October 23, 1942 – November 4, 2008) was an American best-selling author. The
Daily Telegraph, November 10, 2008.
24
contribution to the history of this discipline, namely the progressive devising of a new
standard of metaphysics, in which this discipline assumes the form of a comprehensive
and articulated synthesis of the Greek heritage, undergoes a process of epistemological
refinement in terms of definition of scope, coherence of structure, rigorousness of
arguments and ascends to the role of cornerstone of philosophy.37
During the Hellenistic period (323-43 bc), classical Greek philosophy underwent a radical
transformation. From being an essentially Greek product, it developed into a
cosmopolitan and eclectic cultural movement in which Greek, Egyptian, Phoenician38
and
other Near Eastern religious and ethical elements coalesced. This transformation is best
symbolized by the role Alexandria played as the hub of diverse currents of thought
making up the new philosophy.
When the Abbasid Caliphate was founded in Baghdad in 750 ad, the centre of learning
gradually moved to the Abbasid capital, which became in due course the heir of Athens
and Alexandria as the new cultural metropolis of the medieval world. About two centuries
later Cordoba, capital of Muslim Spain, began to vie with Baghdad as the centre of
'ancient learning'. From Cordoba, Greek-Arabic philosophy and science were transmitted
across the Pyrenees to Paris, Bologna and Oxford in the twelfth and the thirteenth
centuries.
The initial reception of Greek-Hellenistic philosophy in the Islamic world was mixed. It
was frowned upon at first as being suspiciously foreign or pagan, and was dismissed by
conservative theologians, legal scholars and grammarians as pernicious or superfluous.
By the middle of the eighth century the picture had changed somewhat, with the
appearance of the rationalist theologians of Islam known as the Mu'tazilites39
, who were
37
Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N.Zalta, 2012, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysics The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy
38
Ancient Semitic civilization situated on the western, coastal part of the Fertile Crescent and centered on
the coastline of modern Lebanon
39
Islamic school of theology based on reason and rational thought that flourished in the cities
of Basra and Baghdad, both in present-day Iraq, during the 8th–10th centuries. The adherents of the
Mu'tazili school are best known for their having asserted that, because of the perfect unity and eternal
25
thoroughly influenced by the methods of discourse or dialectic favored by the Muslim
philosophers. Of those philosophers, the two outstanding figures of the ninth and tenth
centuries were al-Kindi and al-Razi, who hailed Greek philosophy as a form of liberation
from the shackles of dogma or blind imitation (taqlid). For al-Kindi, the goals of
philosophy are perfectly compatible with those of religion, and, for al-Razi, philosophy
was the highest expression of man's intellectual ambitions and the noblest achievement of
that noble people, the Greeks, who were unsurpassed in their quest for wisdom (hikma).40
3.1 The Greek Early Influence on Al-Kindi’s Views of Metaphysics
Abu Yusuf Ya‗qub ibn Ishaq Al-Kindi (ca. 800–870 CE) was the first self-identified
philosopher in the Arabic tradition. He worked with a group of translators who rendered
works of Aristotle, the Neoplatonists, and Greek mathematicians and scientists into
Arabic. Al-Kindi's own treatises, many of them epistles addressed to members of the
caliph family, depended heavily on these translations, which included the
famous Theology of Aristotle and Book of Causes, Arabic versions of works by Plotinus
and Proclus. Al-Kindi's own thought was suffused with Neo-Platonism, though his main
authority in philosophical matters was Aristotle. Al-Kindi's philosophical treatises
include On First Philosophy, in which he argues that the world is not eternal and that God
is a simple One.
As one would expect given his prominent role in the translation movement, al-Kindi's
works are suffused with ideas from Greek thought. His philosophical works are indebted
in part to the mathematical and scientific authors translated by his day, for instance
Nicomachus of Gerasa; Euclid influenced his methodology as well as his mathematics
nature of Allah, the Qur'an must therefore have been created, as it could not be co-eternal with God (The,
by Abdullah Saeed, 2008, Qurʼan: an introduction page 203)
40
, Majid Fakhry, 1998, Greek Philosophy: Impact on Islamic Philosophy Routledge
26
(cf. Gutas 2004). But the most important influence on his philosophy was from Aristotle,
whose corpus al-Kindi surveys in a treatise called On the Quantity of Aristotle's
Books (Abu Rida 1950, 363–84; also Guidi and Walzer 1940, Cortabarria Beitia 1972,
Jolivet 2004). This work provides a fairly thorough overview of Aristotle's corpus.
His purpose in his book called Metaphysics is to explain things that subsist without matter
and, though they may exist together with what does have matter, are neither connected
nor united to matter; to affirm the oneness of God, the great and exalted, to explain His
beautiful names, and that He is the agent cause of the universe, which perfects [all
things], the God of the universe who governs through His perfect providence and
complete wisdom, while this may not look like an accurate description of
Aristotle's Metaphysics, it is a wholly accurate description of al-Kindi's own conception
of the science of metaphysics. That he conflates metaphysics with theology is clear from
the opening of On First Philosophy, which says that since philosophy in general is the
study of truth, ―first philosophy‖ is ―the knowledge of the first truth who is the cause of
all truth.‖ And indeed Aristotle's Metaphysics is a major influence on this work.41
3.2 The Middle Stages of Aristotle’s Influences on Muslim Philosophers
The Islamic philosophers picked and chose from Aristotle's texts, using him as an
authority when it suited their purposes, and knowing that philosophy was a 'foreign
science' in need of an external authority as it lacked an indigenous authority. While
aspects of Avicennan philosophy continue the Aristotelian tradition in broad terms, Ibn
Sina's ideas about the Necessary Existent and the Possible Existent do not have their
antecedents in Aristotle's philosophy.
41
Adamson, Peter, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2013, Al-Kindi The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(Summer 2012 edition)
27
Among the scholars of the Middle Period42
, Al-Farabi is considered the foremost
Aristotelian, and was indeed known as the Second Teacher (Aristotle himself being the
First Teacher). Some scholars have divided his works into those which admit Aristotelian
influence, such as Kitab al-huruf (The Book of Letters), and more popular works, such
as Kitab fi mabadi' ara' ahl al-madina al-fadila (The Book of the Principles of the
Opinions of the People of the Virtuous City)43
, a utopian treatise which espouses
Neoplatonic theories such as emanation, in which everything is said to flow from the One.
His internalization of Aristotle is apparent in his treatment of the four causes in Tahsil al-
sa'ada (The Attainment of Happiness), echoing those found in al-Tabi'a (The Physics).
Here he shows a complete familiarity with the Aristotelian idea of the four causes, but is
equally willing to propound his own interpretation, preferring the word mabadi'(literally,
principles) rather than asbab (causes), which was the translator Ibn Ishaq's choice.
Al-Farabi considered his Kitab al-huruf, which takes its title from the Greek letters which
entitle Aristotle's chapters, to be a commentary on Aristotle's Metaphysics. While al-
Huruf is inspired by Aristotle's concerns, and deals with many of the same subjects, it
does not slavishly imitate or even follow the order of the Metaphysics. Al-Farabi also
believed in the ultimate harmony of the opinions of Plato and Aristotle, a difficult notion
for many philosophers today to accept.
One might ask why Ibn Sina (Avicenna) would be taken in by a false treatise,
the Theology of Aristotle, when he had such a good command of Aristotelian concepts
that he could quote accurately from memory. In his'Letter to Kiya', Ibn Sina expresses
doubt about the authorship of the Theology of Aristotle, remarking that the text is
'somewhat suspect' (Gutas 1988).
The tone of his discussion indicates that while he included this work with other
Aristotelian treatises, he has by no means concluded it is genuinely an Aristotelian text.
42
The fourth and fifth centuries (tenth and eleventh century’s ad)
43
Kitab fi mabadi' ara' ahl al-madina al-fadila (The Book of the Principles of the Opinions of the People of
the Virtuous City)usually known simply as al-Madina al-fadila (The Virtuous City)
28
On the other hand, in the Danashnama-i 'ala'i (The Book of Knowledge for 'Ala'), his
account of metaphysics, Ibn Sina derives a quotation from Aristotle where he claims that
Aristotle describes the First Being as having complete happiness in itself. It is uncertain
to which part of the Metaphysics Ibn Sina is referring, as such a passage does not appear
to exist.
Elsewhere, Ibn Sina claims to quote Aristotle from memory when discussing the theory of
definition for his treatise on Definitions, when he suggests that in the Topics, Aristotle
defines definition as 'a statement indicating the quiddity of a thing'. This is an exact
quotation. It is remarkable that Ibn Sina appears to remember Aristotle's important ideas
word for word after having, he says, read the books only once and thereafter being unable
to refer to them. Given his life as a wanderer, this statement is credible.44
3.3 The Late Period of Aristotle’s Influences Regarding Metaphysics
Unlike the Islamic east, where a Hellenistic tradition of philosophy45
flourished from the
ninth century, philosophy reached al-Andalus later. Ibn Bajja, known as Avempace in
Latin, was one of its first practitioners, active in the early part of the twelfth century. His
heavily Aristotelian commentaries on the logical works of al-Farabi still survive. The
socio-historian Ibn Khaldun ranked him with Ibn Rushd, and Ibn Bajja no doubt
influenced this, the most famous, philosopher of Muslim Spain.
44
Kiki Kennedy-Day, 1998, Aristotelianism In Islamic Philosophy, Routledge, www.muslimphilosophy.com
45
The Hellenistic period or Hellenistic civilization is the period of ancient Greek history between
the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC and the emergence of ancient Rome as signified by the Battle
of Actium in 31 BC[1] and the subsequent conquest of Ptolemaic Egypt in 30 BC.[2] At this time, Greek
cultural influence and power was at its zenith in Europe and Asia, experiencing prosperity and progress in
the arts, exploration, literature, theatre,architecture, music, mathematics, philosophy, and science. It is
often considered a period of transition, sometimes even of decadence or degeneration,[3]compared to
the brilliance of the Greek Classical era.
29
Ibn Rushd, better known in the West as Averroes, is considered not nearly as influential
in the Islamic world as he was in medieval Europe. Here, either because he lived on the
Western periphery of the Islamic world or because he wrote such extensive commentaries
on Aristotle, he became renowned. Latin translations of Ibn Rushd's texts were available
in Europe within a century of his death. Coming from a family of eminent jurists, Ibn
Rushd had legal as well as philosophical training. He wrote commentaries on a wide
range of Aristotle's works, including his Physics, Metaphysics, and Book of the Soul, On
the Heavens and Posterior Analytics, the last dating from 1170. In both long and
intermediate commentaries as well as short paraphrases, Ibn Rushd tried to analyse the
extent of his Islamic predecessors' deviation from Aristotle. He also exerted himself in
reconciling religion and philosophy in his Fasl al-maqal (Decisive Treatise on the
Harmony of Religion and Philosophy). He discovers a duty to reflect with the intellect on
existing beings and to seek knowledge in the Qur'anic injunction found at Surah 49: 2:
'Consider, you who have vision.'
There is good reason to consider another of Ibn Rushd's works, the Tahafut al-tahafut
(The Incoherence of the Incoherence)46
to be an attack on Neoplatonism and a defence of
true Aristotelianism.47
On the question of the origin of the world, Ibn Rushd promulgated
eternal creation but did not accept emanation. While he wrote the Tahafut primarily as a
rebuttal of al-Ghazali's attack on the philosophers, he also disagreed with Ibn Sina's ideas
about necessity.
Ibn Rushd was also to be the last in the line of Islamic Aristotelians. Throughout the
classical period of Islamic thought, there were always some thinkers who distrusted
46
The Incoherence of the Incoherence by Andalusian Muslim polymath and philosopher Averroes (1126–
1198) is an important Islamic philosophical treatise, in which the author defends the use of Aristotelian
philosophy within Islamic thought.It was written in the style of a dialogue against Al-Ghazali's claims in The
Incoherence of the Philosophers (Tahāfut al-Falasifa), which criticized Islamic Neoplatonic thought.
Originally written in Arabic, The Incoherence of the Incoherence was subsequently translated into many
other languages. The book is considered Averroes' landmark; in it, he tries to create harmony
between faith and philosophy
47
Ahmad Jamil,1994, Ibnu Rushd, Monthly Renaissance
30
rationalism and logic, certain that the study of philosophy results in a loss of faith. Al-
Ghazali and Ibn Taymiyya are the two best known examples. Al-Ghazali studied
philosophy to be able to rebut it; he suggested that knowledge is inferior to faith, as
knowledge could not overcome doubts. His Tahafut al-falasifa (The Incoherence of the
Philosophers) had a lasting influence. Here al-Ghazali attacked Aristotle and his
followers, al-Farabi and Ibn Sina, particularly objecting to the Aristotelian notion of the
eternity of the world, which he found irreconcilable with the Qur'anic description of
God's creation of the world from nothing. Al-Ghazali also saw this as an idea which
limited God in a totally unacceptable manner. Two centuries later, Ibn Taymiyya
wrote al-Radd 'ala al-mantiqiyyin (Against the Logicians) as an attack on the method of
definition and demonstration used by the philosophers who were influenced by Aristotle.
He argued that logic is based on the faculty of human reason, which is necessarily inferior
to divine revelation.
Despite the efforts of Ibn Rushd to rehabilitate philosophy, many scholars believe that
Islamic philosophy never completely recovered from al-Ghazali's massive and brutal
assault on it. In the Latin West, Islamic Aristotelianism was reincarnated as Averroism,
that is, Aristotle's works as taught by Ibn Rushd and translated into Latin. His works also
came to have great influence in Jewish philosophy, and for many years led to a strong
strain of Aristotelianism among Jewish philosophers. Aristotelianism continued to have
an effect on Islamic philosophy through opposition to it from Illuminations philosophy,
and in particular thinkers such as al-Suhrawardi, al-Shahrazuri, Ibn Kammuna and others,
often based in Persia. The latter sought to attack what they took to be the principles of
Aristotelianism, especially its logical and ontological axioms, and produced critiques of
Aristotelian essentialism which are sometimes quite similar to that of William of
Ockham. It is accurate to say, however, that Aristotelianism as a school of philosophy in
the Islamic world found no Muslim successors after the death of Ibn Rushd.48
48
Kiki Kennedy-Day, 1998, Aristotelianism In Islamic Philosophy Routledge
31
There are lots of writings which discussing on Aristotle and his widespread of thought
upon many scholars and ancient philosophers. Through this chapter, researcher has
explains lightly on our Muslim philosophers timeline on expanding Aristotle‘s ideas.
From this chapter, readers may also develop a thorough view on how does those Muslims
philosopher reflecting towards the ideas.
32
CHAPTER 4
The Influences of Aristotle’s Metaphysics in Muslim Philosopher’s Work
Aristotle's work is the only Greek work mentioned in connection with metaphysics in the
Arabic classifications of the sciences. No other Greek metaphysical work was translated
and commented upon in the same continuous, widespread and changeable manner, or
quoted so often and largely in original treatises. Schematically, Arab authors adopted
three main ways of approaching the text of Aristotle's Metaphysics49
, corresponding to
three different literary genres. The first approach, which can be called ―taxonomical‖50
, is
found in classificatory essays whose goal is to outline the content of the Metaphysics and
to clarify its place in the Aristotelian corpus, and to indicate the position of the discipline
of metaphysics in the system of knowledge.
