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Mulla Sadra

Ṣadr ad-Dīn Muḥammad Shīrāzī, more commonly known as Mullā Ṣadrā[1] (Persian: ملا صدرا; Arabic: صدر المتألهین) (c. 1571/2 – c. 1635/40 CE / 980 – 1050 AH), was a Persian[2][3][4][5] Twelver Shi'i Islamic mystic, philosopher, theologian, and ‘Ālim who led the Iranian cultural renaissance in the 17th century. According to Oliver Leaman, Mulla Sadra is arguably the single most important and influential philosopher in the Muslim world in the last four hundred years.[6][7]

Ṣadr ad-Dīn Muḥammad Shīrāzī (Mullā Ṣadrā)
Entrance to Mulla Sadra's House in Kahak, Qom
Personal
Bornc. 1571/2 CE / 980 AH
Diedc. 1635/40 / 1050 AH
ReligionIslam
EraPost-Classical Islamic philosophy
RegionSafavid Persia
DenominationShia
CreedTwelver
Main interest(s)Islamic Philosophy, Illuminationism, Transcendent theosophy, Irfan, Tafsir
Muslim leader

Though not its founder, he is considered the master of the Illuminationist (or, Ishraghi or Ishraqi) school of Philosophy, a seminal figure who synthesized the many tracts of the Islamic Golden Age philosophies into what he called the Transcendent Theosophy or al-hikmah al-muta’āliyah.

Mulla Sadra brought "a new philosophical insight in dealing with the nature of reality" and created "a major transition from essentialism to existentialism" in Islamic philosophy,[8] although his existentialism should not be too readily compared to Western existentialism. His was a question of existentialist cosmology as it pertained to God, and thus differs considerably from the individual, moral, and/or social, questions at the heart of Russian, French, German, or American Existentialism.

Mulla Sadra's philosophy ambitiously synthesized Avicennism, Shahab al-Din Suhrawardi's Illuminationist philosophy, Ibn Arabi's Sufi metaphysics, and the theology of the Sunni Ash'ari school of Kalam into the framework of Twelver Shi'ism.

His main work is The Transcendent Philosophy of the Four Journeys of the Intellect, or simply Four Journeys, In which he attempted to reach Sufism and prove the idea of Unity of Existence by offering a new intake and perspective on Peripatetic philosophy that was offered by Alpharabius and Avicenna in the Islamic world.

Biography

 
This is a view of the inside of the house of Mulla Sadra in Kahak. A copy of a painted portrait of him is hanged on the wall.
 
The house of Mulla Sadra in Kahak (a small village near the city of Qom, in Iran) where Mulla Sadra used to live in when he was exiled due to some of his ideas.

Early life

Mulla Sadra was born in Shiraz, Iran, to a notable family of court officials in 1571 or 1572,[9] In Mulla Sadra's time, the Safavid dynasty governed over Iran. Safavid kings granted independence to Fars Province, which was ruled by the king's brother, Mulla Sadra's father, Khwajah Ibrahim Qavami, who was a knowledgeable and extremely faithful politician. As the ruler of the vast region of Fars Province, Khwajah was rich and held a high position. He had no children, but after much prayer and supplication, God gave him a son, whom the family named Muhammad but called Sadra. Years later, Sadra was nicknamed "Mulla", that is, "great scientist". Sadra was Khwajah's only child. In that time it was customary that the children of aristocrats were educated by private teachers in their own palace. Sadra was a very intelligent, strict, energetic, studious, and curious boy and mastered all the lessons related to Persian and Arabic literature, as well as the art of calligraphy, during a very short time. Following old traditions of his time, and before the age of puberty, he also learned horse riding, hunting and fighting techniques, mathematics, astronomy, some medicine, jurisprudence, and Islamic law. However, he was mainly attracted to philosophy and particularly to mystical philosophy and gnosis.[10]

In 1591, Mulla Sadra moved to Qazvin and then, in 1597, to Isfahan to pursue a traditional and institutional education in philosophy, theology, Hadith, and hermeneutics. At that time, each city was a successive capital of the Safavid dynasty and the center of Twelver Shi'ite seminaries. Sadra's teachers included Mir Damad and Baha' ad-Din al-`Amili.[11]

Teachers

Mulla Sadra became a master of the science of his time. In his own view, the most important of these was philosophy. In Qazvin, Sadra acquired most of his scholarly knowledge from two prominent teachers, namely Baha' ad-Din al-`Amili and Mir Damad, whom he accompanied when the Safavid capital was transferred from Qazvin to Isfahan in 1596 CE / 1006 AH.[12] Shaykh Baha was an expert in Islamic sciences but also a master of astronomy, theoretical mathematics, engineering, architecture, medicine, and some fields of secret knowledge. Mir Damad also knew the science of his time but limited his domain to jurisprudence, hadith. and mainly philosophy. Mir Damad was a master of both the Peripatetic (Aristotelian) and Illuminationist schools of Islamic philosophy. Mulla Sadra obtained most of his knowledge of philosophy and gnosis from Damad and always introduced Damad as his true teacher and spiritual guide.[13]

After he had finished his studies, Sadra began to explore unorthodox doctrines and as a result was both condemned and excommunicated by some Shi'i ʿulamāʾ. He then retired for a lengthy period of time to a village named Kahak, near Qom, where he engaged in contemplative exercises. While in Kahak, he wrote a number of minor works, including the Risāla fi 'l-ḥashr and the Risāla fī ḥudūth al-ʿālam .[14]

Return to Shiraz

In 1612, Ali Quli Khan, son of Allāhwirdī Ḵhān[14] and the powerful governor of Fārs, asked Mulla Sadra to abandon his exile and to come back to Shiraz to teach and run a newly bulit madrasa (Khan School, Persian: مدرسه خان). Mulla Sadra devoted his rest of life to teach the intellectual sciences, particularly his own teachings Transcendent Theosophy.[9]

During his time in Shīrāz, Ṣadrā began writing treatises that synthesized wide-ranging strands of existing Islamic systems of thought at Khan School. The ideas of his school, which may be seen as a continuation of the School of Iṣfahān of Mīr Dāmād and Shaykh Bahāʾī, were promulgated after Sadrā's death by his pupils, several of whom would become sought-after thinkers in their own right, such as, Mullā Muḥsin Fayḍ Kāshānī (Mulla Sadra's son-in-law), and ʿAbd Razzāḳ Lāhidjī.

