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Al-Fārābī as a Source of the History of
Philosophy and of Its Definition

This article by
Professor Mubahat Turker-Kuyel, was first published in the Turkish
review Erdem, 18 (1990). Ankara 1992, pp. 737-747. We are
grateful to Imran Baba, editor of Erdem for allowing
publication.
Al-Fārābī says that
philosophy comes to us from the ancient Greeks,[1]
especially from Plato and Aristotle who have founded and
perfected it.[2]
Historians of
philosophy begin their topics, after citing the name of Homer, with
those of the "Seven Sages" among whom Thales is cited first. All the
people who are interested in philosophy know that the word
philosophy is composed of philia, that is quest and love and
sophos that is wisdom. It seems that the word philosophy is
an invention of the Pythagoreans.[3]
In the literature,
the following questions have been asked rather frequently: "What is
wisdom?" "What is the relation between wisdom and philosophy?" "Is
this wisdom invention of ancient Greeks or contributions from other
cultures?" It seems to me that it is possible to ask these questions
now with reference to Plato, Aristotle, Beressos, Ibn Newbakht, al-Fārābī,
Ibn Maymun, Roger Bacon, Miklosh Daczi Yanos,[4]
and, to the recent studies on ancient Mesopotamia.[5]
With this article,
we ask all these questions and we utilize the works of al-Fārābī,
his definitions and his terms as a referable source. And we see,
that according to him, wisdom has come to us from the Chaldeans; and
that it is the basis of philosophy and science, as well as religion,
and, that it makes the distinction between that which is
intelligible with certainty, and religion which lets us know the
truth by image through similitude and offers us conviction, belief
and persuasion. The starting point of al-Fārābī in these subjects is
certainly found in his very important little book, entitled "The
Conditions of Certain Truth."[6] All these
aspects reveal the beginning of the history of philosophy.
As regards to the
ancient or new bibliographic and bio-bibliographic sources[7]
it is well known that al-Fārābī has written many treatises on
the definitions of philosophy, its appearance in the world, its
transmission from one culture to another and the meaning of the
philosopher's names, as well as which things are necessary before
beginning to study philosophy.[8] We have at
hand some of these books, while we do not have some others.[9]
But al-Fārābī has, always, taken these subjects into
consideration directly or indirectly in his main books.[10]
At the same time he has given to us the definitions of wisdom
and philosophy. The following are the definitions of the not divine
but human wisdom given by al-Fārābī to us:
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"Wisdom is the knowledge about the
First One from whom all the creatures have gotten their virtues
and perfections." [11]
-
"Wisdom is the knowledge about the
ultimate and supreme principles of creatures."
[12]
-
"Wisdom is the veneration before the
most venerable subject by knowing it by means of the most
venerable knowledge." [13]
-
"Wisdom is searching on the ultimate
happiness." [14]
-
"Wisdom is the virtue of the parts
of the rational soul [15] such as
intelligence, reason, understanding, cleverness, just as courage,
righteousness and altruism are the virtues of the parts of the
animal soul like lust and passion."[16]
Indeed, according to al-Fārābī, the virtues are either
"theoretical" or "deliberative" or "moral" or "practical" for all
people or "nations" (Milla).
All previously
mentioned definitions of wisdom are the same by essence although
they seem different at first glance. This is because the theoretical
virtue of man and his searching for "certain truth" is wisdom
in itself. [17]
We could appreciate
this point also in taking into account the outlines of the
philosophy of al-Fārābī and his definitions of philosophy.
It is well known
that, according to the philosophical views of al-Fārābī, existence
per se is only for God Himself. This means that God exists
necessarily, while His creatures are existent only by God. God is
the one and absolute existent per autrui whose essence is His
own existence. [18] God possesses wisdom and
intellect. Thinking His essence, God, gives their existence to His
creatures as well as to man. Therefore, from the First One emanates
the Intellect, the Soul and the Matter. The essence of God being
wisdom, and since Intellectus, Intelligens and Intellectum,
all the Universe, including men, are emanated from His
knowledge, all the Universe should be constructed according to
divine wisdom. For this reason, the knowledge of man about God, and
His creatures as they are, is human wisdom itself and the search of
man for knowledge of these subjects is the theoretical virtue
itself.