The ―exegetical‖ approach is represented by commentaries that aim at explaining, with
different degrees of literalness and comprehensiveness, the content of the Metaphysics.
The tendency to adaptation, finally, is visible in metaphysical treatises that reformulate
the doctrine of Aristotle's work and are intended as original elaborations, regardless of the
amount of dependence on their Greek model. All main authors who considered
metaphysics approached Aristotle's Metaphysics, in different extents and degrees, from
these various perspectives.
In order to make a distinguishes between Islamic and the Greek idea‘s of metaphysics,
Muslim philosophers also does a good counted from their own perspective, which are
suitable with the teachings of Islam and not simply take Aristotle‘s ideas of metaphysics
blindly. Those philosophers such as Al-Kindi, Ibn sina and Al-Farabi made their own
49
Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, (2012), Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, Metaphysics
Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University
50
Taxonomy: the classification of organisms into a hierarchy of groupings, from the general to the
particular, that reflect evolutionary and usually morphological relationships: kingdom, phylum, class,
order, family, genus and species. (Merriam Webster’s Desk Dictionary (concise encyclopedia), 1995)
33
perception with Aristotle‘s works and developed those ideas to make it available to
discuss metaphysics on Islam. We should not take at face value the Islamic philosophers'
claims that they were simply following Aristotle. The convention in Islamic philosophy is
to state that one is repeating the wisdom of the past, thus covering over such originality as
may exist. There was a tendency among Islamic philosophers to cite Aristotle as an
authority in order to validate their own claims and ideas.
4.1 The Arabic Translation of Metaphysics
The translation regarding the subject metaphysic continued constantly for three centuries
(ninth to eleventh), with the production of some Arabic version of Aristotle‘s text, some
of which may have relied on the Syrian connection, and the involvement of several
different translators owned by the major schools of Arabic philosophy. These translations
displayed different degrees of inclusiveness (from integral versions of Aristotle's work to
translations of its single books) and literalness (from strict word for word procedures to
styles more akin to paraphrase).
Cumulatively, the Arabic translations of the Metaphysics evidence the intention of
making the entire text of Aristotle's work accessible to Arabic readers, extending the
translation activity from the main bulk of the work towards more peripheral books, like
Alpha Meizon (I)51
and Nu (XIV). Equally clear is the effort to provide an Arabic version
increasingly faithful to the Greek original and more respondent to philosophical clarity,
and a special focus on the repeatedly translated book Lambda (XII)52
. Remarkable is also
the inclusion in the translation activity of the main available Greek commentaries on
51
Alpha Meizon, the well-known beginning of Aristotle’s work (This is the beginning of the
Greek Metaphysics: “All men by nature desire to know”, translated by W. D. Ross), by Cecilia Martini
Bonadeo, 2011, Greek into Arabic, Philosophical Concepts and Linguistics Bridges University of Pisa
52
Further remarks on beings in general, first principles, and God or gods, This book includes Aristotle's
famous description of the unmoved mover, "the most divine of things observed by us", as "the thinking of
thinking"
34
the Metaphysics, namely those of Alexander of Aphrodisias and Themistius (less certain
is the case of Syrianus' commentary), whose explanations of book Lambda (and, in the
case of Syrianus, Beta (III)) were translated together with the corresponding books of
Aristotle's work. Since also other Greek works intimately related to
Aristotle's Metaphysics were translated into Arabic, like Theophrastus's On First
Principles, the metaphysical section of Nicholas of Damascus's On the Philosophy of
Aristotle, Alexander of Aphrodisias's On the Principles of the Universe, the De aeternitate
mundi contra Aristotelem and other cosmological writings of Philoponus. The entire
Greek exegetical tradition of the Metaphysics, from Aristotle's first disciples
(Theophrastus) to his last interpreters/reformers (Philoponus), was available to Arabic-
speaking scholars.53
On account of its long duration, the high rank of the scholars it engaged, and the breadth
of its scope this area of the overall translation movement from Greek into Arabic cannot
be reduced to a mere preliminary phase of the Arabic reception of the Metaphysics, but
rather provides a specimen of the main trends that characterized the first centuries of its
history.
4.2 Al-Kindi’s Views on Aristotle’s Metaphysics
Al-Kindi was one of the first Arab thinkers to draw on the heritage of Greek Philosophy.
Al-Kindi became interested in the works of Aristotle and Plato, for example, he
recommended that Aristotle‘s Metaphysics be translated. He initiated the translation of
several works from Greek, including the theology of Aristotle which had an important
influence in Arab thought. Al-Kindi‘s best known treatise is his work on metaphysics, fi
al-falsafah al-ula (in first philosophy). Eventhough Al-Kindi‘s was not agreed with
53
Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2012, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, Metaphysics
Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University
35
Aristotle in some point regarding the problems acquired in the issues of metaphysics,
precisely he was affected by the works of Aristotle which forced him to make up an
argument can be said as one of an important sources used by Muslim philosophers today.
One of the most common phrases associated with Al-Kindi‘s philosophy is creation ex
nihilo. This is a Latin phrase means ―creation out of nothing‖. Al-Kindi believed that God
was the only creator of the universe and that he created it out of nothing, meaning that
nothing else existed before God‘s creation. The reason this is so tied to Al-Kindi is that it
distinguished his views and those of the Arabs from the theories of the Greeks.
Al-Kindi often agreed with Aristotle, but he disagreed when it came to creation. Aristotle
viewed god not as a creator, but a force that turned something with potential into reality.
Aristotle, who often studied astronomy, saw that the planets and stars appeared to be
finite objects. In other words, they were not eternal and infinite. If the creation was not
infinite, then the creator may not be either. It is a sign of Al-Kindi‘s open mindedness that
he was able to strongly challenge Aristotle‘s views on this point, while still respecting
other theories of Aristotle.54
From these views we can see, the argument developed by Al-Kindi throughout the
understanding of Aristotle in regards to the creation of the world, which we can say that
the production of the ex-nihilo theories of Al-Kindi is the reflection on Aristotles views of
the eternity of the world and God‘s creation.
Al-Kindi's best known treatise is the metaphysical study, Fi al-falsafa al-ula (On First
Philosophy). Aristotelian influence can be seen in certain elements, However he is
Aristotelian only up to a point. The point of divergence is reached over the question of the
origin of the world. Aristotle teaches the eternity of the world, Al-Kindi propounds
creation ex nihilo. Al-Kindi differs from the Hellenistic philosophical tradition primarily
in espousing the belief that the world was created ex nihilo. In Aristotelian metaphysics
the Prime Mover set the world in motion, but in the Hellenistic tradition, time and motion
54
Tony Abboud, 2006, Al-Kindi: The Father of Arab Philosophy, The Rosen Publishing group
36
are intrinsically linked. Matter set in motion is eternally existing, since it exists before
motion (and therefore before time). In this system, time is defined as the extension of the
series of movements. Thus time begins with movement. In al-Kindi's system, matter, time
and movement are all finite, with a beginning and a cessation at some future point. Other
subjects that concern al-Kindi can be seen from his titles, including Fi wahdaniya Allah
wa tunahiy jirm al-'alam (On the Unity of God and the Limitation of the Body of the
World), and Fi kammiya kutub Aristutalis wa ma yahtaj ilahi fi tahsil al-falsafa (The
Quantity of the Books of Aristotle and What is Required for the Acquisition of
Philosophy).55
It would appear that al-Kindi considered the study of metaphysics to be primary in his
endeavor to reconstruct Greek thought. His most significant remaining work, On First
Philosophy, assimilates metaphysics or "first philosophy" to theology, the study of "the
First Truth Who is the Cause of every truth." His survey of the works of Aristotle
likewise confirms that the Metaphysics studies God, His names and His status as the First
Cause. A similar conception underlies the Prologue to the Theology of Aristotle, which
claims to "complete the whole of Aristotelian philosophy," and promises a "discussion of
the First Divinity, and that it is the Cause of causes." The Prologue also seems to portray
this project as continuous with that of the Metaphysics. We might suspect, then, that al-
Kindi took Aristotle's aim in the study of Metaphysics as central to his own undertaking,
and indeed as central to an adequate philosophical understanding of God.
4.3 Al-Farabi and the Ideas of Aristotle’s Metaphysics
Al-Farabi was known to the Arabs as the 'Second Master' (after Aristotle), and with good
reason. It is unfortunate that his name has been overshadowed by those of later
philosophers such as Ibn Sina. It should be noted that al-Farabi was an Aristotelian as
55
Kiki Kennedy-Day, 1998, Aristotelianism In Islamic Philosophy, Routledge
37
well as a Neoplatonist, he is said, for example, to have read On the Soul two hundred
times and even the Physics forty times. It should then come as no surprise that he deploys
Aristotelian terminology, and indeed there are areas of his writings that are quite
untouched by Neoplatonism. Furthermore, al-Farabi tried to demonstrate the basic
agreement between Aristotle and Plato on such matters as the creation of the world, the
survival of the soul and reward and punishment in the afterlife.
In his philosophy of Aristotle al-Farabi explains in a few lines that metaphysics (ma ba’d
al-tabi’ah) investigates the existents from a point of view different from that of natural
philosophy. But another passage of the same work afford us a glimpse of his conception
of the relation between the two disciplines, the study of the heavenly bodies essence does
not belong to natural philosophy because the latter deals only with beings falling under
ten categories. But there are beings which fall outside the categories, such as the Active
intellect or the thing which impart their motion to the heavenly bodies. It is thus necessary
to study beings in more comprehensive fashion than that of natural philosophy, and this
more comprehensive study, which represents humanity‘s highest achievement and highest
goal, is metaphysics.56
Through these explanations we might see that al-Farabi‘s emphasized on metaphysics
came from his investigations of Aristotle works, which discussing about the Active
intellect that is the God who does not belong to the study of natural philosophy and
indeed there is metaphysics which are importantly used to study it in more comprehensive
ways rather than the natural philosophy‘s study.
Al-Farabi in his exposition of Aristotle‘s philosophy almost entirely ignored his
metaphysics. It has been suggested, quite plausibly, that this is because Al-Farabi was
dissatisfied with it, particularly with its unsystematic order, and wanted to replace it by a
theory of his own57
56
Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman (1996), History of Islamic Philosophy Part 2, Routledge, London and
New York
57
Druart (1981), Al-Farabi’s Metaphysics, Encyclopedia of Iranica, http//www.iranicaonline.org
38
Al-Farabi begins with a description of the First Cause, or more simply the First, and its
main attributes. The First is the source of all further beings, it is absolutely perfect, it is
unique (wahid), knowing (alim), wise (hakim), real (haqq) and living (hayy). The
influence of Mu‘tazilite kalam may be detected in these epithets. Like Aristotle‘s God it
thinks itself. It must be noted that Al-Farabi, with the majority of the peripatetic Islamic
philosophers, does not accept the neoplatonic distinction between the intellect and the
One, such a notion of a One above and beyond being and intellection must have been
inconceivable for them.58
The study of Metaphysics by al-Farabi from Aristotle‘s works related to the cosmological
problem and the theory of emanation is not straightly conceivable, however it urge al-
Farabi to contributed a replacement theory which are counted as better form of ideas by
himself to elaborated it in Islamic thought of Philosophy, such development are more
simply to be understood as the First Cause in which it comes to be the sources of all other
further beings, the First Cause mentioned by Al-Farabi in easier word is that a God which
are all-knowing, oneness and living.
Besides more traditional overviews of the works of Aristotle and the place of
the Metaphysics among them (What Ought to be Premised to the Learning of Aristotle's
Philosophy,Ma yanbaghi an yuqaddama qabla taʿallum falsafat Ariṣṭū; Aristotle's
Philosophy and Its Parts, Falsafat Arisṭuṭalis wa-agzaʼ falsafatihi), al-Farabi also
provided taxonomic accounts in which the Metaphysics is related to the system of the
philosophical and Islamic sciences, rather than to the Aristotelian corpus of writings.
In the most important and influential essay of this type, the Enumeration of the
Sciences (Iḥṣaʼ al-ʿulum), he portrays metaphysics as a discipline having a precise
method (demonstration) and an articulated structure, in which a full-fledged ontology (the
study of being qua being) in its different aspects precedes, first, a part dealing with the
foundation of the other sciences and, second, a philosophical theology concerned, among
58
Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman, 1996, Metaphysics, Charles Genequand, in History of Islamic
Philosophy part2, Routledge, London
39
other things, with Islamic issues such as God's attributes, divine names and actions. In all
these classificatory treatises, the position of the Metaphysics with respect to the other
works of Aristotle, or of metaphysics with respect to the other philosophical disciplines,
is not stable, but varies according to the particular perspective that al-Farabi adopts,
significantly, in some of them metaphysics is presented as the culmination of the entire
system of knowledge, for example, in The Philosophy of Aristotle.59
Al-Farabi finished his early education and spent his childhood in his hometown Turkey.
Later he continued his studies in Bukhara, while continuing his higher education in the
city of Baghdad which is the first time he learned Arabic and Greek. Farabi has a great
desire to learn about the universe and man thus dragging himself to study ancient
philosophy, especially the philosophy of Plato and Aristotle. He absorbs the components
present in the philosophy of Plato and Aristotle, which he then combined those ideas with
the knowledge of the Quran and other sciences in Islam.
4.4 Ibn Sina’s Works of Metaphysics
Avicenna's original adaptation of the Metaphysics can be best appreciated in the
metaphysical sections of his philosophy, which approach Aristotle's work according to a
perspective that combines taxonomy, exegesis and adaptation. In virtue of their format as
a collection of the different branches of philosophy, these works give metaphysics a
specific position in the system of the philosophical disciplines. At the same time, they
provide an explanation of Aristotle's text by incorporating it, according to a modified
formulation and arrangement, into Avicenna's own discourse. Finally, they enrich the
doctrine of the Metaphysics with theories that are taken from other authors and works
within the Aristotelian tradition, or from the fruits of Avicenna's own mind.
59
Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2012, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, Metaphysics
Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University
40
Among Avicenna's theology, the most extensive, influential, and the most dependent
upon Aristotelian sources is the Book of the Healing (Kitāb al-Šifāʼ). The metaphysical
section of The Cure, The Science of Divine Things (Ilāhiyyāt), exhibits two radical
aspects of Avicenna's modification of the Aristotelian Metaphysics. Avicenna changes,
first of all, the ―form‖, which is the scientific profile, of Aristotle's work. Accordingly, he
also modifies its ―content‖, namely the disposition and doctrinal purport of the individual
treatises of the work. The changes regarding the ―form‖ affect four main areas: the
subject-matter of metaphysics, its structure, its method, and its relationship with the other
sciences.60
The content of the Metaphysics, on the other hand, is reworked by means of a different
arrangement of its parts, the integration of Aristotle's thought with subsequent
metaphysical speculation, both Greek and Arabic, and the introduction of some original
doctrines.
