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Things as They are: Nafs al-Amr and the Metaphysical Foundations of Objective Truth

by Tabah
Original price $28.00 - Original price $28.00
Original price
$28.00
$28.00 - $28.00
Current price $28.00

Hasan Spiker
Paperback, 248 pages
9789948860747

 

In a philosophical idiom that attempts to be intelligible to the reader who is not traditionally trained, this study outlines various dimensions of traditional Islamic 'correspondence' theories of truth. It particularly argues that purely intelligible, 'abstract' concepts, universal natures and general principles objectively apply to the world, against schools of thought that contend that they are subjectively imposed. It is only by discerning the congruity or discordance of these fundamental instruments of general metaphysics with forms of extramental reality, that we are able to avoid the implication that their lack of sensible referents implies our knowledge of the world - which is contingent upon the employment of these instruments - must be ultimately subjective. These intelligible entities, universal natures and general principles can thus only be validated by situating them within an all-encompassing theory of objective reality and truth, in the Islamic tradition nafs al-amr or 'things as they are'. Transcending individual minds and sensible reality, such a theory must be sufficiently broad to account for the ultimate ontological and henological status of such universal and abstract principles and forms.

 

This study demonstrates that a synthetical approach to the nature of objective reality and truth, drawing on the Avicennan and kalām, and especially Platonic and Akbarian traditions is capable of effectively responding to subjectivist, anti-metaphysical views on the nature of the world and our knowledge of it. It purports to do this in a manner that strengthens the deepest foundations underlying traditional natural theology, illustrating that the physical world of particulars is 'intelligible' (in the sense of 'objectively knowable') exactly because it is a branch of an 'intelligible' (as the contrary of 'sensible'), non-physically instantiated world.


Content
1 Nafs al-amr and the possibility of objective truth: An introduction to the problem
1.1. Nafs al-amr and the meaning of 'objectivity'
1.2. Difficulties for nafs al-amr in the context of various sciences
1.3. Nafs al-amr in logic, epistemology and metaphysics
2 The study of things as they are in-themselves: history and method
2.1 Nafs al-amr and the proposition
2.2 Truth and things as they are: historical sketches
2.3 Logical, epistemological and metaphysical propaedeutics
i.) Real and relational composite quiddities
ii.) Al-Sayyid al-Sharīf al-Jurjānī on the predicative scope of nafs al-amr
3 Abstract objects and metaphysical necessity
3.1 Taftāzānī on nafs al-amr known and unknowable
3.2 The road to Taşköpruzade's synthesis: Qūshjī, ʿAlāʾuddīn and Dawwānī
3.3. 'Where then are they?' Ibn Bahāʾuddīn on intelligible entities
4 Nafs al-amr and the exemplary forms of cognition
4.1 Qayṣarī and nafs al-amr as the Immutable Archetypes
4.2 Transcending the Transcendental: 'Metaprinciples' and the Henological Ascent
4.3 Taşk.prüzade's solution and synthesis
4.4 Later developments and notes on the subalternation of the sciences