Although Ṣadrā's influence remained limited in the generations after his death, it increased markedly during the 19th century, when his ideas helped inspire a renewed Akhbārī tendency within Twelver Shīʿism. In recent times, his works have been studied in Iran, Europe, and America.[14]He died in Basra after the Hajj and was buried in the present-day city of Najaf, Iraq.

Philosophical ideas

Existentialism

Although Existentialism as defined nowadays is not identical to Mulla Sadra's definition, he was the first to introduce the concept. According to Mulla Sadra, "existence precedes the essence and is thus principal since something has to exist first and then have an essence." It is notable that for Mulla Sadra this was an issue that applied specifically to God and God's position in the universe, especially in the context of reconciling God's position in the Qur'an with the Greek-influenced cosmological philosophies of Islam's Golden Era.[15]

Mulla Sadra's metaphysics gives priority to existence over essence (i.e., quiddity). That is to say, essences are variable and are determined according to existential "intensity" (to use Henry Corbin's definition). Thus, essences are not immutable.[16] The advantage to this schema is that it is acceptable to the fundamental statements of the Qur'an,[citation needed] even as it does not necessarily undermine any previous Islamic philosopher's Aristotelian or Platonic foundations.

Indeed, Mulla Sadra provides immutability only to God, while intrinsically linking essence and existence to each other, and to God's power over existence. In so doing, he provided for God's authority over all things while also solving the problem of God's knowledge of particulars, including those that are evil, without being inherently responsible for them — even as God's authority over the existence of things that provide the framework for evil to exist. This clever solution provides for freedom of will, God's supremacy, the infiniteness of God's knowledge, the existence of evil, and definitions of existence and essence that leave the two inextricably linked insofar as humans are concerned, but fundamentally separate insofar as God is concerned.[17]

Perhaps most importantly, the primacy of existence provides the capacity for God's judgement without God being directly, or indirectly, affected by the evil being judged. God does not need to possess sin to know sin: God is able to judge the intensity of sin as God perceives existence.[17]

One result of Sadra's existentialism is "The unity of the intellect and the intelligible" (Arabic: Ittihad al-Aaqil wa l-Maqul. As Henry Corbin describes:

All the levels of the modes of being and perception are governed by the same law of unity, which at the level of the intelligible world is the unity of intellection, of the intelligizing subject, and of the Form intelligized — the same unity as that of love, lover and beloved. Within this perspective we can perceive what Sadra meant by the unitive union of the human soul, in the supreme awareness of its acts of knowledge, with the active Intelligence which is the Holy Spirit. It is never a question of an arithmetical unity, but of an intelligible unity permitting the reciprocity which allows us to understand that, in the soul which it metamorphoses, the Form—or Idea—intelligized by the active Intelligence is a Form which intelligizes itself, and that as a result the active Intelligence or Holy Spirit intelligizes itself in the soul's act of intellection. Reciprocally, the soul, as a Form intelligizing itself, intelligizes itself as a Form intelligized by the active Intelligence.[18]

Substantial motion

Another central concept of Mulla Sadra's philosophy is the theory of "substantial motion" (Arabic:al-harakat al-jawhariyyah), which is "based on the premise that everything in the order of nature, including celestial spheres, undergoes substantial change and transformation as a result of the self-flow (sarayan al-wujud) and penetration of being (fayd) which gives every concrete individual entity its share of being. In contrast to Aristotle and Avicenna who had accepted change only in four categories, i.e., quantity (kamm), quality (kayf), position (wad’) and place (‘ayn), Sadra defines change as an all-pervasive reality running through the entire cosmos including the category of substance (jawhar)."[19]

Existence as reality

Mulla Sadra held the view that Reality is Existence. He believed that an essence was by itself a general notion, and therefore and does not, in reality, exist.[20]

To paraphrase Fazlur Rahman on Mulla Sadra's Existential Cosmology: Existence is the one and only reality. Existence and reality are therefore identical. Existence is the all-comprehensive reality and there is nothing outside of it. Essences which are negative require some sort of reality and therefore exist. Existence therefore cannot be denied. Therefore, existence cannot be negated. As Existence cannot be negated, it is self-evident that it Existence is God. God should not be searched for in the realm of existence but is the basis of all existence.[21] Reality in Arabic is "Al-Haq", and is stated in the Qur'an as one of the Names of God.

To paraphrase Mulla Sadra's Logical Proof for God:[22]

  1. There is a being
  2. This being is a perfection beyond all perfection
  3. God is Perfect and Perfection in existence
  4. Existence is a singular and simple reality
  5. That singular reality is graded in intensity in a scale of perfection
  6. That scale must have a limit point, a point of greatest intensity and of greatest existence
  7. Therefore, God exists

Causation

Sadra argued that all contingent beings require a cause which puts their balance between existence and non-existence in favor of the former; nothing can come into existence without a cause. Since the world is therefore contingent upon this First Act, not only must God exist, but God must also be responsible for this First Act of creation.

Sadra also believed that a causal regress was impossible because the causal chain could only work in the matter that had a beginning, middle, and end:

  1. a pure cause at the beginning
  2. a pure effect at the end
  3. a nexus of cause and effect
 
Khan School (est. 1595 AD) was a major madrasa that Mulla Sadra was teaching his philosophy during his residence in Shiraz until he died.

The Causal Nexus of Mulla Sadra was a form of Existential Ontology within a Cosmological Framework that Islam supported. For Mulla Sadra the Causal "End" is as pure as its corresponding "Beginning", which instructively places God at both the beginning and the end of the creative act. God's capacity to measure the intensity of Existential Reality by measuring Causal Dynamics' and their Relationship to their Origin, as opposed to knowing their effects, provided the Islamically-acceptable framework for God's Judgement of Reality without being tainted by its Particulars. This was an ingenious solution to a question that had haunted Islamic philosophy for almost one thousand years: How is God able to judge sin without knowing sin?[17]

Truth

For Mulla Sadra a true statement is a statement that is true to the concrete facts in existence. He held a metaphysical and not a formal idea of truth, claiming that the world consists of mind-independent objects that are always true and truth is not what is rationally acceptable within a certain theory of description. In Mulla Sadra's view one cannot have access to the reality of being: only linguistic analysis is available. This theory of Truth has two levels: the claim that a proposition is true if it corresponds to things in reality; and that a proposition can be true if it conforms with the actual thing itself.[23]