In the context of the first aspect of formal revision, Avicenna shows that the subject-
matter of the science of metaphysics corresponds coherently to all the different ways
according to which Aristotle portrays this discipline in the Metaphysics. Thus,
metaphysics is, on the one hand, a study of the First Causes and God, since the First
Causes and God are its ―goal‖. But it is also on the other hand, a study of ―the
existent‖ since ―the existent qua existent‖ is its subject-matter. Finally, metaphysics is a
study of immaterial and motionless things since both the First Causes and God, on the one
hand, and ―the existent qua existent‖, on the other, are realities of this kind. This
harmonization of Aristotle's different points of view is undertaken with the intent of
conforming metaphysics to the epistemological canons of the Posterior Analytics, which
posit the subject-matter as the fundamental element of every science. The other aspects of
the scientific reform of metaphysics introduced by Avicenna are also the result of
applying the epistemological requirements of the Posterior Analytics to this discipline. In
60
Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2012, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysics The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy
41
this way, Avicenna bestows on metaphysics an articulated and coherent structure, a
method that is as apodictic as possible, and a position of eminence with respect to all
other philosophical disciplines.61
4.5 Ibn Rushd’s Commentaries of Aristotle’s Works
Ibn Rushd, better known in the West as Averroes, is considered not nearly as influential
in the Islamic world as he was in medieval Europe. Here, either because he lived on the
Western periphery of the Islamic world or because he wrote such extensive commentaries
on Aristotle, he became renowned. Latin translations of Ibn Rushd's texts were available
in Europe within a century of his death. Coming from a family of eminent jurists, Ibn
Rushd had legal as well as philosophical training. He wrote commentaries on a wide
range of Aristotle's works, including his Physics, Metaphysics, Book of the Soul, On the
Heavens and Posterior Analytics, the last dating from 1170. In both long and intermediate
commentaries as well as short paraphrases, Ibn Rushd tried to analyze the extent of his
Islamic predecessors' deviation from Aristotle. He also exerted himself in reconciling
religion and philosophy in his Fasl al-maqal (Decisive Treatise on the Harmony of
Religion and Philosophy). He discovers a duty to reflect with the intellect on existing
beings and to seek knowledge in the Qur‘anic injunction found at Surah 49: 2: 'Consider,
you who have vision.'62
Metaphysics, for Ibn Rushd, does not simply deal with God or theology; rather it
concerns itself with different classes of being and the analogical idea of being. It is, thus,
a science that distinguishes inferior classes of being from real being. Ibn Rushd, the
61
Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2012, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysics, The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy
62
George F. Hourani, 1976, On the Harmony of Religion and Philosophy A translation, with introduction
and notes, of Ibn Rushd’s Kitab fasl al-maqal, with its appendix (Damima) and an extract from Kitab al-
kashf ‘an manahij al-adilla, Messrs. Lucaz & CO. 46 Great Russell Street, London
42
adamant Aristotelian, puts his own slant on Aristotle‘s metaphysics. Ibn Rushd‘s
classification of being begins with accidental substances, which are physical beings, then
moves to being of the soul or mind and finally discusses whether the substance existing
outside the soul, such as the sphere of the fixed stars, is material or immaterial. This
hierarchy, notes Charles Genequand,63
differs from Aristotle‘s hierarchy of material
beings, beings of the soul, mind and unchangeable entities. The first and third categories
of both thinkers are somewhat similar in that they encompass a straight demarcation
between material and immaterial being. Ibn Rushd‘s second class of being, however,
includes both universals and mathematical beings; and as such cannot be the bridge
between physics and metaphysics as it is in Aristotle. Rather, he contended that all
autonomous beings, whether material or not, constitute a single category. This was likely
a response to the more materialistic interpretations of Aristotle, such as that of Alexander
of Aphrodisias, for Ibn Rushd did not see physics and the metaphysical at opposite sides
of the spectrum.64
This encompasses that Ibn Rushd not only followed Aristotle‘s ideas of metaphysics, he
even includes his own opinions to make it suits with Islamic philosophy without strictly
abandoned it blindly. The defense of Aristotle‘s philosophy can also be determined in the
works of Ibn rushd which are against the attack on philosophy by Al-Ghazali and Ibn
Taymiyyah.
Ibn Rushd was also to be the last in the line of Islamic Aristotelians. Throughout the
classical period of Islamic thought, there were always some thinkers who distrusted
rationalism and logic, certain that the study of philosophy results in a loss of faith. Al-
Ghazali and Ibn Taymiyya are the two best known examples. Al-Ghazali studied
philosophy to be able to rebut it; he suggested that knowledge is inferior to faith, as
knowledge could not overcome doubts. His tahafut al-falasifa (The Incoherence of The
63
Charles Genequand, likely to be the author of one of the Article, “Metaphysics”, available in “History of
Islamic Philosophy”, edited by Seyyed hossein Nasr, Oliver leaman , 1996, Routledge
64
H. Chad Hillier, 2004, Ibn Rushd (Averroes) 1126-1198, Encyclopedia of Philosophy, University of
Toronto, Canada
43
Philosophers) had a lasting influence. Here al-Ghazali attacked Aristotle and his
followers, al-Farabi and Ibn Sina, particularly objecting to the Aristotelian notion of the
eternity of the world, which he found irreconcilable with the Qur'anic description of
God's creation of the world from nothing. Al-Ghazali also saw this as an idea which
limited God in a totally unacceptable manner. Two centuries later, Ibn Taymiyya
wrote al-Radd 'ala al-mantiqiyyin (Against the Logicians) as an attack on the method of
definition and demonstration used by the philosophers who were influenced by Aristotle.
He argued that logic is based on the faculty of human reason, which is necessarily inferior
to divine revelation.65
65
Kiki Kennedy-Day, 1998, Aristotelianism in Islamic Philosophy, Muslim Philosophy, Routledge
44
CHAPTER 5
Conclusion and Recommendation
Aristotle used to said ―It is rather the case that we desire something because we believe it
to be good than that we believe a thing to be good because we desire it. It is the thought
that starts things off.‖ From these writings, there are many things researchers believed it
would be good for the others to know something we have never know, or something that
we have no intention to know, either it is because we can‘t afford to know or don‘t want
to know. In these works researchers, had indicated closely how it is relevant when it
comes to take others opinion rather than that just doing or believing something that
couldn‘t afford to open up our mind rationalizing what we are doing.
History has recorded that the birth and development of philosophy is in Greek. The word
philosophy itself is derived from the Greek words, namely, Philo and Sophia. Philo means
love, or in broadest meaning can be interpreted as a deep curiosity, while Sophia means
wisdom or intelligence. So it can be concluded that the study of philosophy is the love of
wisdom which is never satisfied with knowledge and presume that truth should never be
end, so they will keep trying to find the truth.
The birth of philosophy in Greeks could be considered as one of an amazing things
happened in the history of sciences, these can be proved by looking at the history of
Islamic sciences such as mathematics, logics and even researchers main discussion in
these writings which is metaphysics. The beginning of philosophy in the Islamic world
was mixed, it was frowned upon at first as being suspiciously foreign or pagan and was
dismissed by many conservative scholars, but for those philosophers such as Al-Kindi
and Al-Razi that was the beginning for our Muslims to make a liberation from the chains
of dogma or blind imitation (taqlid).
45
From these writings, researchers are trying to show how our Muslim philosophers not just
picked and chose any of Aristotle‘s ideas, kept it without hesitating, claimed that this is
one of our lost Islamic sciences, in fact, those philosophers tried to make those Aristotle‘s
ideas relevant and suitable in the teachings of Islam.
Discovery consist not in seeking new lands but in seeing with new eyes, from these
writings there are many things we could see in terms of academic reasons, there are lot of
perceptions and views we could indicated, but does these writings would be beneficial for
those who still not agreed with the combination of Islamic sciences with the Greeks
wisdoms?
From this study, researcher aimed to imply that there are nothing we can do if we still
sitting in the back looking at what we cannot think about, and believing without
understanding. The aim of our great philosopher is to abundant any blind imitation which
is continuously becomes one of our Muslim‘s weaknesses. After finishing these studies,
researcher would like to suggest or recommended some of any point that researcher
couldn‘t afford to carried out or not suitable in terms of this research title.
Firstly, regarding the original text of Aristotle‘s ideas of metaphysics there are still lot of
significant fill which is not available in these writings. For example, researcher could not
make it happened to understand several text of Muslim philosophers in regards to
Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysic such as Kitab Huruf written by Al-Farabi.
Secondly, in terms of originality, researchers hope the next studies would be more
enthusiastic in their words and summary of any treatises, which means, researcher was
having difficulties in terms of carrying out researchers own words or maybe not complete
enough while elaborating any paraphrase and references.
Last but not least, researcher always hope for the next studies to be more independent and
objectively clear, unbiased, and ready to accept and to be aware of any sources for the
development of the studies especially in this kind of field.
46
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Al-Quran
Abdullah Saeed, The Qurʼan: an introduction, 2008, page 203)
Adamson, Peter, edited by Edward N. Zalta, Al-Kindi, 2013, The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Ahmad Jamil, Ibnu Rushd, 1994, Monthly Renaissance
Abu Rida, Rasaʼil al-Kindi al-falsafiyya (vol. I), 1950, Dar al-Fikr al-‗Arabi, Cairo
Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N.Zalta, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, 2013,
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Bertrand Russell, A History of Western Philosophy (1945), Stratford Press, New York
Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, (2012),
Metaphysics Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University
Cohen, S.Marc, Aristotle’s Metaphyiscs 2000, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Cecilia Martini Bonadeo, Greek into Arabic, Philosophical Concepts and Linguistics
Bridges, 2011, University of Pisa
Druart, Al-Farabi’s Metaphysics (1981), Encyclopedia of Iranica
47
Edward Craig, Metaphysics, (1998), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, London,
Routledge
Edward N. Zalta, David Lewis's Metaphysics, (2012), Stanford Encyclopedia of
Philosophy, Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University.
Fadlou Sehadi, Metaphysic In Islamic Philosophy, (1982), Caravan Books, Delmar,
New York
Falcon, Andrea, Edward N. Zalta, Commentators on Aristotle, (2012), The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Stanford University)
Geisler, Norman L, Baker Encyclopedia of Christian Apologetics, (1999), Baker
Books
George F. Hourani, On the Harmony of Religion and Philosophy A translation, with
introduction and notes, of Ibn Rushd’s Kitab fasl al-maqal, with its
appendix (Damima) and an extract from Kitab al-kashf ‘an manahij al-adilla , 1976,
Messrs. Lucaz & CO. 46 Great Russell Street, Londo
Hugh Lawson Tancred, Aristotle, The Metaphysic, (1999), Penguin Books Ltd
H. Chad Hillier, Ibn Rushd (Averroes) 1126-1198, Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2004,
University of Toronto, Canada
Isaac Husik, Averroes and the Metaphysic of Aristotle, 2002, The Philosophical
Review, Cornell University
Jeremy Kirby, Aristotle's Metaphysics: Form, Matter and Identity, (2008), Continuum
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International Publishing Group.
Jaafar Hassan, Islam and Metaphysics, 2011, www.islamicinsight.com
Kiki Kennedy Day, Aristotelianism in Islamic Philosophy 1998, Routledge
Michael E. Marmura, Avicenna Metaphysic, 1987, Encyclopedia Iranica
Majid Fakhry, Greek Philosophy: Impact on Islamic Philosophy, (1998), Routledge
Marcus Aurelius Antoninus edited by George Long, Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius
Antoninus, (2005), www.gutenberg.net
Michael Horace Barnes, Understanding Religion And Science, Introducing the
Debate, (2010), Continuum International Publishing Group
Merriam Webster’s Desk Dictionary, 1995, Library of Congress Cataloging, United
State
Robert L. Arrington The World’s Great Philosophers, 2003, Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Avicenna, translated by Michael E. Marmura, The Metaphysic of Healing, 2004,
Bringham Young University
Peter Gay, The Enlightenment: The Rise of Modern Paganism, (1995), Chapter 3,
Section II, pp. 132-141,
Sajjad H. Rizvi, Avicenna (c.980-1037), 2006, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Seyyed Hossein Nasr, An Introduction to Islamic Cosmological Doctrine (1993),
State University of New York Press Albany
49
Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman, History of Islamic Philosophy Part 2 (1996),
Routledge, London and New York
Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman, Metaphysics, Charles Genequand, in History
of Islamic Philosophy part2, 1996, Routledge
Tony Abboud, Al-Kindi: The Father of Arab Philosophy, (2006), The Rosen
Publishing group
Van Inwagen, Peter, edited by Edward N. Zalta, Metaphysics, (2012), Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Plato.stanford.edu

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The Influence of Aristotle's Metaphysic on Selected Muslim Philosophers

  • 1. 1 CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION Metaphysics according to the westerners are the branch of philosophy responsible for the study of existence. It is the foundation of a worldview; answer the question that encompasses everything that exists as well as the nature of existence itself. It says whether the world is real or merely an illusion, and is a fundamental view of the world around us1 . While in Islamic philosophy, the problem inquired in Islamic metaphysic are the same as the problems investigated in the study of western metaphysics. Islamic metaphysics is concerned with finding the truth, the nature of universe, the nature of man and the purpose of all creation. The first major work in the history of philosophy to bear the title ―Metaphysics‖ was the treatise by Aristotle that we have come to know by that name. But Aristotle himself did not use that title or even describe his field of study as ‗metaphysics‘; the name was evidently coined by the first century C.E. editor who assembled the treatise we know as Aristotle's Metaphysics out of various smaller selections of Aristotle's works.2 The term does not go back to Aristotle; it seems merely to be a title in early edition of his works meaning ―Appendix to the Physics‖ Aristotle himself describes what we count this head as ―first Philosophy‖ or ―wisdom‖. There are two tasks he allots to this discipline, which are the investigations of beings in general, and the investigation of a particular being or set of beings, namely God or the Gods.3 The Islamic philosophers picked and chose from Aristotle's texts, using him as an authority when it suited their purposes, and knowing that philosophy was a 'foreign 1 Jeff Landauer, Joseph Rowlands, 2001, Metaphysics, www.importanceofphilosophy.com 2 Cohen, S.Marc, 2000, Aristotle’s Metaphyiscs, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 3 Robert L. Arrington, 2003, The World’s Great Philosophers, Blackwell Publishing Ltd
  • 2. 2 science' in need of an external authority as it lacked an indigenous authority.4 Avicenna‘s metaphysical system is one of the most comprehensive and detailed in the history of philosophy. Its ingredients, its conceptual building blocks, so to speak, are largely Aristotelian.5 Avicenna himself hints at this when in introducing his magnum opus, the voluminous Sefaʾ (Healing), he writes: ―There is nothing in the books of the ancients but we have included in this our book. If something is not found in a place where it is normally found, it would be found in another place where I judge it more fit to be in. I have added to this what I have apprehended with my thought and attained through my reflection, particularly in physics, metaphysics and logic‖.6 IbnSina‘s philosophy is an attempt to construct a coherent and comprehensive system that accords with the religious exigencies of Muslim culture. As such, he may be considered to be the first major Islamic philosopher. The philosophical space that he articulates for God as the Necessary Existence lays the foundation for his theories of the soul, intellect and cosmos. Furthermore, he articulated a development in the philosophical enterprise in classical Islam away from the apologetic concerns for establishing the relationship between religion and philosophy towards an attempt to make philosophical sense of key religious doctrines and even analyze and interpret the Qur‘an.7 Following the initial reception of Hellenistic texts in to Islamic thought, researcher have found that these academic writings which is particularly underlying on the issues of Metaphysic and its utilities on Islamic teachings would give us a refreshment on how it is relevant to discuss some of foreign sciences or to keep in other sources from non-Muslim environment to be implemented in the circle of Islamic thought, so that we are not just going to threw out another better understanding which can make our religion go beyond what we may normally expected it to be happen especially in this kind of field. 4 Kiki Kennedy Day, 1998, Aristotelianism in Islamic Philosophy, Routledge 5 Michael E. Marmura, 1987, Avicenna Metaphysic, Encyclopedia Iranica, http://www.iranicaonline.org 6 Avicenna, translated by Michael E. Marmura, 2004, The Metaphysic of Healing, Bringham Young University 7 Sajjad H. Rizvi, 2006, Avicenna (c.980-1037), Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, http//www/iep.utm.edu
  • 3. 3 1.1 Problem Statement These studies is set to be done for several interest, first of all, is to examine how Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysics developed among Muslims and influenced their ways of thinking. For example, Al-Farabi, he is considered the foremost Aristotelian, and was indeed known as the second teacher. Some scholars has divided his works into those which admit Aristotle‘s influence, such as ―Kitab Al-Huruf‖ The Book of Letter, and more popular work such as ―Kitab Fi Mabadi’ Ara’ Ahl Al-Madina Al-Fadila‖ The Book of the Principle of the Opinions of the People of the Virtuous City.8 Secondly, these studies are conducted to makes a truth evidence of Aristotle‘s views of Metaphysics in Islamic philosophy. Thus connected to the second, is to examine how Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysics could suits the purpose of Muslim philosophers. This is one of the main features in this work where I would like to take some of any point of view which may be an important figure to the reader as a ladder to a better understanding of Islamic philosophy and not to misinterpret any ideologies comes from our Muslim scholars in this field of study. 1.2 Objective of the Study The aim of these studies to be conducted firstly is to analyze how Aristotle‘s Metaphysics could give a wide influence among Muslim Philosophers, secondly how Muslim Philosophers makes truth evidence of Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysics. In addition, 8 Al-Farabi became an expert in philosophy and logic, and also in music: one of his works is entitled Kitab al-musiqa al-kabir (The Great Book of Music). However, perhaps the book for which he is best known is that whose title is abbreviated to al-Madina al-fadila (The Virtuous City), and which is often compared, misleadingly in view of its Neoplatonic orientation, to Plato's Republic. Other major titles from al-Farabi's voluminous corpus included the Risalafi'l-'aql (Epistle on the Intellect), Kitab al-huruf (The Book of Letters).
