Religion vs. Philosophy-To Embrace or Exclude?
What is the character and general structures of the universe in which we live? Is there a permanent element in the constitution of this universe? How are we related to it? What place do we occupy in it, and what is the kind of conduct that benefits the place we occupy? These questions are common to religion, philosophy, and higher poetry.
The Nature of both
But the kind of knowledge that poetic inspiration brings is essentially individual in its character; it is figurative, vague, and indefinite. Religion, in its more advanced forms, rises higher than poetry. It moves from individual to society. In its attitude towards the ultimate reality it is opposed to the limitations of man; it enlarges his claims and holds out the prospect of nothing less than a direct vision of Reality. Is it then possible to apply the purely rational method of philosophy to religion?
The philosophical
spirit
The spirit of philosophy is
one of free inquiry. It suspects all authority.
Its function is to trace the uncritical
assumptions of human thought to their hiding
places, and in this pursuit it may finally end
in denial or a frank admission of the incapacity
of pure reason to reach the ultimate
reality.
Religion: The free bird
The
essence of religion, on the other hand, is
faith, and faith, like the bird, sees its
'trackless way' unattended by intellect which,
in the great mystic poet of Islam, ' only way
lays the living heart of man and robs it of the
invisible lies within.'
Yet it cannot be
denied that faith is mere feeling. It has
something like a cognitive content, and the
existence of rival parties- scholastics and
mystics- in the history shows that idea is a
vital element in religion. Apart from this,
religion on its doctrinal side, as defined by
professor Whitehead, is ' a system of general
truths which have the effect of transforming
character when they are sincerely held and
vividly apprehended'. Now, since the
transformation and guidance of man's inner and
outer life is the essential aim of religion, it
is obvious that the general truths that it
embodies must not remain unsettled.
Religion : more ambitious than philosophy.
Indeed, in view of its function, religion
stands in greater need of a rational foundation
of its ultimate principles than even the dogmas
of science. Science may ignore a rational
metaphysics; indeed, indeed it has ignored it so
far. Religion can hardly afford to ignore the
search for a reconciliation of the oppositions
of experience and justification of the
environment in which humanity fund itself. That
is why Professor Whitehead has acutely remarked
that ' the ages of faith are the ages of
rationalism'.
But to rationalize faith is
not to admit the superiority of philosophy over
religion. Philosophy, no doubt, has jurisdiction
to judge religion, but what is to be judged is
such a nature that it will not submit to the
jurisdiction of philosophy except on its on
terms. While sitting in judgment of religion,
philosophy cannot give religion an inferior
place among its data. Religion is not a
departmental affair; it is neither mere thought,
nor mere feeling; it is an expression of the
whole man.
The need to recognize each other
Thus, in the evaluation of religion, philosophy must recognize the central position of religion and has no other alternative but to admit it as something focal in the process of reflective synthesis. Nor is there any reason to suppose that thought and intuition are essentially opposed to each other. They spring up from the same root and complement each other.
Religion and Philosophy: Compare and
contrast
The one grasp Reality
piecemeal, the other grasps it in its wholeness.
The one fixes its gaze on the eternal the other
on the temporal aspect of Reality. The one is
present enjoyment of the whole of Reality; the
other aims at traversing the whole by slowly
specifying and closing up the various regions of
the whole for exclusive observation. Both are in
need of each other for mutual rejuvenation. Both
seek vision of the same reality, which reveals
itself to them in accordance to the function of
life. In fact, intuition, as Bergson rightly
says, is only a higher kind of
intellect.
Note: summarized from "Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam" by Muhammad Iqbal