1st Edition

Mulla Sadra and Eschatology Evolution of Being

By Eiyad Al-Kutubi Copyright 2015
    162 Pages
    by Routledge

    162 Pages
    by Routledge

    The book explains Sadrā’s theory of the nature of afterlife. It presents Sadrā’s philosophical premises concerning the nature of human beings and their physical and psychological developments through which Sadrā shows how the afterlife is intimately connected to the nature of the human being and how it is a natural stage of the evolution of each individual in which a corporeal body has no role.



    Presenting Mullā Sadrā in a new light, the aim of this book is to investigate Sadrā’s metaphysical principles of the Return (al-ma‘ād) that have been either partially presented or misunderstood in most of the existing secondary literature. Focusing on Sadrā’s philosophical works, specifically the Asfār and his commentary on the Quran, this study demonstrates how Sadrā is a philosopher able to carry the premises of the previous philosophical theories to radically different conclusions. Mullā Sadrā and Eschatology demonstrates the manner in which Sadrā explains the Return as presented in the Quran and Hadith, but also shows how he presents the Return as a natural stage of the evolution of human beings in which a corporeal body has no role. Thus, Sadrā offers a plausible philosophical explanation to the problem of bodily resurrection that had occupied Muslim philosophers for centuries.



    Explaining Mullā Sadrā ‘s distinctive method of "doing" philosophy, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of Islamic Philosophy, Religion and Islamic Studies more broadly.

    1 The Background 2 The Primacy of Existence 3 Individuation and Identity 4 Substantial Motion 5 The Nature of the Human Being 6 Imagination and the Problem of Bodily Return 7 Sadra’s Theories of Imagination and Bodily Return

    Biography



    Eiyad Salman al-Kutubi received his doctorate in Near Eastern Languages and Cultures from Indiana University.He is currently visiting assistant professor in Islamic Studies at the department of Religion/University of Illinois, Urban-Champaign and his research interests include Islamic philosophy and Quranic hermeneutics.

    '... academic audience should be grateful for al-Kurtubi’s careful and detailed reading, which presents a clear explanation of Sadrian theories, and the contribution of such an intense text to the literature.'

    Sümeyye Parildar, Istanbul University, Nazariyat Journal for the History of Islamic Philosophy and Sciences