  • 4. 4 researcher also wanted to examine how Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysic suited the thinking approaches of Muslim Philosophers with Islamic purposes and nature. Lastly, these studies will examine the major work of those Muslim philosophers that connoted Aristotle‘s influences in Metaphysics. 1.3 Research Question 1- How Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysics influence Muslims Philosophers? 2- What does Muslim Philosophers do in conjoining the ideas of Metaphysics in Islamic thought of Philosophy? 3- How Aristotle‘s Metaphysics suits with the teachings of Islam? 4- What is the major work of Muslim Philosophers that connotes Aristotle‘s influence in Metaphysics? 1.4 Significance of the Study These studies serve to makes better improvement for several previous studies that have been conducted in the field of philosophy studies. This writing also aimed to avoid and made up better clearance and further explanation on any confusion and negative perception made by nowadays scholars who accused our previous Muslim philosophers on receiving any sciences and ideas from non-Muslims thinkers. Researcher intend to prove that our previous peripatetic philosophers such as Al-Kindi, Ibn-Sina, Al-Farabi and Ibnu Rushd are not blindly imitating the ideas of the ancient Greek philosopher, Aristotle, and put it at one‘s pleasured onto the teachings of Islamic philosophy.
  • 5. 5 1.5 Literature Review There are plenty of works regarding the influences of Aristotle‘s Metaphysics on Muslim Philosophers. Metaphysics or 'beyond physics' is the study of philosophy examining the true nature of reality, whether it is visible or not. Metaphysics also studies the concepts of being and knowing; essence and existence. Many famous philosophers such as Aristotle, Plato, Al- Kindi, Al-Farabi and ibn Sina have defined metaphysics and tried to contradict theories of each other. In the work, Islam and Metaphysic, by Jaafar Hassan, the writer tried to define God by comparing the concepts of those ancient philosophers and other philosophers who agreed with one or the other. For example, According to Aristotle, God must be the first cause or the first principle of all the substances. Aristotle agrees that theology is an integral part of metaphysics since God is the principle of being. In his epistle, On the Aims of Aristotle's Metaphysics, Farabi explains metaphysics as a universal science comprising general concepts as being, unity, species, accidents etc. From this writings researcher made a conclusion how our Muslim philosophers could agreed with the ideas of Aristotle in this field of studies and harmonizing without neglecting our religious views.9 While according to Isaac Husik, ―Averroes on the Metaphysic of Aristotle‖, mentioned there are plenty of commentaries wrote by Averroes based on Aristotle‘s works, which are divided into three different type of commentaries, ―Great‖, ―middle‖ and ―brief‖, commentaries on Aristotle‘s text with detailed discussion, first few words of each paragraph of Aristotle‘s works and the abandoned of original order with an exposition of Averroes‘s own method and words. 9 Jaafar Hassan, 2011, Islam and Metaphysics, http//www.islamicinsight.com
  • 6. 6 These connote not only those Muslim philosophers takes Aristotle‘s ideas directly without any hesitation, but elaborated and suited those ideas they picked using their own methodology and views.10 Through the writings of Abu Rida, in Rasail Al-Kindi Al-Falsafiyya (vol1) said, when Al- Kindi tries to make an engagement with Aristotle‘s views on metaphysics he found that those ideas of Aristotle are quite ambivalent and by presenting Aristotle‘s work as the culmination of a four-fold division of philosophy into mathematics, logic, physics and metaphysics, Al-Kindi then made up an opposition views with Aristotle.11 Al-Kindi in his metaphysics, insists on offering a consistent opposition to the Aristotelian metaphysics, especially the philosophical issue of the eternity of the world. Aristotle thought the world and its motion and time are eternal; though he himself did not offer adequate arguments to prove his point. Aristotle thought that infinity could not exist in actuality; however, he contradicted himself and stated that the actual existent world is eternal and thus is infinite. Aristotle‘s first cause is a pure intellect that is self-centered. It has no concern about the rest of the universe and is busy in intelligizing itself. Then how can everything in this universe function? How is the first cause controlling this world? These and other questions are very hard to answer within the Aristotelian scheme. Al-Kindi did not find Aristotelian metaphysics appealing at all, in spite of the fact that he greatly admired Aristotle as a man of wisdom. Al-Kindi was a mathematician and Aristotelian cosmology lacks mathematical foundations and suffers from inconsistency; al-Kindi‘s opposition to Aristotle‘s metaphysics reflects al-Kindi‘s independent philosophical reasoning and unique identity. The core emphasis of al-Kindi‘s philosophy is Islamic in essence, and reflects the teachings of the Qur‘an and the traditions of the Prophet. 10 Isaac Husik, 2002, Averroes and the Metaphysic of Aristotle, The Philosophical Review, Cornell University 11 Abu Rida, 1950, Rasaʼil al-Kindi al-falsafiyya (vol. I), Dar al-Fikr al-‘Arabi, Cairo
  • 7. 7 In ―Avicenna Metaphysic‖, by Michael E. Marmura, mentioned that Avicenna‘s metaphysical system is one of the most comprehensive and detailed in the history of philosophy. Its ingredients, its conceptual building blocks, so to speak, are largely Aristotelian.12 Avicenna himself hints at this when in introducing his magnum opus, the voluminous Sefaʾ (Healing). Avicenna's original adaptation of the Metaphysics can be best appreciated in the metaphysical sections of his summae of philosophy, which approach Aristotle's work according to a perspective that combines taxonomy, exegesis and adaptation. In virtue of their format as a collection of the different branches of philosophy, these works give metaphysics a specific position in the system of the philosophical disciplines. At the same time, they provide an explanation of Aristotle's text by incorporating it, according to a modified formulation and arrangement, into Avicenna's own discourse. Finally, they enrich the doctrine of the Metaphysics with theories that are taken from other authors and works within the Aristotelian tradition, or from the fruits of Avicenna's own mind.13 With all these works, researcher found that whenever it came to define particularly on the subject metaphysic, Aristotle can be said as the most significant figure and reference to our Muslim philosophers. Being the most influential men, Aristotle bring those Muslim philosophers to the new evolution in the world of thinking and sciences, make them happened to carried out the secret of our creator through creation. Although, they are not completely followed Aristotle in their studies and methodologies and even criticizing it in order to make it relevance in Islam, indeed, those philosophers make Aristotle as one of their initial references in understanding this knowledge. Through these writings, researcher would like to carry out any ideas of Aristotle‘s in regards to Metaphysics use by those previous Muslim philosophers in finding the truth and how it influenced their thinking and methods. 12 Michael E. Marmura, 1987, Avicenna Metaphysic, Encyclopedia Iranica, http//www.iranicaonline.org 13 Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N.Zalta, 2013, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • 8. 8 1.6 Theoretical Consideration The first known work containing the term metaphysics in its title, or at least an ancestor of that term, was a work belonging to Aristotle. This particular work was distinguished from his other treatises or other tracts, so it seems, by an editor in the first century CE, commonly thought to be Andronicus of Rhodes14 . At that time, the work in question was called "ta meta ta physika", or the stuff after the stuff on physics. The stuff on "physic" would be contained in Aristotle's treatise known to us as Physics. Thus Aristotle's Metaphysics seems to have been thought of as a work that comes after, in some sense of the term Physics. Aristotle's Metaphysics concerns a number of wide-ranging topics about reality as a whole. Therein, he is concerned among other things, with the nature and varieties of causation, the nature of substance and property, the existence of an unmoved- mover, and the nature of possibility and actuality. And, to this day, these are perennial issues that will be taken up in almost any survey of metaphysics.15 1.7 Research Method In order to complete these study, researcher used to implement a historical approaches, which is to study the history of Metaphysics, Aristotle, and several of Muslim Philosophers who responsible to take Aristotle‘s metaphysics as one of their sources in studying philosophy in Islam. Besides there are also a critical approaches had been used 14 Andronicus of Rhodes (fl. c. 60 BC) was a Greek philosopher from Rhodes who was also the head (scholarch) of the Peripatetic school. He is most famous for publishing a new edition of the works of Aristotle which forms the basis of the texts which survive today. by Falcon, Andrea, Edward N. Zalta, 2012, Commentators on Aristotle, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Stanford University) 15 Jeremy Kirby, 2008, Aristotle's Metaphysics: Form, Matter and Identity, Continuum International Publishing Group.
  • 9. 9 to examine or analyzing how Muslim Philosophers responds towards the ideas of Aristotle‘s Metaphysics, views, and what they said about the ideas. 1.8 Scope of the Study These writings, ―The Influence of Aristotle‘s Metaphysic on Selected Muslim philosophers‖ would examined thoroughly on Aristotle‘s ideas by using an appropriate study from our four greatest Muslim philosophers, starting from Al-kindi, Ibn Sina, Al- Farabi and Ibn Rushd. These four intellectual philosophers chosen by the researcher based on their contribution towards the development of Islamic sciences, philosophy and other esoteric knowledge which increased the quality of Muslim civilization. 1.9 Outline and Plan of the Study These study is going to be done through five division part, the first part are included in the introduction sections which explain generally the background of the study, recognizing briefly the term metaphysics from western and Islamic views, the problem statement, methodology approaches and significance of the study. Overall, the first part will explain generally how this study should be orderly implemented. The second part of these studies is to explain the origin of the term Metaphysics, which are used by Muslim Philosophers in Islamic thought of philosophy, the definition of metaphysic in details from both westerners and Muslim scholars. In the third part, researcher will indicate closely the using of Aristotle‘s Metaphysics among Muslim Philosophers, starting from the very beginning of Al-Kindi‘s ages through
  • 10. 10 the middle age of Avicenna and Al-Farabi until the late period of Ibn Rushd and Ibn Bajja. This part will also explain how Aristotle‘s Metaphysics influences their thought in philosophy discussions. Fourthly, is the part which explains further how Aristotle‘s idea of Metaphysics was developed in the Muslim worlds by Muslim Philosophers, which, in this part researcher will expose freely from any sources such as articles and any social networking tools or any types of books which beneficial in explaining the development of Aristotle‘s Metaphysics through the Muslim worlds. Lastly, researcher will make a worthwhile views or an opinions of what had been done from the study, brief conclusions and requesting any general suggestion for further studies and development of the studies.