Methodology

Janan Izadi believes that Hikmat Muta’aliyah is of a metalanguage according to Mehdi Haeri Yazdi. That approach could evaluate the power of epistemology in Mulla Sadra's philosophical views. However, there are, primarily, two groups on Mulla Sadra's methodology. One group basically disagreed with any kind of systematizing of knowledge and methodological approach in Hekmat Muta’aliyyah. The other group believe in being structured of Mulla Sadra's view. They maintain that there is a consistency and methodological approach for Mulla Sadra. In fact, the metalanguage approach could be considered in latter not the former.[24]

List of known works

  • Sharh Usool Al-Kafi شرح اصول الکافي Exegesis of one of the most Important Hadith collection in Shi'a school of thought, Al-Kafi contains Narrations from Twelve Divinely appointed Imams from Household of Prophet Muhammad
  • Hikmat Al Muta'alyahfi-l-asfar al-‘aqliyya al-arba‘a [The Transcendent theosophy in the Four Journeys of the Intellect], a philosophical encyclopedia and a collection of important issues discussed in Islamic philosophy, enriched by the ideas of preceding philosophers, from Pythagoras to those living at the same time with Mulla Sadra, and containing the related responses on the basis of new and strong arguments. In four large volumes; also published several times in nine smaller volumes. He composed this book gradually, starting in about 1015 A.H. (1605 A.D.); its completion took almost 25 years, until some years after 1040 A.H. (1630 A.D.). Book is also translated in Urdu by Indian scholar Abul Ala Maududi by the name of Asfar e Arba.[25]
  • al-Tafsir (A commentary upon the Qur'an)
  • Diwan Shi’r (Collection of Poems), a number of scholarly and mystic poems in Persian.
  • Si Asl, Mulla Sadra's only extant book of philosophy in Persian. Here, by resorting to the main three moral principles, he has dealt with moral and educative subjects related to scientists, and advised his contemporary philosophers.
  • Sharh al-hidayah, a commentary on a book called Hidayah, which had been written on the basis of Peripatetic philosophy.
  • ‘Arshiyyah, also called al-Hikmat al-‘arshiyyah, a referential book about Mulla Sadra's philosophy. As in al-Mazahir, he has tried to demonstrate the Beginning and the End concisely but precisely. This book has been translated by Professor James Winston Morris into English with an informative introduction.
  • al-Mabda‘ wa’l-ma‘ad, also called al-Hikmat al-muta‘aliyyah, considered to be a summary of the second half of Asfar. He called this book the Beginning and the End, since he believed at heart that philosophy means the knowledge of the Origin and the Return.
  • al-Mazahir This book is similar to al-Mabda‘ wa’l-ma‘ad, but is shorter than it. It is, in fact, a handbook for familiarizing readers with Mulla Sadra's philosophy.
  • Huduth al-‘alam, on the issue of the origination of the world, which is a complicated and disputable problem for many philosophers. He proved his solid theory through the theory of the trans-substantial motion.
  • Iksir al-‘arifin, a gnostic and educative book.
  • al-Hashr, a theory of the resurrection of animals and objects in the Hereafter.
  • al-Masha‘ir, on existence and its related subjects. Professor Henry Corbin has translated it into French and written an introduction to it. This book has recently been translated into English, too.
  • al-waridat al-qalbiyyah, a brief account of important philosophical problems, it seems to be an inventory of the Divine inspirations and illuminations he had received all through his life.
  • Iqad al-na‘imin, on theoretical and actual gnosis, and on the science of monotheism. It presents some guidelines and instructional points to wake up the sleeping.
  • al-Masa‘il al-qudsiyyah, a booklet deals mainly with issues such as existence in mind and epistemology. Here, Mulla Sadra has combined epistemology and ontology.
  • al-Shawahid al-rububiyyah, a philosophical book, written in the Illuminationist style, and represents Mulla Sadra's ideas during the early periods of his philosophical thoughts.
  • al-Shawahid al-rububiyyah, a treatise not related to Mulla Sadra's book of the same name (see above). It is an inventory of his particular theories and opinions which he had been able to express in philosophical terms.
  • Sharh-i Shafa, a commentary upon some of the issues discussed in the part on theology (Ilahiyyat) in Ibn-Sina's al-Shifa.
  • Sharh-i Hikmat al-ishraq, a useful and profound commentary or collection of glosses on Suhrawardi's Hikmat al-ishraq and Qutb al-Din Shirazi's commentary upon it.
  • Ittihad al-‘aquil wa’l-ma’qul, a monographic treatise on the demonstration of a complicated philosophical theory, the Union of the Intellect and the Intelligible, which no one could prove and rationalize prior to Mulla Sadra.
  • Ajwibah al-masa’il, consisting of at least three treatises in which Mulla Sadra responds to the philosophical questions posed by his contemporary philosophers.
  • Ittisaf al-mahiyyah bi’l wujud, a monographic treatise dealing with the problem of existence and its relation to quiddities.
  • al-Tashakhkhus, explaining the problem of individuation and clarified its relation to existence and its principality, which is one of the most fundamental principles he has propounded.
  • Sarayan nur wujud, a treatise dealing with the quality of the descent or diffusion of existence from the True Source to existents (quiddities).
  • Limmi’yya ikhtisas al-mintaqah, A treatise on logic, this work focuses on the cause of the specific form of the sphere.
  • Khalq al-a’mal, a treatise on man's determinism and free will.
  • al-Qada’ wa’l-qadar, on the problem of Divine Decree and Destiny.
  • Zad al-Musafir, demonstrating resurrection and the Hereafter following a philosophical approach.
  • al-Mizaj, a treatise on the reality of man's temperament and its relation to the body and soul.
  • Mutashabihat al-Qur'an, a treatise consists of Mulla Sadra's interpretations of those Qura’nic verses which have secret and complicated meanings. It is considered[by whom?] as one of the chapters in [Mafatih al-ghayb].
  • Isalat-i Ja’l-i wujud, on existence and its principality as opposed to quiddities.
  • al-Hashriyyah, a treatise on resurrection and people's presence in the Hereafter, it deals with man's being rewarded in paradise and punished in hell.
  • al-alfazh al-mufradah, an abridged dictionary for interpreting words in the Qur'an.
  • Radd-i shubahat-i iblis, explaining Satan's seven paradoxes and providing the related answers.
  • Kasr al-asnam al-jahiliyyah (Demolishing the idols of the periods of barbarism and man's ignorance). His intention here is to condemn and disgrace impious sophists.
  • al-Tanqih, dealing with formal logic.
  • al-Tasawwur wa’l-tasdiq, a treatise dealing with issues of the philosophy of logic and inquiries into concept and judgment.
  • Diwan Shi’r (Collection of Poems), a number of scholarly and mystic poems in Persian.
  • A Collection of Scientific-Literary Notes, some short notes of his own poetry, the statements of philosophers and gnostics, and scientific issues have been left from his youth, which comprise a precious collection. This book can familiarize the readers with subtleties of Mulla Sadra's nature. These notes were compiled in two different collections, and it is likely that the smaller collection was compiled on one of his journeys.
  • Letters: except for a few letters exchanged between Mulla Sadra and his master, Mir Damad, none of his letters has survived. These letters have been presented at the beginning of the 3-volume

