Posts Tagged ‘Incarnate Life’

Nasr’s Doctrine of Humankind’s “Fall”

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

In my last planned and on-topic post, the “The Mutual ‘Inness’ of the Human and the Divine” of September 30th, I said that in the next planned and on-topic post I would have something to say about the “fall” and our having “become forgetful beings” that we had seen Nasr speaking about. As has been the case before, my promise was some 200% or more of what it should have been. In this post, then, I will deal only with the “fall,” and then not completely, letting the asserted fact of our having “become forgetful beings” wait until a later post.

Nasr brought up the “fall” and our resultant “forgetfulness” in the following passage (The Garden of Truth, pp. 5-6):

The answer to the question “who are we?” is related in a principial manner to our ultimate reality in God, a reality that we have now forgotten as a result of the fall from our original and primordial state and the subsequent decay in the human condition caused by the downward flow of time. We have become forgetful beings, no longer knowing who we are and therefore what our purpose is in this life. But our reality in God, who resides at the depths of our being, is still there. We need to awaken to this reality and to realize our true identity, that is, to know who we really are.

Taking up the cause, the “fall,” and for the time being leaving aside the effect, the “forgetfulness,” as a first observation, we need to note that Nasr’s “fall” is not to be identified with the “fall” of orthodox Christian doctrine. The latter, for one thing, is thought of as the result of the disobedience of the first humans, Adam and Eve. As Nasr notes later in The Garden of Truth (p. 54), however:

Islam does not believe in original sin, but it does emphasize our fall from our primordial state, that primordial nature we still bear deep within ourselves.

Rather, the “fall” of which Nasr speaks corresponds, in at least one central respect, to the creation of mainstream orthodox Christian and mainstream orthodox Muslim theology. That is, just as, in the latter understanding, it is with creation that we begin our incarnate or embodied existence, so, in Nasr’s, it is with the “fall” that we begin our incarnate or embodied existence. One point of difference, of course, is that, in the perspective of the mainstream orthodox theologies, we begin our existence tout court when we begin our incarnate or embodied existence. For Nasr’s Sufism, on the other hand, our existence tout court does not begin when we begin our incarnate or embodied existence; our existence tout court is without beginning.

Cutting a bit more deeply, according to the one view, we are created, ultimately, ex nihilo or out of nothing. But according to the other, we need to keep in mind, there is ultimately only one being, God (as was underlined in the June 28th post, “Nasr’s Gnosis and ‘Theomonism’”). Our fall, then, from our “primordial state,” in which state we were in fact identical with God and so existing, must therefore be a fall from a state of existing to one of not existing, ad nihilo.

Cutting a bit more deeply still, for the two mainstream orthodox theologies, creation and its result are good. But this is not so for Nasr’s gnosticism. In the continuation of the passage from The Garden of Truth (p. 54) quoted above, we find Nasr saying:

We are separated from this [primordial] nature by layers of forgetfulness and imperfection, by veils that can only be removed by God’s Help. And it is precisely these veils, or ontological separation from our Source, that result in what theologically is called evil. It is to these veils with which we usually associate ourselves that the Sufi saint of Basra, Rābi‘ah, was referring when she said, “Alas, my son, thine existence is a sin wherewith no other sin can be compared.”
Metaphysically one can explain the reality of evil as separation from the absolute Good.

Now, we can see that in Nasr’s ontology the thesis that there is but one existent entails the thesis that nothing other than the one is existent; in other words, not being identical with the one existent, God, is simply not being. We might well expect that, in his axiology, i.e., in his theory of value or of the good and bad, the parallel thesis that there is but one good would entail with the thesis that nothing other than the one good is good; in other words, not being identical with the one good, God, is simply not being good. Nasr actually goes further: his thesis is that everything other than the one good is, not merely not good, but evil.

As I have said at least once or twice before in the course of examining Nasr’s version of Sufism, questions abound, even if we grant him his extraordinary theomonist ontology. One that I think should be asked is that of by whose decision and agency we are changed from the primordial state to the fallen state, ours or God’s. It seems to me to be inexplicable in either case.