  • 11. 11 CHAPTER 2 The Meaning and Understanding of Metaphysics Before the readers going onto further discussion on Aristotle and Muslim philosophers in regards to the metaphysics, researcher would explain briefly on the interpretation of metaphysics. Since, there a wise man said, if particular are to have meaning, there must be universals, so before researcher explains particular on this topic, firstly, researcher would like to go on its definition and meaning. In this chapter, researcher would explain further on the meaning and understanding of Western and Islamic philosophy towards the ideas of metaphysics. 2.1 Westerns Understanding of Metaphysics The Metaphysics is considered to be one of the greatest philosophical works. It is essentially a reconciliation of Plato‘s theory of Forms that Aristotle acquired at the Academy in Athens, with the view of the world given by common sense and the observations of the natural sciences. According to Plato, the real nature of things is eternal and unchangeable. However, the world we observe around us is constantly and perpetually changing. Aristotle‘s genius was to reconcile these two apparently contradictory views of the world16 . The result is a synthesis of the naturalism of empirical science, and the rationalism of Plato, that informed the Western intellectual tradition for more than a thousand years.17 16 Bertrand Russell, 1945, A History of Western Philosophy, Stratford Press, New York 17 Hugh Lawson Tancred, 1999, Aristotle, The Metaphysic, Penguin Books Ltd
  • 12. 12 By the time Aristotle was writing, the tradition of Greek philosophy was only two hundred years old. It had begun with the efforts of thinkers in the Greek world to theorize about the common structure that underlies the changes we observe in the natural world. Two contrasting theories, those of Heraclitus and Parmenides, were an important influence on both Plato and Aristotle. Heraclitus argued that things that appear to be permanent are in fact always gradually changing. Therefore, though we believe we are surrounded by a world of things that remain identical through time, this world is really in flux, with no underlying structure or identity. By contrast, Parmenides argued that we can reach certain conclusions by means of reason alone, making no use of the senses. What we acquire through the process of reason is fixed, unchanging and eternal. The world is not made up of a variety of things in constant flux, but of one single Truth or reality. Plato‘s theory of forms is a synthesis of these two views. Given, any object that changes is in an imperfect state. Then, the form of each object we see in this world is an imperfect reflection of the perfect form of the object. For example, Plato claimed a chair may take many forms, but in the perfect world there is only one perfect form of chair. Aristotle encountered the theory of forms when he studied at the Academy, which he joined at the age of about 18 in the 360s B.C.18 Aristotle soon expanded on the concept of forms in his Metaphysics. He believed that in every change there is something which persists through the change, and something else which did not exist before, but comes into existence as a result of the change. The word ‗metaphysics‘ is notoriously hard to define. Twentieth-century coinages like ‗meta-language‘ and ‗metaphilosophy‘ encourage the impression that metaphysics is a study that somehow ―goes beyond‖ physics, a study devoted to matters that transcend the mundane concerns of Newton and Einstein and Heisenberg. This impression is mistaken. The word ‗metaphysics‘ is derived from a collective title of the fourteen books by Aristotle that we currently think of as making up ―Aristotle's Metaphysics.‖ Aristotle 18 Hugh Lawson Tancred, 1999, Aristotle, The Metaphysic, Penguin Books Ltd
  • 13. 13 himself did not know the word. (He had four names for the branch of philosophy that is the subject-matter of Metaphysics: ‗first philosophy‘, ‗first science‘, ‗wisdom‘, and ‗theology‘.) At least one hundred years after Aristotle's death, an editor of his works (in all probability, Andronicus of Rhodes) entitled those fourteen books ―Ta meta ta phusika‖ which mean ―the after the physicals‖ or ―the ones after the physical ones‖, the ―physical ones‖ being the books contained in what we now call Aristotle's Physics. The title was probably meant to warn students of Aristotle's philosophy that they should attempt Metaphysics only after they had mastered ―the physical ones,‖ the books about nature or the natural world—that is to say, about change, for change is the defining feature of the natural world. This is the probable meaning of the title because Metaphysics is about things that do not change. In one place, Aristotle identifies the subject-matter of first philosophy as ―being as such,‖ and, in another, as ―first causes.‖ It is a nice and vexed question, what the connection between these two definitions is. Perhaps this is the answer: The unchanging first causes have nothing but being in common with the mutable things they cause, like us and the objects of our experience, they are, and there the resemblance ceases.19 The study of what things are real and unreal, of what is ultimately real, also the study of the basic constituents of the universe. The metaphysician looks for ontological dependency as one thing depends on another for its existence for example, roundness depends upon the existence of a ball. (William Hasker) The study of the most general concepts used in ordinary language and science. Metaphysics studies concepts, not the things the concepts are about. This is what Science does. It studies reality, the physical world. Metaphysicians study our language, the way we talk about reality. This view is neo-Kantian. It is the study of the concepts of the real, not the real itself. (Rom Harre) 19 Van Inwagen, Peter, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2012, Metaphysics, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, http//www.Plato.stanford.edu
  • 14. 14 Metaphysics is the study of existence and things that exist. Concepts are what confer reality on something. (W.R Carter) Metaphysics is a traditional branch of philosophy concerned with explaining the fundamental nature of being and the world20 , although the term is not easily defined. Traditionally, metaphysics attempts to answer two basic questions in the broadest possible terms21 , what is there? and what is it like?22 Prior to the modern history of science, scientific questions were addressed as a part of metaphysics known as natural philosophy. The term science itself meant "knowledge" of, originating from epistemology. The scientific method, however, transformed natural philosophy into an empirical activity deriving from experiment unlike the rest of philosophy. By the end of the 18th century, it had begun to be called "science" to distinguish it from philosophy. Thereafter, metaphysics denoted philosophical enquiry of a non-empirical character into the nature of existence.23 2.2 Western Notions of God and Cosmos The ultimate reason of things must lie in a necessary substance, in which the differentiation of the changes only exists eminently as in their source; and this is what we call God. .. God alone is the primary Unity, or original simple substance, from which all monads, created and derived, are produced. (Gottfried Leibniz, 1670) 20 Geisler, Norman L, 1999, Baker Encyclopedia of Christian Apologetics, Baker Books 21 Edward N. Zalta, 2012, David Lewis's Metaphysics, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University 22 What is it (that is, whatever it is that there is) like? 23 Peter Gay, 1995, The Enlightenment: The Rise of Modern Paganism Chapter 3, Section II, W. W. Norton & Company, pp. 132-141,
  • 15. 15 Except God no substance can be granted or conceived. .. Everything, I say, is in God, and all things which are made, are made by the laws of the infinite nature of God, and necessarily follow from the necessity of his essence. (Benedict de Spinoza, Ethics, 1673) The metaphysical God, God of philosophers and mystics. This defines God as the Infinite beyond (and within) all finites realities. It is the Uncaused Cause, Absolute (totally independent) Beingness, and eternal Mystery. It is a God about whom little can be said and then only in a carefully qualified way. This God is outside of time and unchanging, for time is change, beyond all dependency on any other power and therefore unaffected by anything that a creature does, although this God may have somehow taken into account from all eternity the acts of all creatures already. This god is perfect personness, goodness, truth, beauty and unity, though in a way beyond conception. This God is actively sustaining the universe in existence for some ultimate divine purposes, but it is hard to say such a God could intervene to do miracles, and it would be incorrect to say that this God can have changes of mind. It is experienced by the mystics, they say, and described metaphorically as a light so pure it blinds human consciousness. It cannot be grasped by mind, imagination, words or images. This is incompatible only with metaphysical naturalism, which denies any reality to God at all.24 Metaphysical Cosmology is an area of philosophy that deals with our place in the universe and the nature of reality beyond its physicality, including understanding and explaining why everything came to be. Metaphysics seeks answers beyond measurable matter, energy, space, and time and explores the mysteries and meanings of all that exists. It can include speculation about what type of god might exist. In metaphysics, it often involves questions of how a god operates and how a god might have created the universe. Metaphysical Cosmology is the branch of cosmological discussion that deals with the world as the totality of all phenomena in space and time. Historically, it has had quite 24 Michael Horace Barnes, 2010, Understanding Religion And Science, Introducing the Debate, Continuum International Publishing Group
  • 16. 16 a broad scope, and in many cases was founded in religion. The ancient Greeks did not draw a distinction between this use and their model for the cosmos. However, in modern times it addresses questions about the Universe which are beyond the scope of the physical sciences. While Physical cosmology is the scholarly and academic study that seeks to understand the origin, evolution, structure, and ultimate fate of the universe at large, as well as the natural laws that keep it in order. The subject matter of this field is studied using scholarly methodology, including the scientific method and reason. It is studied by scientists, such as astronomers, and theoretical physicists; and academic philosophers, such as metaphysicians, philosophers of physics, and philosophers of space and time. The most suitable example could be taken to make a better understanding is the issue emerging among the later scientist which is the Big Bang Theory. The Big Bang Theory is the prevailing scientific theory for the beginning of the universe. The theory states that all matter in the universe was at one point held together in a very dense, hot form (composed of elementary particles). At some point, this condensed matter began to cool, and as the elementary particles clung together to form protons and neutrons, the mass exploded into smaller objects and the universe began to expand (and still is expanding today.) This explosion is estimated to have occurred some fifteen to twenty billion years ago. Some scientists theorize that the expansion of the universe would eventually slow down and that the gravity of its matter would eventually cause the universe to collapse on it (the force of the explosion would run out and would be overtaken by the forces of gravity, slowly pulling the matter together again). However, in recent studies, some scientists separately performed tests on the speed of the expansion of the universe. By looking at the light emitted by supernovas at varying distances from the earth, they hoped to determine the rate at which the universe's expansion is slowing. The results: it isn't. Their research showed that the universe was
  • 17. 17 actually speeding up in its expansion, which has led to several speculations. As of yet, no complete explanation exists.25 Physics and astrophysics have played a central role in shaping the understanding of the universe through scientific observation and experiment. What is known as physical cosmology shaped through both mathematics and observation the analysis of the whole universe. It is generally understood to begin with the Big Bang, followed almost instantaneously by cosmic inflation – an expansion of space from which the universe is thought to have emerged 13.798 ± 0.037 billion years ago.26 Metaphysical cosmology has also been described as the placing of man in the universe in relationship to all other entities. This is exemplified by the observation made by Marcus Aurelius of a man's place in that relationship: "He who does not know what the world is does not know where he is, and he who does not know for what purpose the world exists, does not know who he is, nor what the world is."27 2.3 Metaphysics in Islamic Philosophy Metaphysics is generally accepted as a branch of philosophy, concerned with the nature of ultimate reality (Syed Naquib Al-Attas) Metaphysics strive to define the subject matter. Metaphysics or beyond physics is the study of philosophy examining the true nature of reality whether it is visible or not. Metaphysics also studies the concepts of beings and knowing, essence and existence. 25 Philosophy Index, Copyright 2002-2013, Colin Temple. All Rights Reserved, www.philosophy-index.com 26 Planck Collaboration, "Planck 2013 results. XVI Cosmological Parameters, Submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics 27 Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, edited by George Long, 2005, Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus www.gutenberg.net
  • 18. 18 The problems inquired in Islamic Metaphysics are the same as the problems investigated in the study of western Metaphysics. Islamic Metaphysics is concerned with finding the truth about the nature of God, the nature of truth, the nature of universe, the nature of man and the purpose of all creations. The difference between Islamic Metaphysics and Western Metaphysics is Islamic Metaphysics recognizes the existence of the spiritual or unseen realities. Metaphysics is variously designated in Arabic philosophical literature by the expressions “ma ba’d (fawq, wara’) al-tabi’ah (what is after (above, beyond) nature), al-falsafat al- ula (first philosophy), ilahiyyat (theology, divinity) or even hikmah (wisdom). All these terms except the last derive historically from Greek equivalents and their use, in the first stages of philosophical reflection in Islam, seems to have been dictated by the usage of the respective Greek sources or model of the Muslim authors more than by their literal meaning or their correctness.28 Thus, at the beginning of his treatise ―On First Philosophy‖ (fil falsafat al-ula), Al-Kindi explains that first philosophy is so called because it is the science of the first reality (haqq) which is the cause of all reality, and knowing a thing requires knowing its cause. A little further on he mentions the study of the things above nature (fawq al-tabi’ah), which is immaterial things, the relation between the first cause and immaterial things in general remaining so far unexplained. What is clear, however, is the contrast between natural things, which have both matter and motion, and immaterial ones, which have neither. 29 28 Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman, 1996, History of Islamic Philosophy Part 2, Routledge, London and New York 29 Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman, 1996, History of Islamic Philosophy Part 2, Routledge, London and New York
  • 19. 19 2.4 Islamic Metaphysical views on the Study of God and Cosmos The fullest treatment of the problem of determining the exact subject-matters of Metaphysics is, as expected that of Ibn sina (Avicenna). The term he favors to designate this discipline is that of “ilahiyyat‖, which is the title of the metaphysical part of his main philosophical encyclopedia ―al-shifa‖. But he is careful to accommodate the other traditional denominations of metaphysics and attempts a synthesis of the different views taken of the matter, showing them to be but different ways of envisaging the same discipline. Thus theology (ilahiyyat) inquires into the things which are separate form matter, the first cause of natural beings and the cause of causes and principle of principles which is God. There is in addition a ―first philosophy‖ which provides the principles of the other sciences, it is also properly called ―wisdom‖(hikmah), the object of this science is variously describes as, firstly, the best science of the best object of science, secondly, the truest and most certain science and thirdly, the knowledge of the first causes of the universe. But these are merely three different descriptions of the same science.30 Ibn sina (Avicenna) introduces a distinction between a science‘s subject-matter (mawdu‘) and its object, or goal (matlub). The subject-matter of any one science is taken for granted (musallam) in that science which merely investigates its modes (ahwal). God is the goal, not the subject-matter, of this science, and so are the ultimate causes (asbab quswa). While in Al-Farabi‘s works of god existence and essence, he stated that to deny that existence is a property is to deny that existence can appear in the description of anything, and if the description of anything, and if the description is of the nature or essence of something, then this is to deny, as Farabi does, that existence can be part of the essence of anything. Here essence and existence are kept logically distinct in the case of god an 30 Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman, 1996, History of Islamic Philosophy Part 2, Routledge, London and New York
  • 20. 20 exception is made, and necessary or uncaused existence is precisely what makes god the being he is and different from all else.31 Metaphysical principles of Islamic cosmology are divided into two, which are the duality and teleology. Duality discussed on how Islamic thought categorizes the entire cosmos into two domains: the Unseen Universe (Aalam-ul-Ghaib), which is imperceptible to mankind in general, has properties unknown to us, and includes Allah (metaphorically), angels, Paradise, Hell, heavens, and Al-Arsh (the Divine Throne)32 , and the Observable Universe (Alam-ul-Shahood), perceptible through the five senses (possibly enhanced by means of instruments). The Qur'an says: "Allah is He, Who is the only God, the knower of the Unseen and the Observed.33 There is a general consensus among the Muslim Philosophers about the existence of two realms, which are the material world of nature, of the things subject to generation and decay, and an immaterial, separate world. One of the main problems of Islamic philosophy is to determine the kind of relationship linking the two realms together. Aristotle has admitted the existence of such link in vague and tantalizing allusions, but apart from the obvious fact that the yearly motion of the sun along the ecliptic, by causing the seasonal differences, is the source of the life cycle of generation and decay, his view on the subject remained programmatic. The basic idea that the heavenly bodies and especially the planets occupy an intermediate position between the wholly immaterial being, normally identified with God, and the natural world of generation and decay appears in different guises in all the philosophical system of classical Islam. 31 Fadlou Sehadi, (1982), Metaphysic In Islamic Philosophy, Caravan Books, Delmar, New York 32 Surah Al-Baqarah, (V.2:3): Al-Ghaib: literally means a thing not seen. But this word includes vast meanings: Belief in Allâh, Angels, Holy Books, Allâh’s Messengers, Day of Resurrection and Al- Qadar (Divine Pre-ordainments). It also includes what Allâh and His Messenger ‫لى‬ ‫ص‬ ‫هللا‬ ‫يه‬ ‫ل‬ ‫ع‬ ‫لم‬ ‫س‬ ‫و‬ informed about the knowledge of the matters of past, present, and future e.g., news about the creation of the heavens and earth, botanical and zoological life, the news about the nations of the past, and about Paradise and Hell. 33 Surah Al-Hasr,(V.59,22), He is Allah , other than whom there is no deity, Knower of the unseen and the witnessed. He is the Entirely Merciful, the Especially Merciful.