Commemoration

 
Mulla Sadra Commemoration Conference (Persian: همایش بزرگداشت ملاصدرا)

Mulla Sadra's Commemoration Day (Persian: روز بزرگداشت) is annually held in Iran at the first of Khordad (the third month of the Solar Hijri calendar); on the other hand, this day (1st-Khordad) has been registered among the occasions of Iranian calendars.[26][27]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Morris, James W. (1 September 2005). "Revelation, Intellectual Intuition and Reason in the Philosophy of Mulla Sadra: An Analysis of the al-Hikmah al-ʿArshiyya. By Zailan Moris (London: RoutledgeCurzon, 2003), 238 pp. Price PB £18.99 ISBN 0–700–71503–7". Journal of Islamic Studies. Oxford University Press (OUP). 16 (3): 360–362. doi:10.1093/jis/eti155. ISSN 1471-6917.
  2. ^ "Mulla Sadra's Life and Philosophy – London Academy of Iranian Studies". 7 December 2012. Retrieved 8 November 2021.
  3. ^ "ملاصدرا کیست | زندگینامه، نظریات، اشعار و آثار". کجارو (in Persian). 14 June 2021. Retrieved 8 November 2021.
  4. ^ "British Art Studies". Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art. doi:10.17658/issn.2058-5462. ISSN 2058-5462. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ Bloch, Ernst (2019). Avicenna and the Aristotelian Left. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 87. ISBN 9780231175357. A reference to the work of Mulla Sadra, or Sadr ad-Din Muhammad Shirazi (ca. 1571-1640), a Persian philosopher and theologian.
  6. ^ Leaman 2013, p.146.
  7. ^ Mulla Sadra (Sadr al-Din Muhammad al-Shirazi) (1571/2-1640) by John Cooper
  8. ^ Kamal, Muhammad (2006), Mulla Sadra's Transcendent Philosophy, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., pp. 9, 39, ISBN 0-7546-5271-8
  9. ^ a b Rizvi, Sajjad (2002), Reconsidering the life of Mulla Sadra Shirazi, Pembroke College, p. 181
  10. ^ (Ayatollahi 2005, p. 12)
  11. ^ MOLLĀ ṢADRĀ ŠIRĀZI iranicaonline.org
  12. ^ (Ayatollahi 2005, p. 18)
  13. ^ (Ayatollahi 2005, p. 13)
  14. ^ a b c MacEoin, D. "Mullā Ṣadrā S̲hīrāzī Ṣadr al-Dīn Muḥammad b. Ibrāhīm Ḳawāmī S̲h̲īrāzī". Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel and W.P. Heinrichs. Brill, 2010. Brill Online. Augustana. 13 April 2010 <> Reference Works, Brill brillonline.nl
  15. ^ (Razavi 1997, p. 130)
  16. ^ Corbin (1993), pp. 342, 343
  17. ^ a b c Sayyed Hussein Nasr, Persian Sufi Literature, Lecture, George Washington University, 2006
  18. ^ Corbin (1993), pp. 343, 344
  19. ^ Kalin, Ibrahim (March 2001), "Sadr al-Din Shirazi (Mulla Sadra) (b. 1571-1640)", in Iqbal, Muzaffar; Kalin, Ibrahim (eds.), Resources on Islam & Science, retrieved 4 February 2008
  20. ^ Fazlur Rahman, The Philosophy of Mulla Sadra State University of New York Press, 1975, pp. 27, 28
  21. ^ Fazlur Rahman, The Philosophy of Mulla Sadra State University of New York Press, 1975, p. 125
  22. ^ Rizvi, Sajjad Mulla Sadra and Metaphysics, 2009, p. 126
  23. ^ Rizvi, Sajjad Mulla Sadra and Metaphysics, 2009, pp. 59–62
  24. ^ Janan Izadi (2007). Meta language as a theory for methodology of Hikmat Muta'aliyeh. Kherad nameh Sadra. pp. 21–22.
  25. ^ Asfar e Arba, Tarjuma Maulana Modudi, اسفار اربعہ quranwahadith.com
  26. ^ 1st Khordad, the anniversary of Mulla Sadra's commemoration 4 May 2020
  27. ^ Commemoration of Mulla-Sadra; 1st of Khordad mefda.ir Retrieved 4 May 2020

References

  • Corbin, Henry (1993). History Of Islamic Philosophy. Routledge. ISBN 978-1135198893.
  • Ayatollahi, Hamidreza (2005). The Existence of God: Mulla Sadra's Seddiqin Argument versus Criticisms of Kant and Hume. Teheran: SIPRIn.
  • Razavi, Mehdi Amin (1997). Suhrawardi and the School of Illumination. Routledge. ISBN 0-7007-0412-4.
  • Leaman, Oliver (2013). Islamic Philosophy. John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 978-0745659077.
  • Rizvi, Sajjad (2009). Mulla Sadra and Metaphysics. Routledge. ISBN 978-0415490733.

Further reading

Works by Mulla Sadra
  • The Wisdom of the Throne, James Morris (trans.), Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1981.
  • The Elixir of the Gnostics, Willaim Chittick (trans.), Provo, Brigham Young University Press, 2003.
  • On the Hermeneutics of the Light Verse of the Qur'an, Latimah Peerwani (trans.), Londra, ICAS, 2004.
  • The Book of Metaphysical Penetrations. A Parallel English-Arabic Text translated by Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Provo, Brigham Young University Press, 2014.
Studies
  • Syed Amir Raza, Wisdom of the Unseen: An Inquiry Into the Reality of Things, Pakistan: Wasila Society, 2008
  • Christian Jambet, The Act of Being: The Philosophy of Revelation in Mulla Sadra, Trans. Jeff Fort, New York: Zone Books, 2006.
  • Ibrahim Kalin, Knowledge in Later Islamic Philosophy: Mulla Sadra on Existence, Intellect, and Intuition, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010
  • Zailan Moris, Revelation, Intellectual Intuition and Reason in the Philosophy of Mulla Sadra: An Analysis of the Al-Hikmah Al-'arshiyyah, London: Routledge Curzon, 2003.
  • Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Sadr al-Din Shirazi and his Transcendent Theosophy: Background, Life and Works, 2nd ed., Tehran: Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies, 1997.
  • Fazlur Rahman, The Philosophy of Mulla Sadra, Albany: State University of New York Press, 1975.
  • Sajjad Rizvi, Mulla Sadra Shirazi: His Life, Works and Sources for Safavid Philosophy, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007.