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The drawing of Ibn Sīnā on the
Pakistan stamp. The stamp reads: Hakim Ibn E-Sina (980-1037),
Health from Herbs. |
The wisdom of God
is identical with His life i.e. God's wisdom is "the intellection
about the most venerable subject by means of the most venerable
knowledge." "The most venerable subject" is God Himself. According
to the philosophical view of Ibn Sīnā man finds, the "ultimate
happiness" in the searching for knowledge about God. This means that
man comes to imitate God's wisdom and life and that the response of
man to the "Creatio Dei"(God's creatures) is only by "Imitatio
Dei"(imitation of God). For example, the response of man to the
"Tajallī" (manifestation) of God is only by the "Ittisāl"
(contact, conjunction) of man with Him. "Imitatio Dei" is
then, man's theoretical virtue itself. According to al-Fārābī, the
purpose of man to study philosophy is to know God in order to
imitate Him as much as possible. [19]
Further, "philosophy is to know the being as being."[20]
"The end of philosophy is to know all beings as they are."[21]
Philosophy concerns all being, as in theoretical or practical
philosophy. Mathematics (including Arithmetic, Geometry, Astronomy
and Music), Physics and Theology are theoretical philosophy, while
moral, economical and political sciences are practical ones.
With all these
views, al-Fārābī establishes a parallelism between wisdom and
philosophy on the one hand and a connection between wisdom and moral
and political sciences on the other. He proposes wisdom as the way
to the "attainment" of the ultimate happiness which is also
attainment to the "certain knowledge" about God. One could
attain to knowledge with certainty about God, when one studies all
beings as they are or being as being. These topics are studied in
the "Book of Lambda", part of the Metaphysics of Aristotle.
These subjects are called sometimes "metaphysics", sometimes as
"theology". [22] Theologies come "after"
physics. Its place is "higher" than it. For, to study the
principles of beings and the subjects whose separation from matter
is not imagery like those of Mathematics, but ontological, is the
most venerable thing to do for man. All these subjects are the most
venerable ones. One knows all these "most venerable subjects" by
mean of the "most venerable science" which is both the "certain
truth" andthe "theoretical virtue". One attains to the
"ultimate happiness" by integrating his "theoretical virtue" with
the "deliberative" and "moral" virtues as well as with the
"practical arts".
With these
considerations, al-Fārābī puts together wisdom based on philosophy,
and science, as well as that of religion. Then, it is clear, why in
the Turkish language Physics and Biology have been called for a long
time "the wisdom about nature" or "the natural wisdom" (Hikmet-i
tabiiyye).
For, according to
al-Fārābī, man possesses the "certain truth" as the human
intellect concerns a being and the knowledge about it is exactly
being the same as it is. Both this being and the knowledge about it
are called "truth" or "truthfulness". When there is no
doubt within the human mind about the knowledge about a being that
it is exactly the same as this thing itself, this "truth"
becomes "certain". Then, this state of human mind is called
"certain truth". When any human intellect is not concerned
about any being this being does not become "truth", it rests
alone as a being. When the human intellect is concerning with the
Eternal Being; with certainty, manhas then, the "certain truth"
the "true science", the "most venerable science".
Man attains to it
by asking the following questions and taking their "certain"
responses which are similar to the mathematical definitions:
"Whether the thing is", "What is it?", "By which, from which, for
which is it?", "Why is it?" These questions and their responses are
called the "Principles of instruction". Man attains to the First
Principle by asking all the time to himself the following questions:
"Whether the thing is", "Why the thing is", and having their
"certain" responses. [23] The
"Principles of Being" are the following questions and their
"certain" responses: "What", "By what" and "How the thing is",
"For what it is." In some subjects, like the mathematical ones, the
"Principles of instruction" are the same as the "Principles of
being", while in some subjects it is not. [24]
There is not any "true science" about the changing
objects, of course, [25] Man attains to the
"true science" through "apodeictic", that is,
"certain demonstration' starting with premises which are true,
general, and necessary. To attain to the "true science" orthe
"most venerable science" isto attain to the "certain
truth".