  • 21. 21 For Al-kindi the only real cause is God who created the world ―ex nihilo‖, all other causes are so called only metaphorically (bil-majaz). This real cause, or first cause, is also called ultimate (ba’idah) cause, as opposed to the proximate (qaribah) cause. The heavenly world, from the moon to the ultimate sphere is entirely devoid of the primary qualities (hot, cold, moist and dry) as well as of generation and decay which are found only in the sublunary world composed of the four elements (fire, air, water and earth). While Al-Farabi begins with a description of the First Cause, or more simply the first, and it‘s main attributes. The First is the source of all further being. Every event must have a cause, and each cause must in turn have its own cause, and so forth. Hence, there must either be an infinite regress of causes or there must be a starting point or first cause. Al-Kindi rejects the notion of an infinite regress and insists that there must be a first cause, and the first cause must be God, the only uncaused being. The world consists of the unity of the unified whereas the Divine Independence resides in the Unity of the Unique (Ibn Arabi) The question of the Unity of the Divine Principle and the consequent unicity of Nature is particularly important in Islam where the idea of Unity (al-Tawhid) overshadows all others and remains at every level of Islamic civilization the most basic principle upon which all else depends. But it must not be thought that this goal of finding and displaying the unicity of nature is dependent upon a particular method to the exclusion of others. The Muslims used many ways of knowing to formulate sciences based on the idea of the unicity of nature which is itself derived from the twin source of revelation and intellectual intuition.34 In the light of a detailed description of the creation of the Universe drawn from the Qur'an and Sunnah, the purpose of existence is for God to become known, to be discovered by human beings. Before the creation, Allah was known only to himself, because nothing 34 Seyyed Hossein Nasr, 1993, An Introduction to Islamic Cosmological Doctrine, State University of New York Press Albany
  • 22. 22 existed but He. It was part of his grand design that through created beings the Attributes of Allah were to be fulfilled. Allah may be known in two ways: through revelation and by means of reasoning. In the former case, he has conveyed his presence to humankind by sending messengers. Individuals also may become aware of Allah's existence through personal revelations, much as a schoolchild learns from teachers and books. Reasoning may lead to awareness of God's existence through formal logic, rational arguments, or deductions from the results of scientific or historical research, according to the individual's interests, education, and aptitudes. Those who choose to study the Qur'an and Hadith may obtain further understanding of Allah, his rights, and his judgment of the beings in both the unseen and observable universes.35 From this chapter, our reader may independently understand, what would comes after the discussion of this topic and what is the main discussion on metaphysic, digging out several question and may be an interesting views on what is metaphysics. Generally, metaphysic is a study of beings and what is there before the beings or what is the cause of all beings. From this chapter the reader may also know metaphysics from the westerners and Islamic point of view, how those westerners view in regards to God and cosmos, and what those Muslims know when it come to the discussion of beings. 35 Surah Al-Baqarah, (V.2:164), “In the creation of the heavens and earth, in the alternation of night and day, in the ships that sail the seas with goods for people, in the water which God sends down from the sky to give life to the earth when it has been barren, scattering all kinds of creatures over it, in the changing of the winds and clouds that run their appointed courses between the sky and earth: there are signs in all these for those who use their minds.”
  • 23. 23 CHAPTER 3 Historical Background on the Coming of Greek’s Metaphysical Ideas into Islamic Philosophy Michael Crichton36 used to said, ―if you don‘t know history, then you don‘t know anything, you are a leaf that doesn‘t know it is a part of a tree‖, while in this chapter, researcher would not let our readers to be those ―leaf‖, thus, this chapter would elaborate roughly on the history of metaphysics and its significant figure on Muslim philosophers. Among the philosophical disciplines transmitted to the Arabic and Islamic world from the Greeks, metaphysics was of paramount importance, as its pivotal role in the overall history of the transmission of Greek thought into Arabic makes evident. The beginnings of Arabic philosophy coincide with the production of the first extensive translation of Aristotle‘s Metaphysics, within the circle of translators associated with the founder of Arabic philosophy, Al-Kindi, the so-called ―early or ―classical‖ phase of falsafa ends with the largest commentary on the Metaphysics available in western philosophy, by Ibn Rushd. The following ―golden‖ age of Arabic thought continues to be primarily concerned with metaphysics, turning from the effort of interpreting the intricacies of Aristotle‘s canonical text towards the process of assimilating the model of metaphysical science first outlined by Al-Farabi and then implemented by Ibn Sina. This impression of centrality is confirmed by the large number and great variety of works pertaining to metaphysics written in Arabic translations of the basic Greek texts, different kinds of commentaries on the translated material, original works with various degrees of comprehensiveness and doctrinal depth, all of which provide clear evidence of the intellectual vivacity and the productive energy of this philosophical area. Such an intensive reflection on metaphysics leads to what represent the specific Arabic 36 John Michael Crichton (October 23, 1942 – November 4, 2008) was an American best-selling author. The Daily Telegraph, November 10, 2008.
  • 24. 24 contribution to the history of this discipline, namely the progressive devising of a new standard of metaphysics, in which this discipline assumes the form of a comprehensive and articulated synthesis of the Greek heritage, undergoes a process of epistemological refinement in terms of definition of scope, coherence of structure, rigorousness of arguments and ascends to the role of cornerstone of philosophy.37 During the Hellenistic period (323-43 bc), classical Greek philosophy underwent a radical transformation. From being an essentially Greek product, it developed into a cosmopolitan and eclectic cultural movement in which Greek, Egyptian, Phoenician38 and other Near Eastern religious and ethical elements coalesced. This transformation is best symbolized by the role Alexandria played as the hub of diverse currents of thought making up the new philosophy. When the Abbasid Caliphate was founded in Baghdad in 750 ad, the centre of learning gradually moved to the Abbasid capital, which became in due course the heir of Athens and Alexandria as the new cultural metropolis of the medieval world. About two centuries later Cordoba, capital of Muslim Spain, began to vie with Baghdad as the centre of 'ancient learning'. From Cordoba, Greek-Arabic philosophy and science were transmitted across the Pyrenees to Paris, Bologna and Oxford in the twelfth and the thirteenth centuries. The initial reception of Greek-Hellenistic philosophy in the Islamic world was mixed. It was frowned upon at first as being suspiciously foreign or pagan, and was dismissed by conservative theologians, legal scholars and grammarians as pernicious or superfluous. By the middle of the eighth century the picture had changed somewhat, with the appearance of the rationalist theologians of Islam known as the Mu'tazilites39 , who were 37 Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N.Zalta, 2012, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysics The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 38 Ancient Semitic civilization situated on the western, coastal part of the Fertile Crescent and centered on the coastline of modern Lebanon 39 Islamic school of theology based on reason and rational thought that flourished in the cities of Basra and Baghdad, both in present-day Iraq, during the 8th–10th centuries. The adherents of the Mu'tazili school are best known for their having asserted that, because of the perfect unity and eternal
  • 25. 25 thoroughly influenced by the methods of discourse or dialectic favored by the Muslim philosophers. Of those philosophers, the two outstanding figures of the ninth and tenth centuries were al-Kindi and al-Razi, who hailed Greek philosophy as a form of liberation from the shackles of dogma or blind imitation (taqlid). For al-Kindi, the goals of philosophy are perfectly compatible with those of religion, and, for al-Razi, philosophy was the highest expression of man's intellectual ambitions and the noblest achievement of that noble people, the Greeks, who were unsurpassed in their quest for wisdom (hikma).40 3.1 The Greek Early Influence on Al-Kindi’s Views of Metaphysics Abu Yusuf Ya‗qub ibn Ishaq Al-Kindi (ca. 800–870 CE) was the first self-identified philosopher in the Arabic tradition. He worked with a group of translators who rendered works of Aristotle, the Neoplatonists, and Greek mathematicians and scientists into Arabic. Al-Kindi's own treatises, many of them epistles addressed to members of the caliph family, depended heavily on these translations, which included the famous Theology of Aristotle and Book of Causes, Arabic versions of works by Plotinus and Proclus. Al-Kindi's own thought was suffused with Neo-Platonism, though his main authority in philosophical matters was Aristotle. Al-Kindi's philosophical treatises include On First Philosophy, in which he argues that the world is not eternal and that God is a simple One. As one would expect given his prominent role in the translation movement, al-Kindi's works are suffused with ideas from Greek thought. His philosophical works are indebted in part to the mathematical and scientific authors translated by his day, for instance Nicomachus of Gerasa; Euclid influenced his methodology as well as his mathematics nature of Allah, the Qur'an must therefore have been created, as it could not be co-eternal with God (The, by Abdullah Saeed, 2008, Qurʼan: an introduction page 203) 40 , Majid Fakhry, 1998, Greek Philosophy: Impact on Islamic Philosophy Routledge
  • 26. 26 (cf. Gutas 2004). But the most important influence on his philosophy was from Aristotle, whose corpus al-Kindi surveys in a treatise called On the Quantity of Aristotle's Books (Abu Rida 1950, 363–84; also Guidi and Walzer 1940, Cortabarria Beitia 1972, Jolivet 2004). This work provides a fairly thorough overview of Aristotle's corpus. His purpose in his book called Metaphysics is to explain things that subsist without matter and, though they may exist together with what does have matter, are neither connected nor united to matter; to affirm the oneness of God, the great and exalted, to explain His beautiful names, and that He is the agent cause of the universe, which perfects [all things], the God of the universe who governs through His perfect providence and complete wisdom, while this may not look like an accurate description of Aristotle's Metaphysics, it is a wholly accurate description of al-Kindi's own conception of the science of metaphysics. That he conflates metaphysics with theology is clear from the opening of On First Philosophy, which says that since philosophy in general is the study of truth, ―first philosophy‖ is ―the knowledge of the first truth who is the cause of all truth.‖ And indeed Aristotle's Metaphysics is a major influence on this work.41 3.2 The Middle Stages of Aristotle’s Influences on Muslim Philosophers The Islamic philosophers picked and chose from Aristotle's texts, using him as an authority when it suited their purposes, and knowing that philosophy was a 'foreign science' in need of an external authority as it lacked an indigenous authority. While aspects of Avicennan philosophy continue the Aristotelian tradition in broad terms, Ibn Sina's ideas about the Necessary Existent and the Possible Existent do not have their antecedents in Aristotle's philosophy. 41 Adamson, Peter, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2013, Al-Kindi The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2012 edition)
  • 27. 27 Among the scholars of the Middle Period42 , Al-Farabi is considered the foremost Aristotelian, and was indeed known as the Second Teacher (Aristotle himself being the First Teacher). Some scholars have divided his works into those which admit Aristotelian influence, such as Kitab al-huruf (The Book of Letters), and more popular works, such as Kitab fi mabadi' ara' ahl al-madina al-fadila (The Book of the Principles of the Opinions of the People of the Virtuous City)43 , a utopian treatise which espouses Neoplatonic theories such as emanation, in which everything is said to flow from the One. His internalization of Aristotle is apparent in his treatment of the four causes in Tahsil al- sa'ada (The Attainment of Happiness), echoing those found in al-Tabi'a (The Physics). Here he shows a complete familiarity with the Aristotelian idea of the four causes, but is equally willing to propound his own interpretation, preferring the word mabadi'(literally, principles) rather than asbab (causes), which was the translator Ibn Ishaq's choice. Al-Farabi considered his Kitab al-huruf, which takes its title from the Greek letters which entitle Aristotle's chapters, to be a commentary on Aristotle's Metaphysics. While al- Huruf is inspired by Aristotle's concerns, and deals with many of the same subjects, it does not slavishly imitate or even follow the order of the Metaphysics. Al-Farabi also believed in the ultimate harmony of the opinions of Plato and Aristotle, a difficult notion for many philosophers today to accept. One might ask why Ibn Sina (Avicenna) would be taken in by a false treatise, the Theology of Aristotle, when he had such a good command of Aristotelian concepts that he could quote accurately from memory. In his'Letter to Kiya', Ibn Sina expresses doubt about the authorship of the Theology of Aristotle, remarking that the text is 'somewhat suspect' (Gutas 1988). The tone of his discussion indicates that while he included this work with other Aristotelian treatises, he has by no means concluded it is genuinely an Aristotelian text. 42 The fourth and fifth centuries (tenth and eleventh century’s ad) 43 Kitab fi mabadi' ara' ahl al-madina al-fadila (The Book of the Principles of the Opinions of the People of the Virtuous City)usually known simply as al-Madina al-fadila (The Virtuous City)
  • 28. 28 On the other hand, in the Danashnama-i 'ala'i (The Book of Knowledge for 'Ala'), his account of metaphysics, Ibn Sina derives a quotation from Aristotle where he claims that Aristotle describes the First Being as having complete happiness in itself. It is uncertain to which part of the Metaphysics Ibn Sina is referring, as such a passage does not appear to exist. Elsewhere, Ibn Sina claims to quote Aristotle from memory when discussing the theory of definition for his treatise on Definitions, when he suggests that in the Topics, Aristotle defines definition as 'a statement indicating the quiddity of a thing'. This is an exact quotation. It is remarkable that Ibn Sina appears to remember Aristotle's important ideas word for word after having, he says, read the books only once and thereafter being unable to refer to them. Given his life as a wanderer, this statement is credible.44 3.3 The Late Period of Aristotle’s Influences Regarding Metaphysics Unlike the Islamic east, where a Hellenistic tradition of philosophy45 flourished from the ninth century, philosophy reached al-Andalus later. Ibn Bajja, known as Avempace in Latin, was one of its first practitioners, active in the early part of the twelfth century. His heavily Aristotelian commentaries on the logical works of al-Farabi still survive. The socio-historian Ibn Khaldun ranked him with Ibn Rushd, and Ibn Bajja no doubt influenced this, the most famous, philosopher of Muslim Spain. 44 Kiki Kennedy-Day, 1998, Aristotelianism In Islamic Philosophy, Routledge, www.muslimphilosophy.com 45 The Hellenistic period or Hellenistic civilization is the period of ancient Greek history between the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC and the emergence of ancient Rome as signified by the Battle of Actium in 31 BC[1] and the subsequent conquest of Ptolemaic Egypt in 30 BC.[2] At this time, Greek cultural influence and power was at its zenith in Europe and Asia, experiencing prosperity and progress in the arts, exploration, literature, theatre,architecture, music, mathematics, philosophy, and science. It is often considered a period of transition, sometimes even of decadence or degeneration,[3]compared to the brilliance of the Greek Classical era.