External links

mulla, sadra, Ṣadr, dīn, muḥammad, shīrāzī, more, commonly, known, mullā, Ṣadrā, persian, ملا, صدرا, arabic, صدر, المتألهین, 1571, 1635, 1050, persian, twelver, islamic, mystic, philosopher, theologian, Ālim, iranian, cultural, renaissance, 17th, century, acco. Ṣadr ad Din Muḥammad Shirazi more commonly known as Mulla Ṣadra 1 Persian ملا صدرا Arabic صدر المتألهین c 1571 2 c 1635 40 CE 980 1050 AH was a Persian 2 3 4 5 Twelver Shi i Islamic mystic philosopher theologian and Alim who led the Iranian cultural renaissance in the 17th century According to Oliver Leaman Mulla Sadra is arguably the single most important and influential philosopher in the Muslim world in the last four hundred years 6 7 Ṣadr ad Din Muḥammad Shirazi Mulla Ṣadra Entrance to Mulla Sadra s House in Kahak QomPersonalBornc 1571 2 CE 980 AHShirazDiedc 1635 40 1050 AHBasraReligionIslamEraPost Classical Islamic philosophyRegionSafavid PersiaDenominationShiaCreedTwelverMain interest s Islamic Philosophy Illuminationism Transcendent theosophy Irfan TafsirMuslim leaderInfluenced by Imam Ali Shahab al Din Suhrawardi Mir Damad Avicenna Bahaʾ al din al ʿAmili Sheykh Baha i Ibn ArabiInfluenced Hadi Sabzavari Muhammad Husayn Tabatabaei Ruhollah Khomeini Morteza Motahhari Abul A la Maududi Gholamhossein Ebrahimi Dinani Hossein NasrThough not its founder he is considered the master of the Illuminationist or Ishraghi or Ishraqi school of Philosophy a seminal figure who synthesized the many tracts of the Islamic Golden Age philosophies into what he called the Transcendent Theosophy or al hikmah al muta aliyah Mulla Sadra brought a new philosophical insight in dealing with the nature of reality and created a major transition from essentialism to existentialism in Islamic philosophy 8 although his existentialism should not be too readily compared to Western existentialism His was a question of existentialist cosmology as it pertained to God and thus differs considerably from the individual moral and or social questions at the heart of Russian French German or American Existentialism Mulla Sadra s philosophy ambitiously synthesized Avicennism Shahab al Din Suhrawardi s Illuminationist philosophy Ibn Arabi s Sufi metaphysics and the theology of the Sunni Ash ari school of Kalam into the framework of Twelver Shi ism His main work is The Transcendent Philosophy of the Four Journeys of the Intellect or simply Four Journeys In which he attempted to reach Sufism and prove the idea of Unity of Existence by offering a new intake and perspective on Peripatetic philosophy that was offered by Alpharabius and Avicenna in the Islamic world Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Teachers 1 3 Return to Shiraz 2 Philosophical ideas 2 1 Existentialism 2 2 Substantial motion 2 3 Existence as reality 2 4 Causation 2 5 Truth 2 6 Methodology 3 List of known works 4 Commemoration 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography Edit This is a view of the inside of the house of Mulla Sadra in Kahak A copy of a painted portrait of him is hanged on the wall The house of Mulla Sadra in Kahak a small village near the city of Qom in Iran where Mulla Sadra used to live in when he was exiled due to some of his ideas Early life Edit Mulla Sadra was born in Shiraz Iran to a notable family of court officials in 1571 or 1572 9 In Mulla Sadra s time the Safavid dynasty governed over Iran Safavid kings granted independence to Fars Province which was ruled by the king s brother Mulla Sadra s father Khwajah Ibrahim Qavami who was a knowledgeable and extremely faithful politician As the ruler of the vast region of Fars Province Khwajah was rich and held a high position He had no children but after much prayer and supplication God gave him a son whom the family named Muhammad but called Sadra Years later Sadra was nicknamed Mulla that is great scientist Sadra was Khwajah s only child In that time it was customary that the children of aristocrats were educated by private teachers in their own palace Sadra was a very intelligent strict energetic studious and curious boy and mastered all the lessons related to Persian and Arabic literature as well as the art of calligraphy during a very short time Following old traditions of his time and before the age of puberty he also learned horse riding hunting and fighting techniques mathematics astronomy some medicine jurisprudence and Islamic law However he was mainly attracted to philosophy and particularly to mystical philosophy and gnosis 10 In 1591 Mulla Sadra moved to Qazvin and then in 1597 to Isfahan to pursue a traditional and institutional education in philosophy theology Hadith and hermeneutics At that time each city was a successive capital of the Safavid dynasty and the center of Twelver Shi ite seminaries Sadra s teachers included Mir Damad and Baha ad Din al Amili 11 Teachers Edit Mulla Sadra became a master of the science of his time In his own view the most important of these was philosophy In Qazvin Sadra acquired most of his scholarly knowledge from two prominent teachers namely Baha ad Din al Amili and Mir Damad whom he accompanied when the Safavid capital was transferred from Qazvin to Isfahan in 1596 CE 1006 AH 12 Shaykh Baha was an expert in Islamic sciences but also a master of astronomy theoretical mathematics engineering architecture medicine and some fields of secret knowledge Mir Damad also knew the science of his time but limited his domain to jurisprudence hadith and mainly philosophy Mir Damad was a master of both the Peripatetic Aristotelian and Illuminationist schools of Islamic philosophy Mulla Sadra obtained most of his knowledge of philosophy and gnosis from Damad and always introduced Damad as his true teacher and spiritual guide 13 After he had finished his studies Sadra began to explore unorthodox doctrines and as a result was both condemned and excommunicated by some Shi i ʿulamaʾ He then retired for a lengthy period of time to a village named Kahak near Qom where he engaged in contemplative exercises While in Kahak he wrote a number of minor works including the Risala fi l ḥashr and the Risala fi ḥuduth al ʿalam 14 Return to Shiraz Edit In 1612 Ali Quli Khan son of Allahwirdi Ḵhan 14 and the powerful governor of Fars asked Mulla Sadra to abandon his exile and to come back to Shiraz to teach and run a newly bulit madrasa Khan School Persian مدرسه خان Mulla Sadra devoted his rest of life to teach the intellectual sciences particularly his own teachings Transcendent Theosophy 9 During his time in Shiraz Ṣadra began writing treatises that synthesized wide ranging strands of existing Islamic systems of thought at Khan School The ideas of his school which may be seen as a continuation of the School of Iṣfahan of Mir Damad and Shaykh Bahaʾi were promulgated after Sadra s death by his pupils several of whom would become sought after thinkers in their own right such as