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A calligraphy that mentions
about wisdom (hikma): Ra's al-Hikmatu mahāfatullah. |
According to al-Fārābī,
this "most venerable science" that the ancient "Greeks used to call
the true wisdom, is the highest wisdom. They call the
acquisition of it science and the scientific state of mind
philosophy, by which they meant the quest and the love for the
highest wisdom. They held that, potentially, it subsumes all
the virtues. They called it science of science, the mother
of sciences, the wisdom of wisdoms and the art of
arts. They meant the art that makes use of all the arts,
the virtue that makes use of all the virtues and the wisdom that
makes use of all wisdoms. Now wisdom may be used for
consummate and extreme competence in any art whatsoever when it
leads to performing feats of which most practitioners of that art
are incapable. Here wisdom is used in a qualified sense. Thus, he
who is extremely competent in art is said to be wise in that
art. Similarly, a man with penetrating practical judgment and acumen
may be called wise in the thing regarding which he has penetrating
practical judgment. However true wisdom is this science and
state of mind alone. [26] When the
theoretical sciences are isolated and their possessors do not have
the faculty for exploiting them for the benefit of others,
they are defective philosophy. To be truly a perfect
philosopher, one has to possess both the theoretical sciences and
the faculty for exploiting them for the benefit of all others
according to their capacity. Were one to consider the case of the
true philosopher, he would find no difference between him and the
supreme ruler."
According to al-Fārābī,
"There are two ways of making a thing comprehensible; first by
causing its essence to be perceived by the intellect this is the
method of "certain demonstration" and, second, by causing it
to be imagined through the similitude that imitates it this is the
method of persuasion . When one acquires knowledge of the beings or
receives instruction in them, if he perceives their ideas themselves
with his intellect and his assent to them this is by means of
certain demonstration; then, the science that comprises these
cognitions is philosophy. But, if they are known by imagining
them through similitudes that imitate them and assent to what is
imagined of them is caused by the persuasive method, then the
Ancients call what comprises these cognitions Religion. And,
if those intelligibles themselves are adopted and persuasive
methods are used, then, the religion comprising them is called
popular, generally accepted, and external philosophy.
Therefore, according to the Ancients, religion is an imitation of
philosophy. Both comprise the same subjects and both give an account
of the ultimate principles of the beings. For both supply knowledge
about the first principle and cause of the beings, and both give an
account of the ultimate end for the sake of which man is made that
is the supreme happiness and the ultimate end of every one of the
other beings. In everything of which philosophy gives an account
based on intellectual perception or conception, religion gives an
account based on imagination. In everything demonstrated by
philosophy, religion employs persuasion. [27]
Philosophy gives an account of the ultimate principles as they
are perceived by the intellect. Religion set forth its images by
means of similitudes of them taken from corporal principles and
imitates them by their likeness among political offices. It imitates
the divine acts by means of the functions of political offices. It
imitates the actions of natural powers and principles of their
likeness among the faculties. States and arts have to do with the
will, just as Plato does in the Timaeus. It imitates the
intelligibles by their likenesses among the sensible: For instance,
some imitate matter by abyss or darkness or
water, and nothingness by darkness. It imitates
the classes of supreme happiness by their likenesses among the good
that are believed to be the ends. It imitates the classes of true
happiness by means of the ones that are believed to be happiness. It
imitates the ranks of the beings by their likenesses among spatial
and temporal ranks. And, it attempts to bring the similitudes of
these things as close as possible to their essences. Also, in
everything of which philosophy gives an account that is
demonstrative and certain, religion gives an account based on
persuasive arguments. Finally philosophy is prior to religion in
time, [28] and the subjects of wisdom or
philosophy are more comprehensive than those of religion. In the
last analysis, the meanings of "Milla", "Sunna", "Umma" and
"Sharī'a" should be the same.[29]
Likewise, the "ultimate happiness" should be the same for all
umma's, while their symbols are different.
[30] This means that the essence of all the religions is the
same, although their external forms or their symbols are different.
The idea of the true philosopher, supreme ruler, prince, legislator
and Imam is but a single idea. But, religion is the
instruction of people by persuasion and imagination. Because
according to al-Fārābī, when the logic, with which one searches what
is common for all languages is used in the parts of philosophy, one
attains to the certainty. Thus, the "certain demonstration"
is used in philosophy. The "certain demonstration" is a kind
of syllogism formed with premises which are certain.
[31] The "certain demonstration" is attainable only
through the "certain affirmation".[32]
There are also other lands of affirmations which are nearest to
the certainty, giving to us opinion or persuasion or conviction. All
these other kinds of affirmations are used by religions as
rhetorical, popular and generally accepted arguments.
