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The Spirit of Muslim Culture
-Muhammad of Arabia ascended the highest
Heaven and returned. I swear by God that if I had reached that point,
I should never have returned. These are the words of a great
Muslim saint, AbdulQuddës of Gangoh. In the whole range
of Sufi literature it will be probably difficult to find words which,
in a single sentence, disclose such an acute perception of the psychological
difference between the prophetic and the mystic types of consciousness.
The mystic does not wish to return from the repose of unitary
experience; and even when he does return, as he must, his
return does not mean much for mankind at large. The prophets
return is creative. He returns to insert himself into the sweep
of time with a view to control the forces of history, and thereby
to create a fresh world of ideals. For the mystic the repose of
unitary experience is something final; for the prophet
it is the awakening, within him, of world-shaking psychological
forces, calculated to completely transform the human world. The
desire to see his religious experience transformed into a living
world-force is supreme in the prophet. Thus his return amounts to
a kind of pragmatic test of the value of his religious experience.
In its creative act the prophets will judges both itself and
the world of concrete fact in which it endeavours to objectify itself.
In penetrating the impervious material before him the prophet discovers
himself for himself, and unveils himself to the eye of history.
Another way of judging the value of a prophets religious experience,
therefore, would be to examine the type of manhood that he has created,
and the cultural world that has sprung out of the spirit of his
message. In this lecture I want to confine myself to the latter
alone. The idea is not to give you a description of the achievements
of Islam in the domain of knowledge. I want rather to fix your gaze
on some of the ruling concepts of the culture of Islam in order
to gain an insight into the process of ideation that underlies them,
and thus to catch a glimpse of the soul that found expression through
them. Before, however, I proceed to do so it is necessary to understand
the cultural value of a great idea in Islam - I mean the finality
of the institution of prophethood.
A prophet may be defined as a type of mystic consciousness
in which unitary experience tends to overflow its boundaries,
and seeks opportunities of redirecting or refashioning the forces
of collective life. In his personality the finite centre of life
sinks into his own infinite depths only to spring up again, with
fresh vigour, to destroy the old, and to disclose the new directions
of life. This contact with the root of his own being is by no means
peculiar to man. Indeed the way in which the word WaÁâ
(inspiration) is used in the Qur«n shows that the Qur«n
regards it as a universal property of life; though its nature and
character are different at different stages of the evolution of
life. The plant growing freely in space, the animal developing a
new organ to suit a new environment, and a human being receiving
light from the inner depths of life, are all cases of inspiration
varying in character according to the needs of the recipient, or
the needs of the species to which the recipient belongs. Now during
the minority of mankind psychic energy develops what I call prophetic
consciousness - a mode of economizing individual thought and choice
by providing ready-made judgements, choices, and ways of action.
With the birth of reason and critical faculty, however, life, in
its own interest, inhibits the formation and growth of non-rational
modes of consciousness through which psychic energy flowed at an
earlier stage of human evolution. Man is primarily governed by passion
and instinct. Inductive reason, which alone makes man master of
his environment, is an achievement; and when once born it must be
reinforced by inhibiting the growth of other modes of knowledge.
There is no doubt that the ancient world produced some great systems
of philosophy at a time when man was comparatively primitive and
governed more or less by suggestion. But we must not forget that
this system-building in the ancient world was the work of abstract
thought which cannot go beyond the systematization of vague religious
beliefs and traditions, and gives us no hold on the concrete situations
of life.
Looking at the matter from this point of view, then,
the Prophet of Islam seems to stand between the ancient and the
modern world. In so far as the source of his revelation is concerned
he belongs to the ancient world; in so far as the spirit of his
revelation is concerned he belongs to the modern world. In him life
discovers other sources of knowledge suitable to its new direction.
The birth of Islam, as I hope to be able presently to prove to your
satisfaction, is the birth of inductive intellect. In Islam prophecy
reaches its perfection in discovering the need of its own abolition.
This involves the keen perception that life cannot for ever be kept
in leading strings; that, in order to achieve full self-consciousness,
man must finally be thrown back on his own resources. The abolition
of priesthood and hereditary kingship in Islam, the constant appeal
to reason and experience in the Qur«n, and the emphasis
that it lays on Nature and History as sources of human knowledge,
are all different aspects of the same idea of finality. The idea,
however, does not mean that mystic experience, which qualitatively
does not differ from the experience of the prophet, has now ceased
to exist as a vital fact. Indeed the Qur«n regards both
Anfus (self) and ÿf«q (world) as sources of knowledge.
God reveals His signs in inner as well as outer experience, and
it is the duty of man to judge the knowledge-yielding capacity of
all aspects of experience. The idea of finality, therefore, should
not be taken to suggest that the ultimate fate of life is complete
displacement of emotion by reason. Such a thing is neither possible
nor desirable. The intellectual value of the idea is that it tends
to create an independent critical attitude towards mystic experience
by generating the belief that all personal authority, claiming a
supernatural origin, has come to an end in the history of man. This
kind of belief is a psychological force which inhibits the growth
of such authority. The function of the idea is to open up fresh
vistas of knowledge in the domain of mans inner experience.
Just as the first half of the formula of Islam has created and fostered
the spirit of a critical observation of mans outer experience
by divesting the forces of nature of that Divine character with
which earlier cultures had clothed them. Mystic experience, then,
however unusual and abnormal, must now be regarded by a Muslim as
a perfectly natural experience, open to critical scrutiny like other
aspects of human experience. This is clear from the Prophets
own attitude towards Ibn Âayy«ds psychic experiences.
The function of Sufism in Islam has been to systematize mystic experience;
though it must be admitted that Ibn Khaldën was the only Muslim
who approached it in a thoroughly scientific spirit.