Mulla Muḥsin Fayḍ Kashani Mulla Sadra s son in law and ʿAbd Razzaḳ Lahidji Although Ṣadra s influence remained limited in the generations after his death it increased markedly during the 19th century when his ideas helped inspire a renewed Akhbari tendency within Twelver Shiʿism In recent times his works have been studied in Iran Europe and America 14 He died in Basra after the Hajj and was buried in the present day city of Najaf Iraq Philosophical ideas EditMain article Transcendent theosophy Existentialism Edit Although Existentialism as defined nowadays is not identical to Mulla Sadra s definition he was the first to introduce the concept According to Mulla Sadra existence precedes the essence and is thus principal since something has to exist first and then have an essence It is notable that for Mulla Sadra this was an issue that applied specifically to God and God s position in the universe especially in the context of reconciling God s position in the Qur an with the Greek influenced cosmological philosophies of Islam s Golden Era 15 Mulla Sadra s metaphysics gives priority to existence over essence i e quiddity That is to say essences are variable and are determined according to existential intensity to use Henry Corbin s definition Thus essences are not immutable 16 The advantage to this schema is that it is acceptable to the fundamental statements of the Qur an citation needed even as it does not necessarily undermine any previous Islamic philosopher s Aristotelian or Platonic foundations Indeed Mulla Sadra provides immutability only to God while intrinsically linking essence and existence to each other and to God s power over existence In so doing he provided for God s authority over all things while also solving the problem of God s knowledge of particulars including those that are evil without being inherently responsible for them even as God s authority over the existence of things that provide the framework for evil to exist This clever solution provides for freedom of will God s supremacy the infiniteness of God s knowledge the existence of evil and definitions of existence and essence that leave the two inextricably linked insofar as humans are concerned but fundamentally separate insofar as God is concerned 17 Perhaps most importantly the primacy of existence provides the capacity for God s judgement without God being directly or indirectly affected by the evil being judged God does not need to possess sin to know sin God is able to judge the intensity of sin as God perceives existence 17 One result of Sadra s existentialism is The unity of the intellect and the intelligible Arabic Ittihad al Aaqil wa l Maqul As Henry Corbin describes All the levels of the modes of being and perception are governed by the same law of unity which at the level of the intelligible world is the unity of intellection of the intelligizing subject and of the Form intelligized the same unity as that of love lover and beloved Within this perspective we can perceive what Sadra meant by the unitive union of the human soul in the supreme awareness of its acts of knowledge with the active Intelligence which is the Holy Spirit It is never a question of an arithmetical unity but of an intelligible unity permitting the reciprocity which allows us to understand that in the soul which it metamorphoses the Form or Idea intelligized by the active Intelligence is a Form which intelligizes itself and that as a result the active Intelligence or Holy Spirit intelligizes itself in the soul s act of intellection Reciprocally the soul as a Form intelligizing itself intelligizes itself as a Form intelligized by the active Intelligence 18 Substantial motion Edit Another central concept of Mulla Sadra s philosophy is the theory of substantial motion Arabic al harakat al jawhariyyah which is based on the premise that everything in the order of nature including celestial spheres undergoes substantial change and transformation as a result of the self flow sarayan al wujud and penetration of being fayd which gives every concrete individual entity its share of being In contrast to Aristotle and Avicenna who had accepted change only in four categories i e quantity kamm quality kayf position wad and place ayn Sadra defines change as an all pervasive reality running through the entire cosmos including the category of substance jawhar 19 Existence as reality Edit Mulla Sadra held the view that Reality is Existence He believed that an essence was by itself a general notion and therefore and does not in reality exist 20 To paraphrase Fazlur Rahman on Mulla Sadra s Existential Cosmology Existence is the one and only reality Existence and reality are therefore identical Existence is the all comprehensive reality and there is nothing outside of it Essences which are negative require some sort of reality and therefore exist Existence therefore cannot be denied Therefore existence cannot be negated As Existence cannot be negated it is self evident that it Existence is God God should not be searched for in the realm of existence but is the basis of all existence 21 Reality in Arabic is Al Haq and is stated in the Qur an as one of the Names of God To paraphrase Mulla Sadra s Logical Proof for God 22 There is a being This being is a perfection beyond all perfection God is Perfect and Perfection in existence Existence is a singular and simple reality That singular reality is graded in intensity in a scale of perfection That scale must have a limit point a point of greatest intensity and of greatest existence Therefore God existsCausation Edit Sadra argued that all contingent beings require a cause which puts their balance between existence and non existence in favor of the former nothing can come into existence without a cause Since the world is therefore contingent upon this First Act not only must God exist but God must also be responsible for this First Act of creation Sadra also believed that a causal regress was impossible because the causal chain could only work in the matter that had a beginning middle and end a pure cause at the beginning a pure effect at the end a nexus of cause and effect Khan School est 1595 AD was a major madrasa that Mulla Sadra was teaching his philosophy during his residence in Shiraz until he died The Causal Nexus of Mulla Sadra was a form of Existential Ontology within a Cosmological Framework that Islam supported For Mulla Sadra the Causal End is as pure as its corresponding Beginning which instructively places God at both the beginning and the end of the creative act God s capacity to measure the intensity of Existential Reality by measuring Causal Dynamics and their Relationship to their Origin as opposed to knowing their effects provided the Islamically acceptable framework for God s Judgement of Reality without being tainted by its Particulars This was an ingenious solution to a question that had haunted Islamic philosophy for almost one thousand years How is God able to judge sin without knowing sin 17 Truth Edit For Mulla Sadra a true statement is a statement that is true to the concrete facts in existence He held a metaphysical and not a formal idea of truth claiming that the world consists of mind independent objects that are always true and truth is not what is rationally acceptable within a certain theory of description In Mulla Sadra s view one cannot have access to the reality of being only linguistic analysis is available This theory of Truth has two levels the claim that a proposition is true if it corresponds to things in reality and that a proposition can be true if it conforms with the actual thing itself 23 Methodology Edit Janan Izadi believes that Hikmat Muta aliyah is of a metalanguage according to Mehdi Haeri Yazdi That approach could evaluate the power of epistemology in Mulla Sadra s philosophical views However there are primarily two groups on Mulla Sadra s methodology One group basically disagreed with any kind of systematizing of knowledge and methodological approach in Hekmat Muta aliyyah The other group believe in being structured of Mulla Sadra s view They maintain that there is a consistency and methodological approach for Mulla Sadra In fact the metalanguage approach could be considered in latter not the former 24 List of known works EditSharh Usool Al Kafi شرح اصول الکافي Exegesis of one of the most Important Hadith collection in Shi a school of thought Al Kafi contains Narrations from Twelve Divinely appointed Imams from Household of Prophet Muhammad Hikmat Al Muta alyahfi l asfar al aqliyya al arba a The Transcendent theosophy in the Four Journeys of the Intellect a philosophical encyclopedia and a collection of important issues discussed in Islamic philosophy enriched by the ideas of preceding philosophers from Pythagoras to those living at the same time with Mulla Sadra and containing the related responses on the basis of new and strong arguments In four large volumes also published several times in nine smaller volumes He composed this book gradually starting in about 1015 A H 1605 A D its completion took almost 25 years until some years after 1040 A H 1630 A D Book is also translated in Urdu by Indian scholar Abul Ala Maududi by the name of Asfar e Arba 25 al Tafsir A commentary upon the Qur an Diwan Shi r Collection of Poems a number of scholarly and mystic poems in Persian Si Asl Mulla Sadra s only extant book of philosophy in Persian Here by resorting to the main three moral principles he has dealt with moral and educative subjects related to scientists and advised his contemporary philosophers Sharh al hidayah a commentary on a book called Hidayah which had been written on the basis of Peripatetic philosophy Arshiyyah also called al Hikmat al arshiyyah a referential book about Mulla Sadra s philosophy As in al Mazahir he has tried to demonstrate the Beginning and the End concisely but precisely This book has been translated by Professor James Winston Morris into English with an informative introduction al Mabda wa l ma ad also called al Hikmat al muta aliyyah considered to be a summary of the second half of Asfar He called this book the Beginning and the End since he believed at heart that philosophy means the knowledge of the Origin and the Return al Mazahir This book is similar to al Mabda wa l ma ad but is shorter than it It is in fact a handbook for familiarizing readers with Mulla Sadra s philosophy Huduth al alam on the issue of the origination of the world which is a complicated and disputable problem for many philosophers He proved his solid theory through the theory of the trans substantial motion Iksir al arifin a gnostic and educative book al Hashr a theory of the resurrection of animals and objects in the Hereafter al Masha ir on existence and its related subjects Professor Henry Corbin has translated it into French and written an introduction to it This book has recently been translated into English too al waridat al qalbiyyah a brief account of important philosophical problems it seems to be an inventory of the Divine inspirations and illuminations he had received all through his life Iqad al na imin on theoretical and actual gnosis and on the science of monotheism It presents some guidelines and instructional points to wake up the sleeping al Masa il al qudsiyyah a booklet deals mainly with issues such as existence in mind and epistemology Here Mulla Sadra has combined epistemology and ontology al Shawahid al rububiyyah a philosophical book written in the Illuminationist style and represents Mulla Sadra s ideas during the early periods of his philosophical thoughts al Shawahid al rububiyyah a treatise not related to Mulla Sadra s book of the same name see above It is an inventory of his particular theories and opinions which he had been able to express in philosophical terms Sharh i Shafa a commentary upon some of the issues discussed in the part on theology Ilahiyyat in Ibn Sina s al Shifa Sharh i Hikmat al ishraq a useful and profound commentary or collection of glosses on Suhrawardi s Hikmat al ishraq and Qutb al Din Shirazi s commentary upon it Ittihad al aquil wa l ma qul a monographic treatise on the demonstration of a complicated philosophical theory the Union of the Intellect and the Intelligible which no one could prove and rationalize prior to Mulla Sadra Ajwibah al masa il consisting of at least three treatises in which Mulla Sadra responds to the philosophical questions posed by his contemporary philosophers Ittisaf al mahiyyah bi l wujud a monographic treatise dealing with the problem of existence and its relation to quiddities al Tashakhkhus explaining the problem of individuation and clarified its relation to existence and its principality which is one of the most fundamental principles he has propounded Sarayan nur wujud a treatise dealing with the quality of the descent or diffusion of existence from the True Source to existents quiddities Limmi yya ikhtisas al mintaqah A treatise on logic this work focuses on the cause of the specific form of the sphere Khalq al a mal a treatise on man s determinism and free will al Qada wa l qadar on the problem of Divine Decree and Destiny Zad al Musafir demonstrating resurrection and the Hereafter following a philosophical approach al Mizaj a treatise on the reality of man s temperament and its relation to the body and soul Mutashabihat al Qur an a treatise consists of Mulla Sadra s interpretations of those Qura nic verses which have secret and complicated meanings It is considered by whom as one of the chapters in Mafatih al ghayb Isalat i Ja l i wujud on existence and its principality as opposed to quiddities al Hashriyyah a treatise on resurrection and people s presence in the Hereafter it deals with man s being rewarded in paradise and punished in hell al alfazh al mufradah an abridged