Al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s Philosophical
Download 4.03 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
in the outside world ( f ı¯ l-a ¶ya¯n ) removes an important difference: whether pos- sibility and necessity exist in things outside of our mind, or whether they are simply predicates of our judgment. Al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s critique of Avicenna’s under- standing of the modalities was anticipated by al-Juwaynı¯’s notion of necessity and possibility in his proof of God’s existence in the Creed for Niz.a¯m al-Mulk . Al-Juwaynı¯ begins his argument there with an explanation of the modalities. Every sound thinking person fi nds within himself “the knowledge about the possibility of what is possible, the necessity of what is necessary, and the im- possibility of what is impossible.” 134
We know this distinction without having to study or make further inquiry into the world; it is an impulse ( badı¯ha ) of our rational judgment ( ¶aql ). The impulsive possibility that the intellect rushes to apprehend without [any] consideration, thinking, or inquiry is what becomes evident to the intelligent person when he sees a building. This [ scil. the building] is [simply] a possibility that comes into being ( min jawa¯z
( h.udu¯th ) of that building is from among its possible states ( ja¯ 7iza¯t ) and that it is not impossible in the intellect that it had not been built. 135
The intelligent person ( al- ¶a¯qil , here meaning a person with full rational capac- ity) realizes that all of the features of the building—its height, its length, its form, and so forth—are actualized possibilities that could be different from what they are. The same possibilities apply to the time when the building is built. We immediately realize, al-Juwaynı¯ says, that there is a synchronic alter- native state to the actual building. This is what we call, contingency ( imka¯n ). Realizing that there is such an alternative is an important part of our under- standing: “The intelligent person cannot realize in his mind anything about the states of the building other than through a comparison with what is contingent like it ( imka¯n mithlihi ) or what is different from it ( khila¯fi hi ).” 136
Knowledge about the modalities is “on an impulsive rank” ( bi-l-martaba al- badı¯ha ), meaning it is a priori : it cannot be derived from any other prior knowl- edge.
137 This statement is limited to the modalities when they are considered by themselves. Al-Juwaynı¯ realizes that God’s creative activity makes all the unrealized possibilities impossible. If considererd on its own, the actual move- ment of the celestial spheres ( afl a¯k ) from east to west could be imagined dif- ferently. The intellect can imagine that the spheres could move in the opposite direction. Studying the movements in heaven, however, leads to the realization that this possibility is not actualized. Al-Juwaynı¯ understands possibility as synchronic alternative states to what actually exists. This is different from Avicenna’s understanding of possibility 1 7 2 a l - gh a z a ¯ l 1
¯ ’ s ph ilosoph ic a l t h e olo g y and necessity as modes of actualized beings. It also shifts the perspective of the modalities away from what exists in actuality toward what is considered al- ternative states in the human mind. Al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s critique of Avicenna’s modal theory is in no way haphazard but is an outcome of long-standing considera- tion of modalities developed in Ash ¶arite kala¯m . 138
Causal Connections Are Not Necessary? Once Avicenna’s and al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s differing understandings of the modalities are applied to the initial statement of the seventeenth discussion, they change the established meaning of this passage. When al-Ghaza¯lı¯ says that “accord- ing to us ( ¶
effect is not necessary, 139 he aims to point out that the connection could be dif- ferent, even if it never will be different from what it is today. For Avicenna, the fact that the connection never was different and never will be different implies that the connection is necessary. Not so for al-Ghaza¯lı¯. His understanding of modal judgments does not require that any given causal connection was dif- ferent or will be different in order to be considered possible and not necessary. The possible is that for which the human mind can perceive an alternative state of affairs. For al-Ghaza¯lı¯, the connection between a cause and its effect is pos- sible—or, to be more precise: contingent ( mumkin )—because an alternative to it is conceivable in our minds. We can imagine a world in which fi re does not cause cotton to combust. Or, to quote the second sentence of the initial state- ment of the seventeenth discussion: It is within divine power to create satiety without eating, to create death without a deep cut ( h.azz ) in the neck, to continue life after having received a deep cut in the neck, and so on to all connected things. The fala¯sifa deny the possibility of [this] and claim it to be impossible. 140