Another question that I think should be asked is that of to what good purpose or end we have become fallen. As the very term “fall” suggests, we are in are in a worse situation as fallen than we were beforehand. In this respect his “fall” contrasts rather unfavorably with the perspective of the mainstream orthodox theologies, for in being created we have at least gained existence.

We need to remember, of course, that the “fall” does not represent the end of the “journey” of which, in the June 30th post, “Where We Are Coming from and Where We Are Going to: 1,” we saw Nasr speak (The Garden of Truth, p. 6):

According to Sufi metaphysics, and in fact other metaphysical traditions in general, all that exists comes from that Reality which is at once Beyond-Being and Being, and ultimately all things return to that Source. In the language of Islamic thought, including both philosophy and Sufism, the first part of this journey of all beings from the Source is called the “arc of descent” and the second part back to the Source the “arc of ascent.” Within this vast cosmic wayfaring we find ourselves here and now on earth as human beings. Moreover, our life here in this world is a journey within that greater cosmic journey of all existents back to the Source of all existence.

This does not help. We are told that “ultimately all things return to that Source.” From this it follows that ultimately all humans return to that Source. After pausing to note that it really follows that all humans return to that Source, we surely have to ask what has been gained from this “journey” “through the “arc of descent,” “our life here in this world,” and the “arc of ascent”? We have simply returned to the starting point.

There must be more.

In future posts we will have occasion to delve more thoroughly into Nasr’s axiology of the good and the bad. A more fundamental inquiry will also need to be made into his monistic or theomonistic ontology. Most readers will have already taken note of the kinship that it has with that of the Parmenides and his rejection of the reality of change and multiplicity. I am beginning to gather my thoughts on the achievements, and the opposite, of that great philosophical pioneer.

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If you wish, you can easily purchase The Garden of Truth through Amazon.com by clicking on:

The Garden of Truth: The Vision and Promise of Sufism, Islam’s Mystical Tradition

Where We Are Coming from and Where We Are going to: 4

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

In my July 11th post, “Where We Are Coming from and Where We Are Going to 3: More Logic,” I made two claims. One is that, in the passage from his The Garden of Truth currently under examination Nasr does not provide us with proofs, or even arguments, that we humans have both a life prior to our incarnate life and a life posterior to our incarnate life. (It will be helpful at this point to recall, from my July 6th, 2009, post, “Where We Are Coming from and Where We Are Going to 2,” that “ours is an ‘incarnate life’ if and only if there is an immaterial or non-physical something, be it a soul, a psyche, a self, or whatever, that is other than but somehow incarnate or in our physical bodies as we live out this life, ‘here and now on earth as human beings.’”)

The other claim that I made arose from the observation that:

The statement, “We have one incarnate life,” is not as explicit as logic demands that it should be. For one thing, it actually represents the conjunction of two statements, viz. “We have at least one incarnate life” and “We have at most one incarnate life.” The first statement rules out our having no incarnate life and the second rules out our having two or more incarnate lives.

The claim, then, was that Nasr does not provide us with a proof of or even an argument on behalf of the second of the two conjuncts, “We have at most one incarnate life.”

He does, however, it seems to me, provide us with an argument on behalf of the first of the two conjuncts, “We have at least one incarnate life.” This, I believe, can be extracted from the continuation of the passage at hand and will provide us with the focus of today’s post.

Picking the passage up from the point at which we left it, we read (p. 7):

The answer of the materialists and nihilists is that we came from nowhere and we go nowhere; we had no reality before coming into this world, and nothing of our consciousness survives our death. They reduce our existence to simply the physical and terrestrial level and believe that we are merely animals (themselves considered as complicated machines) who have ascended from below, not spiritual beings who have descended from above. But if we are honest with ourselves, we realize that even the concept of matter or corporeality is contained within our consciousness and that therefore when we ask ourselves who we are, we are acting as conscious beings and have to begin with our consciousness. If we are intellectually awake, we realize that we cannot reduce consciousness to that which is contained in our consciousness.

The argument, however, that I think we can see to be contained within or lying behind the passage can be stated in the following way:

1. We are conscious beings.
2. Conscious beings are beings not reducible to being exclusively material beings.
3. Therefore, we are beings not reducible to being exclusively material beings.

Let’s call this argument the “main argument.”

The first premise of the main argument, that we are conscious beings, can be arrived at as the conclusion of the following chain of argumentation:

1.a. There is a concept of matter or corporeality that we have in our consciousness.
1.b. Therefore, we have consciousness.
1.c. Only conscious beings have consciousness.
1.d. Therefore, we are conscious beings.

The key premise here, that there is a concept of matter or corporeality that we have in our consciousness, is either equivalent to or at least implied by his “even the concept of matter or corporeality is contained within our consciousness.” The remaining steps in the argument follow with nearly complete explicitness. So, if we grant him that key premise, any reasonable person would say that he must be granted the conclusion that we are conscious beings. The argumentation is, in other words, valid.

But is the argumentation sound? That is, is the premise, that there is a concept of matter or corporeality that we have in our consciousness,” actually true? Certainly no materialist worth his or her salt would accept it. For a rigorous materialism, to speak of a “concept,” as in “the concept of matter or corporeality,” is but to employ an in the end misleading manner of speaking. While we can with various instruments observe various activities of the brain, no observation of the activities of the brain will bring anything like a concept to light. The same is true of “consciousness.” While materialists will be willing to admit that we are conscious, and certainly when we are asking who we are, no observation of the activities of the brain will bring anything like consciousness to light.

Then there is the second premise of the main argument, that “conscious beings are beings not reducible to being exclusively material beings.” It takes a bit more work to extract this premise from our passage, but I think that, with the help of some charitable reworking, it can be so extracted from the passage’s last line, which says that “we cannot reduce consciousness to that which is contained in our consciousness.”

Now this statement is a bit odd, for according to what Nasr says earlier in the passage it is “the concept of matter or corporeality” [my emphasis] that “is contained within our consciousness,” not matter or corporeality itself. But, while he actually says that we cannot reduce consciousness to the concept of matter or corporeality, he must mean to say that we cannot reduce consciousness to matter or corporeality, as the materialists wish to do. Otherwise the passage would not actually constitute a reply to materialism. So, I propose to understand him as having intended to say just that, that we cannot reduce consciousness to matter or corporeality. Accepting this as a premise and conjoining an equally reasonable additional premise or two, it will follow that conscious beings are beings not reducible to being exclusively material beings, the premise sought.

Once again, however, while we find ourselves having an apparently valid piece of argumentation, we are faced with the question of the argumentation’s soundness. That is, is it true that we cannot reduce consciousness to matter or corporeality? Is it then true that conscious beings are beings not reducible to being exclusively material beings?

Now I am by no means claiming that the materialist thesis is true or that the argumentation extracted from Nasr’s passage is not sound. I have my opinion, but I do not know whether the materialist thesis is true or false. It is my intention, at some point later in the history of this blog, to subject the question to a thorough investigation.

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If you wish, you an easily purchase The Garden of Truth through Amazon.com by clicking on:

The Garden of Truth: The Vision and Promise of Sufism, Islam’s Mystical Tradition

Where We Are Coming from and Where We Are Going to: 2

Monday, July 6th, 2009

In my June 30th post, I introduced the answers that Nasr’s Sufism gives to the questions of where we come from and where we are going; they are that, in brief, we come from and we are going to God. In today’s post, I’ll begin to subject them to examination.

First, however, I want to quote the following three sentences again and raise two questions, without answering them.

In the language of Islamic thought, including both philosophy and Sufism, the first part of this journey of all beings from the Source is called the “arc of descent” and the second part back to the Source the “arc of ascent.” Within this vast cosmic wayfaring we find ourselves here and now on earth as human beings. Moreover, our life here in this world is a journey within that greater cosmic journey of all existents back to the Source of all existence.

The first question arises from the odd wording of “we find ourselves here and now on earth as human beings.” This question is: Is it only “here and now on earth” that we are beings who are more specifically human beings, such that we are beings other than specifically human beings in the existence that he sees us having before and after our life “here and now on earth”?

The second question arises from the affirmation evident in the “greater cosmic journey of all existents back to the Source of all existence,” that all existents will return to “the Source,” to, that is, God. Assuming all that we have seen Nasr holding to be true, would it really be the case that all existents would so return and thus that all human beings, in some mode of being, would return to God, no matter how evil or depraved? That would seem to have an important implication for the hell of Islamic, and Christian, belief, that it is, in some sense, temporary or provisional.

Those questions raised, let’s move on to the continuation of the passage just quoted.

We are born, we move through time, and we die. For most of us, without knowing who we really are, we move between two great mysteries and unknowns, namely where we were before we came into this world and where we shall go after death. The answer of the materialists and nihilists is that we came from nowhere and we go nowhere; we had no reality before coming into this world, and nothing of our consciousness survives our death.

Another question to be raised in passing: does his locating our moving through time in this life tell us that our life before and our life after this life are non-temporal, outside of time?

For now, however, I want first to point to the two perspectives that we can see identified in Nasr’s text and then to point to the others that are at least logically possible and so in need of consideration. The one, his, is that we exist prior to the existence we have in this life, we exist in this life, and we exist posterior to the existence we have in this life. The other, that of the “materialists and nihilists,” is that we do not exist prior to the existence we have in this life, we do exist in this life, and we do not exist posterior to the existence we have in this life.

The pertinent truth-table will set forth all the other perspectives that are at least logically possible and so in need of consideration.

To make the statement of these possibilities easier, let us agree to use the descriptor, “incarnate life,” to refer to the life that we have in this life, if we are more that the material components that constitute our bodies. That is, ours is an “incarnate life” if and only if there is an immaterial or non-physical something, be it a soul, a psyche, a self, or whatever, that is other than but somehow incarnate or in our physical bodies as we live out this life, “here and now on earth as human beings.”

Let us then use “B” to abbreviate the statement “We have a life or existence prior to, or before, having an incarnate life,” “I” to abbreviate the statement “We have an incarnate life or existence,” and “A” to abbreviate the statement “We have a life or existence posterior to, or after, having an incarnate life or existence.” The truth-table generates itself thusly:

B I A
T T T
T T F
T F T
T F F
F T T
F T F
F F T
F F F

The first (T T T) row represents Nasr’s perspective, according to which we have a life or existence both before and after having the incarnate life we have “here and now on earth as human beings.”

There are two distinct “materialist” perspectives that Nasr may have had in mind in the passage quoted above. One, which we might describe as a “moderate materialism,” is represented by the sixth (F T F) row. It holds that, while we have no life or existence either before or after having an incarnate life, “here and now on earth as human beings” we do have an incarnate life; the consciousness that he point to our having in this life may be thought to suggest that we do have a non-physical soul, a psyche, a self, or whatever, that is other than but somehow conjoined with our physical bodies.

The other of the two distinct materialist perspectives that Nasr may have had in mind in the passage quoted above we might describe as an “absolute materialism.” This perspective is represented by the last (F F F) row. It holds that, not only do we not have a life or existence either before or after having an incarnate life, we do not have an incarnate life. That is, there is no non-physical soul, psyche, self, or whatever that is other than but somehow incarnate or in our physical bodies; there is just the physical body and its physical processes.

The fifth (F T T) row represents the mainstream Christian or Muslim view that holds that we do not have a life or existence before having an incarnate life; that is, we begin to live or exist at conception or at some point shortly thereafter and we continue to live or exist on into a hereafter.

The remaining rows represent logical possibilities, albeit logical possibilities of diminishing real interest.

There remain other, related, sets of possibilities, involving different sets of propositions, that a thorough treatment of the topic at hand would need to address. We’ll spell some of them out in our next scheduled on-topic post. I anticipate taking up the reasons Nasr can offer us for accepting the perspective represented by the above truth-table’s first row in the post succeeding that one.

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If you wish, you an easily purchase The Garden of Truth through Amazon.com by clicking on:

The Garden of Truth: The Vision and Promise of Sufism, Islam’s Mystical Tradition