But inner experience is only one source of human
knowledge. According to the Qur«n, there are two other
sources of knowledge - Nature and History; and it is in tapping
these sources of knowledge that the spirit of Islam is seen at its
best. The Qur«n sees signs of the Ultimate Reality in
the sun, the moon, the lengthening
out of shadows, the alternation of day and night,
the variety of human colours and tongues,10 the
alternation of the days of success and reverse among peoples
- in fact in the whole of Nature as revealed to the sense-perception
of man. And the Muslims duty is to reflect on these signs
and not to pass by them as if he is dead and blind,
for he who does not see these signs in this life will remain
blind to the realities of the life to come. This appeal to
the concrete combined with the slow realization that, according
to the teachings of the Qur«n, the universe is dynamic
in its origin, finite and capable of increase, eventually brought
Muslim thinkers into conflict with Greek thought which, in the beginning
of their intellectual career, they had studied with so much enthusiasm.
Not realizing that the spirit of the Qur«n was essentially
anti-classical, and putting full confidence in Greek thinkers, their
first impulse was to understand the Qur«n in the light
of Greek philosophy. In view of the concrete spirit of the Qur«n,
and the speculative nature of Greek philosophy which enjoyed theory
and was neglectful of fact, this attempt was foredoomed to failure.
And it is what follows their failure that brings out the real spirit
of the culture of Islam, and lays the foundation of modern culture
in some of its most important aspects.
This intellectual revolt against Greek philosophy
manifests itself in all departments of thought. I am afraid I am
not competent enough to deal with it as it discloses itself in Mathematics,
Astronomy, and Medicine. It is clearly visible in the metaphysical
thought of the Asharite, but appears as a most well-defined
phenomenon in the Muslim criticism of Greek Logic. This was only
natural; for dissatisfaction with purely speculative philosophy
means the search for a surer method of knowledge. It was, I think,
Naïï«m who first formulated the principle of doubt
as the beginning of all knowledge. Ghazz«lâ further
amplified it in his Revivification of the Sciences of Religion,
and prepared the way for Descartes Method. But
Ghazz«lâ remained on the whole a follower of Aristotle
in Logic. In his Qist«s he puts some of the Quranic arguments
in the form of Aristotelian figures, but forgets the Quranic Sërah
known as Shuar« where the proposition that retribution
follows the gainsaying of prophets is established by the method
of simple enumeration of historical instances. It was Ishr«qâand
Ibn Taimâyyah who undertook a systematic refutation of Greek
Logic. Abë Bakr R«zâ was perhaps the first to criticize
Aristotles first figure, and in our own times his objection,
conceived in a thoroughly inductive spirit, has been reformulated
by John Stuart Mill. Ibn Àazm, in his Scope of Logic,
emphasizes sense-perception as a source of knowledge; and Ibn Taimâyyah
in his Refutation of Logic, shows that induction is
the only form of reliable argument. Thus arose the method of observation
and experiment. It was not a merely theoretical affair. Al-Bârënâs
discovery of what we call reaction-time and al-Kindâs
discovery that sensation is proportionate to the stimulus, are instances
of its application in psychology. It is a mistake to suppose that
the experimental method is a European discovery. Dü hring tells
us that Roger Bacons conceptions of science are more just
and clear than those of his celebrated namesake. And where did Roger
Bacon receive his scientific training? - In the Muslim universities
of Spain. Indeed Part V of his Opus Majus which is devoted to Perspective
is practically a copy of Ibn Haithams Optics. Nor is the book,
as a whole, lacking in evidences of Ibn Hazms influence on
its author. Europe has been rather slow to recognize the Islamic
origin of her scientific method. But full recognition of the fact
has at last come. Let me quote one or two passages from Briffaults
Making of Humanity,
. . . it was under their successors at that
Oxford school that Roger Bacon learned Arabic and Arabic science.
Neither Roger Bacon nor his later namesake has any title to be credited
with having introduced the experimental method. Roger Bacon was
no more than one of the apostles of Muslim science and method to
Christian Europe; and he never wearied of declaring that a knowledge
of Arabic and Arabian science was for his contemporaries the only
way to true knowledge. Discussions as to who was the originator
of the experimental method . . . are part of the colossal misrepresentation
of the origins of European civilization. The experimental method
of the Arabs was by Bacons time widespread and eagerly cultivated
throughout Europe.
Science is the most momentous contribution
of Arab civilization to the modern world, but its fruits were slow
in ripening. Not until long after Moorish culture had sunk back
into darkness did the giant to which it had given birth rise in
his might. It was not science which brought Europe back to life.
Other and manifold influences from the civilization of Islam communicated
its first glow to European life.
For although there is not a single aspect of
European growth in which the decisive influence of Islamic culture
is not traceable, nowhere is it so clear and momentous as in the
genesis of that power which constitutes the paramount distinctive
force of the modern world, and the supreme source of its victory
- natural science and the scientific spirit.
The debt of our science to that of the Arabs
does not consist in startling discoveries or revolutionary theories;
science owes a great deal more to Arab culture, it owes its existence.
The ancient world was, as we saw, pre-scientific. The astronomy
and mathematics of the Greek were a foreign importation never thoroughly
acclimatized in Greek culture. The Greeks systematized, generalized,
and theorized, but the patient ways of investigation, the accumulation
of positive knowledge, the minute methods of science, detailed and
prolonged observation, experimental inquiry, were altogether alien
to the Greek temperament. Only in Hellenistic Alexandria was any
approach to scientific work conducted in the ancient classical world.
What we call science arose in Europe as a result of a new spirit
of inquiry, of new methods of investigation, of the method of experiment,
observation, measurement, of the development of mathematics in a
form unknown to the Greeks. That spirit and those methods were introduced
into the European world by the Arabs.
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