[33]
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Ibn Sīnā drawing by A. Suheyl
Unver |
The "certain
demonstration" is other than the certainty itself. Therefore,
the "certain demonstration" is a scientific syllogism formed
with the premises which are general, true and necessary, while
certainty is a state of mind to which one attains by starting from
the premises which are true, necessary, general, primary, immediate,
indemonstrable, first, more intelligible than and prior to the
conclusion and causes of the conclusion. [34]
The proposition,
which informs us of the necessary existence of a thing, is
invertible with the proposition that is necessarily certain and
informs us about it.[35] There is not any
being which is necessary with the exception of God. The only being
that is necessary is God Himself. Other beings are possible in the
different degree of majority, equality, minority and eventuality.
The natural things are not necessary but possible in the degree of
majority. The thing, which is possible in the degree of equality, is
called neither contingent, that is not possible to say neither "is"
(true) nor "is not" (true) about it. They who give us "true
demonstration" about creation and attain to the "certain
truth" about it, are the philosophers, they who give us the
"persuasive demonstration" are theologians.
[36] But, the "true demonstrations" of philosophers are
superior and most venerable. [37]
According to al-Fārābī,
man knows God and divine subjects by means of intellect.[38]
The intellect is the nearest being to God. It is a part of the
"most honourable world".[39] It is the "most
honourable part of human soul."[40] It is a
part and a faculty of the human soul by means of which man
comprehends the "certain truth".[41]
When. God created the beings; He gave the most convenient nature to
man to receive the intellectual soul. . The first place for
the human soul is in the heart [42] which is
one of the parts of the human body.[43] The
knowledge about the First One is the attainment to the ultimate
happiness which is the specific perfection of man.[44]
This is the First and Eternal One who gives to the beings as
well as to the man their virtues and perfection.[45]
The Supreme Ruler
prepares his people to the virtuous city by instruction with
"certain truth". There is a parallelism between God, Universe,
Society and Peoples. The people of the virtuous city are those who
know wisdom and justice. One attains to the Milla through the
"certain truth" or similitude as we said before. It is clear
now from all these explanations that, "true wisdom" is the
"most honorable science" or the "certain truth" according
to al-Fārābī. According to him "it is said that this science existed
anciently among the Chaldeans [46] who are
the people of Iraq, subsequently reaching the people of Egypt, from
there transmitted to the Greeks, where it remained until it was
transmitted to the Syrians, and then to the Arabs. Everything
comprised by this science was expounded in the Greek language, later
in Syriac and finally in Arabic."[47] We
have also very detailed information coming from al-Fārābī, included
in cUyūn al-Anbā' and appreciated by Max Meyerhof
on the transmission of philosophy from the Greeks to the world of
Islam. [48]
Ancient and new
archeological studies on the literature of wisdom and science in
Ancient Mesopotamia and especially in Sumer made by many
cuneiformists, especially by Thureau-Dangin, Neugebauer, Thomson,
Arno Poebel, Landsberger, Van Dyck, Kramer, affirm the main thesis
of al-Fārābī.
As a result, we
could say that, although al-Fārābī says that philosophy comes to us
from the Greeks, especially from Plato and Aristotle, both the
definitions and the history of wisdom, in the light of works of al-Fārābī
as well as those of cuneiform literature, point out to us that the
main conceptions of Greek philosophy and philosophers are included
in the Mesopotamian, especially Sumerian literature of wisdom.
[1] Tahsīl al-Sa'āda, 49; Muhsin Mahdi,
Alfārābī's Philosophy of Plato and Aristotle, Agora, Free
Press of Glencoe, New York. 1962.
[2] Kitāb al-Cam' Bayna Ra'yayn al-Hakimayn,
1, Dieterici, Leiden 1890.
[3] Lalande, Vocabulaire Technicue et
Philosophique.
[4] Plato, Timaios; Aristotle (Eudemos,
Matematik Tarihi); Pseudo-Hippocrates, Yedi Sayisi Uzerine
4, 2, 6; Berossos, (Conteneau, Le Deluge, 32-33, Payot,
Paris 1952); Ibn Nawbakht, Kitāb Nahmutān; Ibn Nadīm, al-Fihrist,
Flugel, Dodge; Al-Fārābī Tahsīl 43; Ibn Maymun,
Dalālat al-Hā'irīn, Fs. 54, 183, Atay, Ilāhiyāt Fakultesi,
Ankara 1974; Roger Bacon, Opus Maius; 0. Tertium. (Gilson,
La Philosophie au Moyen Age 477-78). Huseyin Namik Orkun,
Eski Turk Tazilari, III, 1940, T.D.K., 302 vd.