  • 29. 29 Ibn Rushd, better known in the West as Averroes, is considered not nearly as influential in the Islamic world as he was in medieval Europe. Here, either because he lived on the Western periphery of the Islamic world or because he wrote such extensive commentaries on Aristotle, he became renowned. Latin translations of Ibn Rushd's texts were available in Europe within a century of his death. Coming from a family of eminent jurists, Ibn Rushd had legal as well as philosophical training. He wrote commentaries on a wide range of Aristotle's works, including his Physics, Metaphysics, and Book of the Soul, On the Heavens and Posterior Analytics, the last dating from 1170. In both long and intermediate commentaries as well as short paraphrases, Ibn Rushd tried to analyse the extent of his Islamic predecessors' deviation from Aristotle. He also exerted himself in reconciling religion and philosophy in his Fasl al-maqal (Decisive Treatise on the Harmony of Religion and Philosophy). He discovers a duty to reflect with the intellect on existing beings and to seek knowledge in the Qur'anic injunction found at Surah 49: 2: 'Consider, you who have vision.' There is good reason to consider another of Ibn Rushd's works, the Tahafut al-tahafut (The Incoherence of the Incoherence)46 to be an attack on Neoplatonism and a defence of true Aristotelianism.47 On the question of the origin of the world, Ibn Rushd promulgated eternal creation but did not accept emanation. While he wrote the Tahafut primarily as a rebuttal of al-Ghazali's attack on the philosophers, he also disagreed with Ibn Sina's ideas about necessity. Ibn Rushd was also to be the last in the line of Islamic Aristotelians. Throughout the classical period of Islamic thought, there were always some thinkers who distrusted 46 The Incoherence of the Incoherence by Andalusian Muslim polymath and philosopher Averroes (1126– 1198) is an important Islamic philosophical treatise, in which the author defends the use of Aristotelian philosophy within Islamic thought.It was written in the style of a dialogue against Al-Ghazali's claims in The Incoherence of the Philosophers (Tahāfut al-Falasifa), which criticized Islamic Neoplatonic thought. Originally written in Arabic, The Incoherence of the Incoherence was subsequently translated into many other languages. The book is considered Averroes' landmark; in it, he tries to create harmony between faith and philosophy 47 Ahmad Jamil,1994, Ibnu Rushd, Monthly Renaissance
  • 30. 30 rationalism and logic, certain that the study of philosophy results in a loss of faith. Al- Ghazali and Ibn Taymiyya are the two best known examples. Al-Ghazali studied philosophy to be able to rebut it; he suggested that knowledge is inferior to faith, as knowledge could not overcome doubts. His Tahafut al-falasifa (The Incoherence of the Philosophers) had a lasting influence. Here al-Ghazali attacked Aristotle and his followers, al-Farabi and Ibn Sina, particularly objecting to the Aristotelian notion of the eternity of the world, which he found irreconcilable with the Qur'anic description of God's creation of the world from nothing. Al-Ghazali also saw this as an idea which limited God in a totally unacceptable manner. Two centuries later, Ibn Taymiyya wrote al-Radd 'ala al-mantiqiyyin (Against the Logicians) as an attack on the method of definition and demonstration used by the philosophers who were influenced by Aristotle. He argued that logic is based on the faculty of human reason, which is necessarily inferior to divine revelation. Despite the efforts of Ibn Rushd to rehabilitate philosophy, many scholars believe that Islamic philosophy never completely recovered from al-Ghazali's massive and brutal assault on it. In the Latin West, Islamic Aristotelianism was reincarnated as Averroism, that is, Aristotle's works as taught by Ibn Rushd and translated into Latin. His works also came to have great influence in Jewish philosophy, and for many years led to a strong strain of Aristotelianism among Jewish philosophers. Aristotelianism continued to have an effect on Islamic philosophy through opposition to it from Illuminations philosophy, and in particular thinkers such as al-Suhrawardi, al-Shahrazuri, Ibn Kammuna and others, often based in Persia. The latter sought to attack what they took to be the principles of Aristotelianism, especially its logical and ontological axioms, and produced critiques of Aristotelian essentialism which are sometimes quite similar to that of William of Ockham. It is accurate to say, however, that Aristotelianism as a school of philosophy in the Islamic world found no Muslim successors after the death of Ibn Rushd.48 48 Kiki Kennedy-Day, 1998, Aristotelianism In Islamic Philosophy Routledge
  • 31. 31 There are lots of writings which discussing on Aristotle and his widespread of thought upon many scholars and ancient philosophers. Through this chapter, researcher has explains lightly on our Muslim philosophers timeline on expanding Aristotle‘s ideas. From this chapter, readers may also develop a thorough view on how does those Muslims philosopher reflecting towards the ideas.
  • 32. 32 CHAPTER 4 The Influences of Aristotle’s Metaphysics in Muslim Philosopher’s Work Aristotle's work is the only Greek work mentioned in connection with metaphysics in the Arabic classifications of the sciences. No other Greek metaphysical work was translated and commented upon in the same continuous, widespread and changeable manner, or quoted so often and largely in original treatises. Schematically, Arab authors adopted three main ways of approaching the text of Aristotle's Metaphysics49 , corresponding to three different literary genres. The first approach, which can be called ―taxonomical‖50 , is found in classificatory essays whose goal is to outline the content of the Metaphysics and to clarify its place in the Aristotelian corpus, and to indicate the position of the discipline of metaphysics in the system of knowledge. The ―exegetical‖ approach is represented by commentaries that aim at explaining, with different degrees of literalness and comprehensiveness, the content of the Metaphysics. The tendency to adaptation, finally, is visible in metaphysical treatises that reformulate the doctrine of Aristotle's work and are intended as original elaborations, regardless of the amount of dependence on their Greek model. All main authors who considered metaphysics approached Aristotle's Metaphysics, in different extents and degrees, from these various perspectives. In order to make a distinguishes between Islamic and the Greek idea‘s of metaphysics, Muslim philosophers also does a good counted from their own perspective, which are suitable with the teachings of Islam and not simply take Aristotle‘s ideas of metaphysics blindly. Those philosophers such as Al-Kindi, Ibn sina and Al-Farabi made their own 49 Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, (2012), Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, Metaphysics Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University 50 Taxonomy: the classification of organisms into a hierarchy of groupings, from the general to the particular, that reflect evolutionary and usually morphological relationships: kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and species. (Merriam Webster’s Desk Dictionary (concise encyclopedia), 1995)
  • 33. 33 perception with Aristotle‘s works and developed those ideas to make it available to discuss metaphysics on Islam. We should not take at face value the Islamic philosophers' claims that they were simply following Aristotle. The convention in Islamic philosophy is to state that one is repeating the wisdom of the past, thus covering over such originality as may exist. There was a tendency among Islamic philosophers to cite Aristotle as an authority in order to validate their own claims and ideas. 4.1 The Arabic Translation of Metaphysics The translation regarding the subject metaphysic continued constantly for three centuries (ninth to eleventh), with the production of some Arabic version of Aristotle‘s text, some of which may have relied on the Syrian connection, and the involvement of several different translators owned by the major schools of Arabic philosophy. These translations displayed different degrees of inclusiveness (from integral versions of Aristotle's work to translations of its single books) and literalness (from strict word for word procedures to styles more akin to paraphrase). Cumulatively, the Arabic translations of the Metaphysics evidence the intention of making the entire text of Aristotle's work accessible to Arabic readers, extending the translation activity from the main bulk of the work towards more peripheral books, like Alpha Meizon (I)51 and Nu (XIV). Equally clear is the effort to provide an Arabic version increasingly faithful to the Greek original and more respondent to philosophical clarity, and a special focus on the repeatedly translated book Lambda (XII)52 . Remarkable is also the inclusion in the translation activity of the main available Greek commentaries on 51 Alpha Meizon, the well-known beginning of Aristotle’s work (This is the beginning of the Greek Metaphysics: “All men by nature desire to know”, translated by W. D. Ross), by Cecilia Martini Bonadeo, 2011, Greek into Arabic, Philosophical Concepts and Linguistics Bridges University of Pisa 52 Further remarks on beings in general, first principles, and God or gods, This book includes Aristotle's famous description of the unmoved mover, "the most divine of things observed by us", as "the thinking of thinking"
  • 34. 34 the Metaphysics, namely those of Alexander of Aphrodisias and Themistius (less certain is the case of Syrianus' commentary), whose explanations of book Lambda (and, in the case of Syrianus, Beta (III)) were translated together with the corresponding books of Aristotle's work. Since also other Greek works intimately related to Aristotle's Metaphysics were translated into Arabic, like Theophrastus's On First Principles, the metaphysical section of Nicholas of Damascus's On the Philosophy of Aristotle, Alexander of Aphrodisias's On the Principles of the Universe, the De aeternitate mundi contra Aristotelem and other cosmological writings of Philoponus. The entire Greek exegetical tradition of the Metaphysics, from Aristotle's first disciples (Theophrastus) to his last interpreters/reformers (Philoponus), was available to Arabic- speaking scholars.53 On account of its long duration, the high rank of the scholars it engaged, and the breadth of its scope this area of the overall translation movement from Greek into Arabic cannot be reduced to a mere preliminary phase of the Arabic reception of the Metaphysics, but rather provides a specimen of the main trends that characterized the first centuries of its history. 4.2 Al-Kindi’s Views on Aristotle’s Metaphysics Al-Kindi was one of the first Arab thinkers to draw on the heritage of Greek Philosophy. Al-Kindi became interested in the works of Aristotle and Plato, for example, he recommended that Aristotle‘s Metaphysics be translated. He initiated the translation of several works from Greek, including the theology of Aristotle which had an important influence in Arab thought. Al-Kindi‘s best known treatise is his work on metaphysics, fi al-falsafah al-ula (in first philosophy). Eventhough Al-Kindi‘s was not agreed with 53 Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2012, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, Metaphysics Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University
  • 35. 35 Aristotle in some point regarding the problems acquired in the issues of metaphysics, precisely he was affected by the works of Aristotle which forced him to make up an argument can be said as one of an important sources used by Muslim philosophers today. One of the most common phrases associated with Al-Kindi‘s philosophy is creation ex nihilo. This is a Latin phrase means ―creation out of nothing‖. Al-Kindi believed that God was the only creator of the universe and that he created it out of nothing, meaning that nothing else existed before God‘s creation. The reason this is so tied to Al-Kindi is that it distinguished his views and those of the Arabs from the theories of the Greeks. Al-Kindi often agreed with Aristotle, but he disagreed when it came to creation. Aristotle viewed god not as a creator, but a force that turned something with potential into reality. Aristotle, who often studied astronomy, saw that the planets and stars appeared to be finite objects. In other words, they were not eternal and infinite. If the creation was not infinite, then the creator may not be either. It is a sign of Al-Kindi‘s open mindedness that he was able to strongly challenge Aristotle‘s views on this point, while still respecting other theories of Aristotle.54 From these views we can see, the argument developed by Al-Kindi throughout the understanding of Aristotle in regards to the creation of the world, which we can say that the production of the ex-nihilo theories of Al-Kindi is the reflection on Aristotles views of the eternity of the world and God‘s creation. Al-Kindi's best known treatise is the metaphysical study, Fi al-falsafa al-ula (On First Philosophy). Aristotelian influence can be seen in certain elements, However he is Aristotelian only up to a point. The point of divergence is reached over the question of the origin of the world. Aristotle teaches the eternity of the world, Al-Kindi propounds creation ex nihilo. Al-Kindi differs from the Hellenistic philosophical tradition primarily in espousing the belief that the world was created ex nihilo. In Aristotelian metaphysics the Prime Mover set the world in motion, but in the Hellenistic tradition, time and motion 54 Tony Abboud, 2006, Al-Kindi: The Father of Arab Philosophy, The Rosen Publishing group
  • 36. 36 are intrinsically linked. Matter set in motion is eternally existing, since it exists before motion (and therefore before time). In this system, time is defined as the extension of the series of movements. Thus time begins with movement. In al-Kindi's system, matter, time and movement are all finite, with a beginning and a cessation at some future point. Other subjects that concern al-Kindi can be seen from his titles, including Fi wahdaniya Allah wa tunahiy jirm al-'alam (On the Unity of God and the Limitation of the Body of the World), and Fi kammiya kutub Aristutalis wa ma yahtaj ilahi fi tahsil al-falsafa (The Quantity of the Books of Aristotle and What is Required for the Acquisition of Philosophy).55 It would appear that al-Kindi considered the study of metaphysics to be primary in his endeavor to reconstruct Greek thought. His most significant remaining work, On First Philosophy, assimilates metaphysics or "first philosophy" to theology, the study of "the First Truth Who is the Cause of every truth." His survey of the works of Aristotle likewise confirms that the Metaphysics studies God, His names and His status as the First Cause. A similar conception underlies the Prologue to the Theology of Aristotle, which claims to "complete the whole of Aristotelian philosophy," and promises a "discussion of the First Divinity, and that it is the Cause of causes." The Prologue also seems to portray this project as continuous with that of the Metaphysics. We might suspect, then, that al- Kindi took Aristotle's aim in the study of Metaphysics as central to his own undertaking, and indeed as central to an adequate philosophical understanding of God. 4.3 Al-Farabi and the Ideas of Aristotle’s Metaphysics Al-Farabi was known to the Arabs as the 'Second Master' (after Aristotle), and with good reason. It is unfortunate that his name has been overshadowed by those of later philosophers such as Ibn Sina. It should be noted that al-Farabi was an Aristotelian as 55 Kiki Kennedy-Day, 1998, Aristotelianism In Islamic Philosophy, Routledge
  • 37. 37 well as a Neoplatonist, he is said, for example, to have read On the Soul two hundred times and even the Physics forty times. It should then come as no surprise that he deploys Aristotelian terminology, and indeed there are areas of his writings that are quite untouched by Neoplatonism. Furthermore, al-Farabi tried to demonstrate the basic agreement between Aristotle and Plato on such matters as the creation of the world, the survival of the soul and reward and punishment in the afterlife. In his philosophy of Aristotle al-Farabi explains in a few lines that metaphysics (ma ba’d al-tabi’ah) investigates the existents from a point of view different from that of natural philosophy. But another passage of the same work afford us a glimpse of his conception of the relation between the two disciplines, the study of the heavenly bodies essence does not belong to natural philosophy because the latter deals only with beings falling under ten categories. But there are beings which fall outside the categories, such as the Active intellect or the thing which impart their motion to the heavenly bodies. It is thus necessary to study beings in more comprehensive fashion than that of natural philosophy, and this more comprehensive study, which represents humanity‘s highest achievement and highest goal, is metaphysics.56 Through these explanations we might see that al-Farabi‘s emphasized on metaphysics came from his investigations of Aristotle works, which discussing about the Active intellect that is the God who does not belong to the study of natural philosophy and indeed there is metaphysics which are importantly used to study it in more comprehensive ways rather than the natural philosophy‘s study. Al-Farabi in his exposition of Aristotle‘s philosophy almost entirely ignored his metaphysics. It has been suggested, quite plausibly, that this is because Al-Farabi was dissatisfied with it, particularly with its unsystematic order, and wanted to replace it by a theory of his own57 56 Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman (1996), History of Islamic Philosophy Part 2, Routledge, London and New York 57 Druart (1981), Al-Farabi’s Metaphysics, Encyclopedia of Iranica, http//www.iranicaonline.org