radically different from the one in which we live. A change in a single causal connection would likely imply that many others would also change. Still, such a world can be conceived in our minds, which means it is a possible world. God, however, did not choose to create such an alternative possible world. He chose to create this world among alternatives. In the initial sentence of the seventeenth discussion, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ argues against two types of adversaries. First, he argues against those who hold that a causal connection is necessary by itself. This group includes people who claim that any given proximate effi cient cause is an independent effi cient cause ( fa¯ ¶il ) of its effect. This group also includes some natural philosophers who reject sec- ondary causality as well as the Mu ¶tazilites, who argue that humans create their actions and the immediate effects of them. Al-Ghaza¯lı¯, however, makes a clear t h e s e v e n t e e n t h disc us sion of THE INCOHERENCE 1 7 3
distinction between the teachings of the Mu ¶tazilite and those of the Avicennan fala¯sifa . 141 The Avicennan fala¯sifa are the second group of adversaries in the seventeenth discussion. Although al-Ghaza¯lı¯ does not argue against the idea of secondary causality in Avicenna, he does reject Avicenna’s teaching that the connection cannot be any different from what it is. Being contingent by itself, according to Avicenna, the connection between cause and effect is necessary on account of something else, namely, God’s nature. God’s nature cannot be conceived any differently from what it is. For Avicenna, there can be no world alternative to the one that exists. In the initial statement of the seventeenth discussion, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ also claims that “the connection [between cause and effect] is due to the prior de- cision ( taqdı¯r ) of God.” 142 When he objects to Avicenna and states that these connections are not necessary, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ wishes to express that God could have chosen to create an alternative world in which the causal connections are different from those of this world. Al-Ghaza¯lı¯ upholds the contingency of the world against the necessitarianism of Avicenna. For al-Ghaza¯lı¯, this world is the contingent effect of God’s free will and His deliberate choice between alternative worlds. While rejecting this necessitarian element in Avicenna’s cosmology, al- Ghaza¯lı¯ does not object to the philosopher’s concept of secondary causality. Of the two pillars in Avicenna’s cosmology—secondary causality and neces- sitarianism—al-Ghaza¯lı¯ rejects only the latter. In the First Position of the sev- enteenth discussion, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ uses secondary causality to refute the view that proximate causes are independent effi cient causes. In the Second Position, he offers two alternative explanations (“approaches”) of prophetical miracles, the fi rst based on occasionalism, the second, on secondary causality and the exist- ence of natures ( t.aba¯ 7i ¶ ). In all this discussion, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ says nothing about whether God actually breaks his habit, meaning the existent laws of nature, when creating the prophetical miracle. For al-Ghaza¯lı¯, the connection between the cause and its effect is contingent even if God never changes His habits. The sole possibility of His breaking His habit—that we could conceive of God breaking His habit—or just the possibility that He could have arranged the laws of nature differently means that any individual connection between two of His creations is not necessary. Although it is conceivable and therefore pos- sible that God would break his habit or intervene in the assigned function of the secondary causes, an actual break in God’s habit is not required for the con- nections to be contingent.