[5] Borger, Handbuch der
Keilshriftslitteratur, De Gruyter, 1975-1977, Berlin 1979.
[6] M. Turker-Kuyel, "Sarā'it al-Yakīn
d'al-Fārābī," Arastirma, i, 1963, 173-194, Ankara 1964.
Ayrica bk. A.K.M., Fārābī Kulliyati, no: 2.
[7] Ibn Nadīm, al-Fihrist; Ibn Abī cUsaibica,
'Uyūn al-Anbā'; al-Kiftī, Ihbār al-Ulama; Brockelmann,
GAL, 1 Suppl, 1; F. Sezgin, Shriftstum; Ates, "Fārābī'nin
Eserleri'nin Bibliyografyasi," Belleten, 1951, XV, 57,
175-192; Pearson, Index Islamicus; N. Rescher, al-Fārābī,
Pittsburgh, 1962; M. Mahdi; La Filosofia della Natura nel
Medioevo, Milano 1966, s. 772-776.
[8] Ates, no: 20, 72. Fīmā yanbagī Kabla
Ta'allum al-Falsafa.
[9] Ates, no: 24, 44, 45, 151; Sayili, "Fārābī'nin
Tefekkur Tarihindeki Yeri," 43-44, Belleten, 57, XV, 1951;
Max Meyerhof, Von Atexandrien nach Bagdad, 1930, La Fin de
l'Ecole d'Alexandrie, 1933; On the Transmission of Greek and
Indian Science to the Arabs, Islamic Culture, X, 1, Hyderabad
1937
[10] Tahsīl; al-Siyāsat al-Madaniyya; Kilāb
al-Hurūf (Muhsin Mahdi); Kitāb al-Milla, (Muhsin Mahdi);
Muhtasar al-Mantik; K. al-Cam fī Ma'ānī'l-Akl.
[11] Fusūl Muntaza'a, 62.
[12] Fusūl Muntaza'a, 52.
[13] Arā' Ahl Medīna, 5. Fasl. (Dieterici).
[14] Fusūl Muntaza'a, 62; Arā,
62.
[15] Fusūl Muntaza'a, 30.
[16] Fusūl Muntaza'a, 30.
[17] Tahsīl, 1.
[18] Agrāz al-Hakim, 36.
[19] Kabla Ta'allum, 52.
[20] Cam', 1.
[21] Cam', 1.728
[22] M. Turker, L'lmportance et l'Origine de
la Metaphysique chez al-Fārābī, Die Metatphysik im Mittelalter,
1963, 418-427. De Gruyter, Berlin.
[23] Fusūl Muntaza'a, 30.
[24] Tahsīl, 15-16.
[25] Fusūl Muntaza'a, 54.
[26] Fusūl Muntaza'a, 53-54; Tahsīl,
43; Ibn Maymun, Dalālet, Fs. 54.
[27] Tahsīl, 44.
[28] DīnMillaMadīna, sunnashari' a,
Muhsin Mahdi, Tahsīl, VII, 86.
[29] Siyāsa Madaniyya, 47
[30] Arā' 69-70.
[31] Muhtasar Mantik, Kitāb al-Burhān,
221, 228, Arastirma, 1. 1963 (1964).
[32] Muhtasar Mantik, Kitāb al-Burhān,
213-222.
[33] Muhtasar Mantik, 223; al-Kiyās
as-Sagīr.
[34] Serā'it al-Yakīn, 195-204, 205,
212.
[35] Muhtasar al-Mantik, Kitāb al-Burhān,
216-224.
[36] Cam', 26.
[37] Arā', 69-70.
[38] Cam', 31.
[39] Cam', 31.
[40] Cam', 31.
[41] Fī Maāni'l-Akl, 40.
[42] 'Uyūn, 22. Bh.
[43] 'Uyūn, 22. Bh.
[44] Arā', 62.
[45] Arā'.
[46] Tahsīl, 43.
[47] Tahsīl, 43.
[48] Ibn Abī "Usaibi'a; 'Uyūn, II, 134. Max
Meyerhaf, Von Alexandrien Nach Bagdad; La Fin de l'Ecole
d'Alexandrie; On the Transmission; Sayili, Fārābi'nin...;
Majid Fakhry, History of Islamic Phihsophy; 126-127, Columbia
Press. New York.
by: Prof. Mubahat Turker-Kuyel
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