  • 38. 38 Al-Farabi begins with a description of the First Cause, or more simply the First, and its main attributes. The First is the source of all further beings, it is absolutely perfect, it is unique (wahid), knowing (alim), wise (hakim), real (haqq) and living (hayy). The influence of Mu‘tazilite kalam may be detected in these epithets. Like Aristotle‘s God it thinks itself. It must be noted that Al-Farabi, with the majority of the peripatetic Islamic philosophers, does not accept the neoplatonic distinction between the intellect and the One, such a notion of a One above and beyond being and intellection must have been inconceivable for them.58 The study of Metaphysics by al-Farabi from Aristotle‘s works related to the cosmological problem and the theory of emanation is not straightly conceivable, however it urge al- Farabi to contributed a replacement theory which are counted as better form of ideas by himself to elaborated it in Islamic thought of Philosophy, such development are more simply to be understood as the First Cause in which it comes to be the sources of all other further beings, the First Cause mentioned by Al-Farabi in easier word is that a God which are all-knowing, oneness and living. Besides more traditional overviews of the works of Aristotle and the place of the Metaphysics among them (What Ought to be Premised to the Learning of Aristotle's Philosophy,Ma yanbaghi an yuqaddama qabla taʿallum falsafat Ariṣṭū; Aristotle's Philosophy and Its Parts, Falsafat Arisṭuṭalis wa-agzaʼ falsafatihi), al-Farabi also provided taxonomic accounts in which the Metaphysics is related to the system of the philosophical and Islamic sciences, rather than to the Aristotelian corpus of writings. In the most important and influential essay of this type, the Enumeration of the Sciences (Iḥṣaʼ al-ʿulum), he portrays metaphysics as a discipline having a precise method (demonstration) and an articulated structure, in which a full-fledged ontology (the study of being qua being) in its different aspects precedes, first, a part dealing with the foundation of the other sciences and, second, a philosophical theology concerned, among 58 Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Oliver Leaman, 1996, Metaphysics, Charles Genequand, in History of Islamic Philosophy part2, Routledge, London
  • 39. 39 other things, with Islamic issues such as God's attributes, divine names and actions. In all these classificatory treatises, the position of the Metaphysics with respect to the other works of Aristotle, or of metaphysics with respect to the other philosophical disciplines, is not stable, but varies according to the particular perspective that al-Farabi adopts, significantly, in some of them metaphysics is presented as the culmination of the entire system of knowledge, for example, in The Philosophy of Aristotle.59 Al-Farabi finished his early education and spent his childhood in his hometown Turkey. Later he continued his studies in Bukhara, while continuing his higher education in the city of Baghdad which is the first time he learned Arabic and Greek. Farabi has a great desire to learn about the universe and man thus dragging himself to study ancient philosophy, especially the philosophy of Plato and Aristotle. He absorbs the components present in the philosophy of Plato and Aristotle, which he then combined those ideas with the knowledge of the Quran and other sciences in Islam. 4.4 Ibn Sina’s Works of Metaphysics Avicenna's original adaptation of the Metaphysics can be best appreciated in the metaphysical sections of his philosophy, which approach Aristotle's work according to a perspective that combines taxonomy, exegesis and adaptation. In virtue of their format as a collection of the different branches of philosophy, these works give metaphysics a specific position in the system of the philosophical disciplines. At the same time, they provide an explanation of Aristotle's text by incorporating it, according to a modified formulation and arrangement, into Avicenna's own discourse. Finally, they enrich the doctrine of the Metaphysics with theories that are taken from other authors and works within the Aristotelian tradition, or from the fruits of Avicenna's own mind. 59 Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2012, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, Metaphysics Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University
  • 40. 40 Among Avicenna's theology, the most extensive, influential, and the most dependent upon Aristotelian sources is the Book of the Healing (Kitāb al-Šifāʼ). The metaphysical section of The Cure, The Science of Divine Things (Ilāhiyyāt), exhibits two radical aspects of Avicenna's modification of the Aristotelian Metaphysics. Avicenna changes, first of all, the ―form‖, which is the scientific profile, of Aristotle's work. Accordingly, he also modifies its ―content‖, namely the disposition and doctrinal purport of the individual treatises of the work. The changes regarding the ―form‖ affect four main areas: the subject-matter of metaphysics, its structure, its method, and its relationship with the other sciences.60 The content of the Metaphysics, on the other hand, is reworked by means of a different arrangement of its parts, the integration of Aristotle's thought with subsequent metaphysical speculation, both Greek and Arabic, and the introduction of some original doctrines. In the context of the first aspect of formal revision, Avicenna shows that the subject- matter of the science of metaphysics corresponds coherently to all the different ways according to which Aristotle portrays this discipline in the Metaphysics. Thus, metaphysics is, on the one hand, a study of the First Causes and God, since the First Causes and God are its ―goal‖. But it is also on the other hand, a study of ―the existent‖ since ―the existent qua existent‖ is its subject-matter. Finally, metaphysics is a study of immaterial and motionless things since both the First Causes and God, on the one hand, and ―the existent qua existent‖, on the other, are realities of this kind. This harmonization of Aristotle's different points of view is undertaken with the intent of conforming metaphysics to the epistemological canons of the Posterior Analytics, which posit the subject-matter as the fundamental element of every science. The other aspects of the scientific reform of metaphysics introduced by Avicenna are also the result of applying the epistemological requirements of the Posterior Analytics to this discipline. In 60 Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2012, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysics The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • 41. 41 this way, Avicenna bestows on metaphysics an articulated and coherent structure, a method that is as apodictic as possible, and a position of eminence with respect to all other philosophical disciplines.61 4.5 Ibn Rushd’s Commentaries of Aristotle’s Works Ibn Rushd, better known in the West as Averroes, is considered not nearly as influential in the Islamic world as he was in medieval Europe. Here, either because he lived on the Western periphery of the Islamic world or because he wrote such extensive commentaries on Aristotle, he became renowned. Latin translations of Ibn Rushd's texts were available in Europe within a century of his death. Coming from a family of eminent jurists, Ibn Rushd had legal as well as philosophical training. He wrote commentaries on a wide range of Aristotle's works, including his Physics, Metaphysics, Book of the Soul, On the Heavens and Posterior Analytics, the last dating from 1170. In both long and intermediate commentaries as well as short paraphrases, Ibn Rushd tried to analyze the extent of his Islamic predecessors' deviation from Aristotle. He also exerted himself in reconciling religion and philosophy in his Fasl al-maqal (Decisive Treatise on the Harmony of Religion and Philosophy). He discovers a duty to reflect with the intellect on existing beings and to seek knowledge in the Qur‘anic injunction found at Surah 49: 2: 'Consider, you who have vision.'62 Metaphysics, for Ibn Rushd, does not simply deal with God or theology; rather it concerns itself with different classes of being and the analogical idea of being. It is, thus, a science that distinguishes inferior classes of being from real being. Ibn Rushd, the 61 Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, 2012, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysics, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 62 George F. Hourani, 1976, On the Harmony of Religion and Philosophy A translation, with introduction and notes, of Ibn Rushd’s Kitab fasl al-maqal, with its appendix (Damima) and an extract from Kitab al- kashf ‘an manahij al-adilla, Messrs. Lucaz & CO. 46 Great Russell Street, London
  • 42. 42 adamant Aristotelian, puts his own slant on Aristotle‘s metaphysics. Ibn Rushd‘s classification of being begins with accidental substances, which are physical beings, then moves to being of the soul or mind and finally discusses whether the substance existing outside the soul, such as the sphere of the fixed stars, is material or immaterial. This hierarchy, notes Charles Genequand,63 differs from Aristotle‘s hierarchy of material beings, beings of the soul, mind and unchangeable entities. The first and third categories of both thinkers are somewhat similar in that they encompass a straight demarcation between material and immaterial being. Ibn Rushd‘s second class of being, however, includes both universals and mathematical beings; and as such cannot be the bridge between physics and metaphysics as it is in Aristotle. Rather, he contended that all autonomous beings, whether material or not, constitute a single category. This was likely a response to the more materialistic interpretations of Aristotle, such as that of Alexander of Aphrodisias, for Ibn Rushd did not see physics and the metaphysical at opposite sides of the spectrum.64 This encompasses that Ibn Rushd not only followed Aristotle‘s ideas of metaphysics, he even includes his own opinions to make it suits with Islamic philosophy without strictly abandoned it blindly. The defense of Aristotle‘s philosophy can also be determined in the works of Ibn rushd which are against the attack on philosophy by Al-Ghazali and Ibn Taymiyyah. Ibn Rushd was also to be the last in the line of Islamic Aristotelians. Throughout the classical period of Islamic thought, there were always some thinkers who distrusted rationalism and logic, certain that the study of philosophy results in a loss of faith. Al- Ghazali and Ibn Taymiyya are the two best known examples. Al-Ghazali studied philosophy to be able to rebut it; he suggested that knowledge is inferior to faith, as knowledge could not overcome doubts. His tahafut al-falasifa (The Incoherence of The 63 Charles Genequand, likely to be the author of one of the Article, “Metaphysics”, available in “History of Islamic Philosophy”, edited by Seyyed hossein Nasr, Oliver leaman , 1996, Routledge 64 H. Chad Hillier, 2004, Ibn Rushd (Averroes) 1126-1198, Encyclopedia of Philosophy, University of Toronto, Canada
  • 43. 43 Philosophers) had a lasting influence. Here al-Ghazali attacked Aristotle and his followers, al-Farabi and Ibn Sina, particularly objecting to the Aristotelian notion of the eternity of the world, which he found irreconcilable with the Qur'anic description of God's creation of the world from nothing. Al-Ghazali also saw this as an idea which limited God in a totally unacceptable manner. Two centuries later, Ibn Taymiyya wrote al-Radd 'ala al-mantiqiyyin (Against the Logicians) as an attack on the method of definition and demonstration used by the philosophers who were influenced by Aristotle. He argued that logic is based on the faculty of human reason, which is necessarily inferior to divine revelation.65 65 Kiki Kennedy-Day, 1998, Aristotelianism in Islamic Philosophy, Muslim Philosophy, Routledge
  • 44. 44 CHAPTER 5 Conclusion and Recommendation Aristotle used to said ―It is rather the case that we desire something because we believe it to be good than that we believe a thing to be good because we desire it. It is the thought that starts things off.‖ From these writings, there are many things researchers believed it would be good for the others to know something we have never know, or something that we have no intention to know, either it is because we can‘t afford to know or don‘t want to know. In these works researchers, had indicated closely how it is relevant when it comes to take others opinion rather than that just doing or believing something that couldn‘t afford to open up our mind rationalizing what we are doing. History has recorded that the birth and development of philosophy is in Greek. The word philosophy itself is derived from the Greek words, namely, Philo and Sophia. Philo means love, or in broadest meaning can be interpreted as a deep curiosity, while Sophia means wisdom or intelligence. So it can be concluded that the study of philosophy is the love of wisdom which is never satisfied with knowledge and presume that truth should never be end, so they will keep trying to find the truth. The birth of philosophy in Greeks could be considered as one of an amazing things happened in the history of sciences, these can be proved by looking at the history of Islamic sciences such as mathematics, logics and even researchers main discussion in these writings which is metaphysics. The beginning of philosophy in the Islamic world was mixed, it was frowned upon at first as being suspiciously foreign or pagan and was dismissed by many conservative scholars, but for those philosophers such as Al-Kindi and Al-Razi that was the beginning for our Muslims to make a liberation from the chains of dogma or blind imitation (taqlid).
  • 45. 45 From these writings, researchers are trying to show how our Muslim philosophers not just picked and chose any of Aristotle‘s ideas, kept it without hesitating, claimed that this is one of our lost Islamic sciences, in fact, those philosophers tried to make those Aristotle‘s ideas relevant and suitable in the teachings of Islam. Discovery consist not in seeking new lands but in seeing with new eyes, from these writings there are many things we could see in terms of academic reasons, there are lot of perceptions and views we could indicated, but does these writings would be beneficial for those who still not agreed with the combination of Islamic sciences with the Greeks wisdoms? From this study, researcher aimed to imply that there are nothing we can do if we still sitting in the back looking at what we cannot think about, and believing without understanding. The aim of our great philosopher is to abundant any blind imitation which is continuously becomes one of our Muslim‘s weaknesses. After finishing these studies, researcher would like to suggest or recommended some of any point that researcher couldn‘t afford to carried out or not suitable in terms of this research title. Firstly, regarding the original text of Aristotle‘s ideas of metaphysics there are still lot of significant fill which is not available in these writings. For example, researcher could not make it happened to understand several text of Muslim philosophers in regards to Aristotle‘s ideas of Metaphysic such as Kitab Huruf written by Al-Farabi. Secondly, in terms of originality, researchers hope the next studies would be more enthusiastic in their words and summary of any treatises, which means, researcher was having difficulties in terms of carrying out researchers own words or maybe not complete enough while elaborating any paraphrase and references. Last but not least, researcher always hope for the next studies to be more independent and objectively clear, unbiased, and ready to accept and to be aware of any sources for the development of the studies especially in this kind of field.
  • 46. 46 BIBLIOGRAPHY Al-Quran Abdullah Saeed, The Qurʼan: an introduction, 2008, page 203) Adamson, Peter, edited by Edward N. Zalta, Al-Kindi, 2013, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Ahmad Jamil, Ibnu Rushd, 1994, Monthly Renaissance Abu Rida, Rasaʼil al-Kindi al-falsafiyya (vol. I), 1950, Dar al-Fikr al-‗Arabi, Cairo Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N.Zalta, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, 2013, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Bertrand Russell, A History of Western Philosophy (1945), Stratford Press, New York Bertolacci, Amos, edited by Edward N. Zalta, Arabic and Islamic Metaphysic, (2012), Metaphysics Research Lab, CSLI, Stanford University Cohen, S.Marc, Aristotle’s Metaphyiscs 2000, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Cecilia Martini Bonadeo, Greek into Arabic, Philosophical Concepts and Linguistics Bridges, 2011, University of Pisa Druart, Al-Farabi’s Metaphysics (1981), Encyclopedia of Iranica
  • 47. 47 Edward Craig, Metaphysics, (1998), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, London, Routledge Edward N. Zalta, David Lewis's Metaphysics, (2012), Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University. Fadlou Sehadi, Metaphysic In Islamic Philosophy, (1982), Caravan Books, Delmar, New York Falcon, Andrea, Edward N. Zalta, Commentators on Aristotle, (2012), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Stanford University) Geisler, Norman L, Baker Encyclopedia of Christian Apologetics, (1999), Baker Books George F. Hourani, On the Harmony of Religion and Philosophy A translation, with introduction and notes, of Ibn Rushd’s Kitab fasl al-maqal, with its appendix (Damima) and an extract from Kitab al-kashf ‘an manahij al-adilla , 1976, Messrs. Lucaz & CO. 46 Great Russell Street, Londo Hugh Lawson Tancred, Aristotle, The Metaphysic, (1999), Penguin Books Ltd H. Chad Hillier, Ibn Rushd (Averroes) 1126-1198, Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2004, University of Toronto, Canada Isaac Husik, Averroes and the Metaphysic of Aristotle, 2002, The Philosophical Review, Cornell University Jeremy Kirby, Aristotle's Metaphysics: Form, Matter and Identity, (2008), Continuum
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