This page intentionally left blank 7
Knowledge of Causal Connection Is Necessary In the seventeenth discussion of the Incoherence , is there a consis- tent line of argument with regard to causality? After proposing his most radical epistemological criticism in the First Position—that sense perception does not lead to necessary judgments—al-Ghaza¯lı¯ presents in the Second and the Third Positions two alternatives to the Avicennan model of metaphysics and physics. In the First Approach of the Second Position, occasionalism is contrasted with the deter- ministic cosmology of his opponents. Al-Ghaza¯lı¯ aims to show that a congruent occasionalist model can be a viable alternative to Avicen- nan metaphysics. He implicitly claims that the fala¯sifa can accept this model and still continue to pursue the natural sciences. The “laws of nature” that, according to the fala¯sifa, govern God’s creation may be understood as habitual courses of action subject to suspension, at least in principle. Our human experience, however, has shown us that God does not frivolously break His habit. This insight allows us to equate God’s habit with the laws of nature, for all practical pur- poses. In the natural sciences, we study God’s actions and reformu- late their habitual course into laws that we justifi ably consider, if not necessary, at least stable, unchanging, and permanent. In the Third Position, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ puts up a far less radical alternative to Avicennan metaphysics and natural sciences. Although not clearly explicated, this theory appears to be a slightly altered ver- sion of Aristotelian physics. This physical theory postulates that in ad- dition to the rules of logic, God cannot violate laws of nature that rely on the relationships of implications. Such implications are usually formulated in defi nitions. Will is defi ned as existing in a being that has knowledge, for instance, and knowledge is defi ned as existing in a being that has life. God therefore cannot create will in a being that 1 7 6 a l - gh a z a ¯ l 1
¯ ’ s ph ilosoph ic a l t h e olo g y is lifeless. Equally, God cannot “change the genera” ( qalb al-ajna¯s ), meaning that He cannot transform a material body into an immaterial being and vice versa. Al-Ghaza¯lı¯ was certainly aware that these three conditions limit God’s omnipotence signifi cantly. He here lists what can be viewed as the unchange- able essence of God’s creation. And although the laws of nature from among this core group cannot be altered once creation unfolds, God reserves the power to alter others of His habits, such as making water fl ow uphill or creating life in any given material object, such as a stick. These two alternative theories to Avicenna’s cosmology frame a passage of roughly two pages, which, to the Avicennan, forms the most persuasive part of the seventeenth discussion. In addition to these two alternative cosmologi- cal theories (alternative to Avicenna’s cosmology), al-Ghaza¯lı¯ defends a slightly modifi ed Avicennan explanation of causal connections in the Second Approach of the Second Position. Here, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ is willing to accept that chains of sec- ondary causes connect every event in creation with the creative activity of the creator. In this part of the seventeenth discussion he clearly accepts the exist- ence of “natures” ( t.aba¯ 7i ¶ ). He requires the Avicennan simply to acknowledge that we lack exhaustive knowledge of the full possibilities of these natures. They might allow causal connections that we have not yet witnessed. The miracles reported in revelation have causes unknown to us. They are not true miracles but mere marvels. In the Incoherence, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ presents what might be called a nominalist criticism of the modalities, in some sense a criticism of human judgments as a whole. Using the parlance of Avicenna, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ implicitly asks whether we can know that any given object that we witness in the outside world is possible by itself ( mumkin bi-dha¯tihi ) and at the same time is necessitated by something else ( wa¯jib bi-ghayrihi ). Al-Ghaza¯lı¯ rejects Avicenna’s assumption that modali- ties exist in the outside world. This rejection goes to the heart of the Avicen- nan ontology that regards potentiality as a paradigm that strives to actualize itself. Like Avicenna, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ views human knowledge as a conglomerate of judgments. 1 He agrees with Avicenna that true knowledge is congruent to the outside world and describes it as such. For Avicenna, however, there can be only one true explanation of any given phenomenon in the world. True human knowledge describes the necessary and only way the world is constructed. Dem- onstration ( burha¯n ) is the best means to achieve such correct knowledge about the world. Where demonstration is not available, humans choose less perfect means of acquiring knowledge. Al-Ghaza¯lı¯ agrees with Avicenna on the imper- fect nature of these means. He realizes, however, that where demonstration can- not be achieved, multiple explanations are compossible, that is one explanation may coexist with another without needing to decide which applies. The inability to demonstrate the unchanging nature of the connection between cause and effect creates a situation in which more than one explanation of causal connec- tions is viable. Only a nominalist position toward human knowledge allows the assumption of two different explanations of a given process as compossible. Al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s nominalist critique of Avicenna is an important element in the understanding of his cosmology. We must point out that al-Ghaza¯lı¯ was not