dictionary for interpreting words in the Qur an Radd i shubahat i iblis explaining Satan s seven paradoxes and providing the related answers Kasr al asnam al jahiliyyah Demolishing the idols of the periods of barbarism and man s ignorance His intention here is to condemn and disgrace impious sophists al Tanqih dealing with formal logic al Tasawwur wa l tasdiq a treatise dealing with issues of the philosophy of logic and inquiries into concept and judgment Diwan Shi r Collection of Poems a number of scholarly and mystic poems in Persian A Collection of Scientific Literary Notes some short notes of his own poetry the statements of philosophers and gnostics and scientific issues have been left from his youth which comprise a precious collection This book can familiarize the readers with subtleties of Mulla Sadra s nature These notes were compiled in two different collections and it is likely that the smaller collection was compiled on one of his journeys Letters except for a few letters exchanged between Mulla Sadra and his master Mir Damad none of his letters has survived These letters have been presented at the beginning of the 3 volumeCommemoration Edit Mulla Sadra Commemoration Conference Persian همایش بزرگداشت ملاصدرا Mulla Sadra s Commemoration Day Persian روز بزرگداشت is annually held in Iran at the first of Khordad the third month of the Solar Hijri calendar on the other hand this day 1st Khordad has been registered among the occasions of Iranian calendars 26 27 See also EditList of Iranian scientists Iranian philosophy List of Shi a Muslims Al Akbariyya Sufi school Hossein Nasr Kalam Islamic philosophy IrfanNotes Edit Morris James W 1 September 2005 Revelation Intellectual Intuition and Reason in the Philosophy of Mulla Sadra An Analysis of the al Hikmah al ʿArshiyya By Zailan Moris London RoutledgeCurzon 2003 238 pp Price PB 18 99 ISBN 0 700 71503 7 Journal of Islamic Studies Oxford University Press OUP 16 3 360 362 doi 10 1093 jis eti155 ISSN 1471 6917 Mulla Sadra s Life and Philosophy London Academy of Iranian Studies 7 December 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2021 ملاصدرا کیست زندگینامه نظریات اشعار و آثار کجارو in Persian 14 June 2021 Retrieved 8 November 2021 British Art Studies Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art doi 10 17658 issn 2058 5462 ISSN 2058 5462 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Bloch Ernst 2019 Avicenna and the Aristotelian Left New York Columbia University Press p 87 ISBN 9780231175357 A reference to the work of Mulla Sadra or Sadr ad Din Muhammad Shirazi ca 1571 1640 a Persian philosopher and theologian Leaman 2013 p 146 Mulla Sadra Sadr al Din Muhammad al Shirazi 1571 2 1640 by John Cooper Kamal Muhammad 2006 Mulla Sadra s Transcendent Philosophy Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 9 39 ISBN 0 7546 5271 8 a b Rizvi Sajjad 2002 Reconsidering the life of Mulla Sadra Shirazi Pembroke College p 181 Ayatollahi 2005 p 12 MOLLA ṢADRA SIRAZI iranicaonline org Ayatollahi 2005 p 18 Ayatollahi 2005 p 13 a b c MacEoin D Mulla Ṣadra S hirazi Ṣadr al Din Muḥammad b Ibrahim Ḳawami S h irazi Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Edited by P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel and W P Heinrichs Brill 2010 Brill Online Augustana 13 April 2010 lt gt Reference Works Brill brillonline nl Razavi 1997 p 130 Corbin 1993 pp 342 343 a b c Sayyed Hussein Nasr Persian Sufi Literature Lecture George Washington University 2006 Corbin 1993 pp 343 344 Kalin Ibrahim March 2001 Sadr al Din Shirazi Mulla Sadra b 1571 1640 in Iqbal Muzaffar Kalin Ibrahim eds Resources on Islam amp Science retrieved 4 February 2008 Fazlur Rahman The Philosophy of Mulla Sadra State University of New York Press 1975 pp 27 28 Fazlur Rahman The Philosophy of Mulla Sadra State University of New York Press 1975 p 125 Rizvi Sajjad Mulla Sadra and Metaphysics 2009 p 126 Rizvi Sajjad Mulla Sadra and Metaphysics 2009 pp 59 62 Janan Izadi 2007 Meta language as a theory for methodology of Hikmat Muta aliyeh Kherad nameh Sadra pp 21 22 Asfar e Arba Tarjuma Maulana Modudi اسفار اربعہ quranwahadith com 1st Khordad the anniversary of Mulla Sadra s commemoration 4 May 2020 Commemoration of Mulla Sadra 1st of Khordad mefda ir Retrieved 4 May 2020References EditCorbin Henry 1993 History Of Islamic Philosophy Routledge ISBN 978 1135198893 Ayatollahi Hamidreza 2005 The Existence of God Mulla Sadra s Seddiqin Argument versus Criticisms of Kant and Hume Teheran SIPRIn Razavi Mehdi Amin 1997 Suhrawardi and the School of Illumination Routledge ISBN 0 7007 0412 4 Leaman Oliver 2013 Islamic Philosophy John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 0745659077 Rizvi Sajjad 2009 Mulla Sadra and Metaphysics Routledge ISBN 978 0415490733 Further reading EditWorks by Mulla SadraThe Wisdom of the Throne James Morris trans Princeton Princeton University Press 1981 The Elixir of the Gnostics Willaim Chittick trans Provo Brigham Young University Press 2003 On the Hermeneutics of the Light Verse of the Qur an Latimah Peerwani trans Londra ICAS 2004 The Book of Metaphysical Penetrations A Parallel English Arabic Text translated by Seyyed Hossein Nasr Provo Brigham Young University Press 2014 StudiesSyed Amir Raza Wisdom of the Unseen An Inquiry Into the Reality of Things Pakistan Wasila Society 2008 Christian Jambet The Act of Being The Philosophy of Revelation in Mulla Sadra Trans Jeff Fort New York Zone Books 2006 Ibrahim Kalin Knowledge in Later Islamic Philosophy Mulla Sadra on Existence Intellect and Intuition Oxford Oxford University Press 2010 Zailan Moris Revelation Intellectual Intuition and Reason in the Philosophy of Mulla Sadra An Analysis of the Al Hikmah Al arshiyyah London Routledge Curzon 2003 Seyyed Hossein Nasr Sadr al Din Shirazi and his Transcendent Theosophy Background Life and Works 2nd ed Tehran Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies 1997 Fazlur Rahman The Philosophy of Mulla Sadra Albany State University of New York Press 1975 Sajjad Rizvi Mulla Sadra Shirazi His Life Works and Sources for Safavid Philosophy Oxford Oxford University Press 2007 External links EditMOLLAṢADRA SIRAZI an article by Sajjad H Rizvi in Encyclopaedia Iranica Mulla Sadra an article in Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Sajjad Rizvi Mulla Sadra In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Mulla Sadra an article in the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Mulla Sadra Sadr al Din Muhammad al Shirazi 1571 2 1640 an article in Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Commentary on Mulla Sadra s philosophy PDF 2 11 MiB by Muhammad Husayn Tabatabai Sadra Islamic Philosophy research Institute Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mulla Sadra amp oldid 1152437568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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