k now led ge of c a usa l c on ne c t ion is ne ce s sa ry 1 7 7 a nominalist in the sense of his contemporary Roscelin (d. c. 1120) or William of Ockham (d. 1347) in the Latin West. 2 These nominalists outspokenly denied any ontological coherence between things and their formal (and universal) rep- resentations in our minds. In the Latin dispute about the status of universals— a dispute that lasted from the late thirteenth to the end of the fourteenth centuries—the nominalist criticism was directed against the Aristotelian claim of an eternal and invariant formal level of being that shapes both the individual things in the outside world as well as our knowledge of them. This position, which is known as epistemological realism, essentially maintains that individ- ual things are what they are because of real existing universals. The consistency of our knowledge with the outside world is due to the ontological coherence between the two. Human souls have access to these universals, and their ap- prehension constitutes our knowledge. In the Latin West, Avicenna was one of the most important proponents of the realist position. In the Muslim East, the parameters of the dispute on the status of univer- sals were different. Here, the nominalist criticism of Avicenna developed from Ash ¶arite occasionalism, as in the case of al-Ghaza¯lı¯. Yet nominalist positions were not unknown within the discourse of falsafa in the East. Justifying his position that the modalities exist only in minds and not in the outside world, al- Ghaza¯lı¯ cites a moderate nominalist view toward human knowledge that were current among the fala¯sifa . He tries to persuade his philosophical readers to ac- cept his position on the modalities by comparing them to universals. According to views held by the fala¯sifa themselves, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ continues, the universals are just concepts in the mind without referring objects ( ma ¶lu¯ma¯t ) in the outside world. The universals do not exist in the outside world: What exists in the outside world ( f ı¯ l-a ¶ya¯n ) are individual particulars that we perceive with our senses and not in our mind. But they are (only) the cause; because the mind abstracts from them intellectual judgments that are empty of matter. Therefore being a color ( lawniyya ) is a single judgment ( qad.iya ) in the mind ( ¶aql ) similar to blackness or whiteness. One cannot conceive that there exists a color that is neither black nor white nor any other of the colors. In the mind there exists the form of “being a color” without any details; and one says it is a form and it exists in the minds and not in the outside world. 3
The position referred to here needs not be that of a nominalist. Avicenna him- self taught that the perception of individual objects cannot lead to universal judgments. 4 Although admitting that universals have no existence in matter, the Avicennan opponent still holds that they exist in a real and immaterial way in the active intellect, outside of the human mind. Al-Ghaza¯lı¯ uses this argument, however, to advance a distinctly nominalist critique of the position that modali- ties exist outside of the human mind. We will later see how al-Ghaza¯lı¯ made productive use of some nominalist tendencies within Avicenna’s œuvre. 5
In the methodological introduction to The Highest Goal in Explaining the Beautiful Names of God, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ develops a distinctly nominalist theory of 1 7 8 a l - gh a z a ¯ l 1
¯ ’ s ph ilosoph ic a l t h e olo g y semantic relations that combines Ash ¶arite notions with philosophical distinc- tions. 6
temology on him was so strong that he often applies to his own writings a realist concept of the universals. 7 What distinguishes al-Ghaza¯lı¯ from Avicenna, as we will see in the course of this study, is that he remained ontologically uncom- mitted to the existence of the universals outside of individual human minds. Although the universals may exist as entities in the active intellect, such an existence cannot be demonstrated. The realist understanding of the universals may or may not be true. In the Second Approach of the seventeenth discussion, he counters the realist position with the occasionalist position that human cog- nitions are the immediate creations of God and are only congruent with the outside world if God wills it. Some of al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s criticism in his Incoherence of the Philosophers cent- ers on questioning the ontological connection between the formal structure of the world and the formal structure of our knowledge. Averroes (d. 595/1198), for instance, who shared Avicenna’s realist epistemology, was surprised by al-Ghaza¯lı¯’s effort to defend an occasionalist position with the argument that human knowledge may become disconnected from the world it aims to describe. That cannot be the case, Averroes says, “because the knowledge created in us is always in conformity with the nature of the real thing, since the defi nition of truth is that a thing is believed to be such as it is in reality.” 8 Yet this conform- ity ( taba ¶ ) is precisely what al-Ghaza¯lı¯ argues against. Since there is no proof of the necessity of the connection between a cause and its effect, there is also no proof of the necessary conformity of our knowledge with the world. The mere possibility of a disconnect between the two proves that there is no formal—and thus necessary—coherence between the world and our knowledge of it. In a later passage of the Incoherence , al-Ghaza¯lı¯ comments on what he does in the seventeenth discussion. This comment appears in the twentieth discus- sion of the book, on the subject of corporeal resurrection in the afterlife. The fala¯sifa argue that a resurrection of bodies is impossible, as it necessitates the impossible feat of transformation of substances, such as iron transforming into a garment. In his response, al-Ghaza¯lı¯ refers his readers back to the Sec- Download 4.03 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling