HUMAN NATURE IN THE ISLAMIC TRADITION AYATULLAH MURTAZA MUTAHHARI PHILOSOPHY 224.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 8 Understanding Methodologies: Quantitative, Qualitative and ‘Mixed’ Approaches Zina O’Leary.
Advertisements

Educational Psychology
Human Intimacy, 10/e Frank D. Cox.
Being Good News For Young People. Wide range of schools in a parish, VA, VC, community, academy, free school, federations, collaborations.....infant,
DR. MOHD. RUMZI TAUSIF ASST. PROF. (MKT) SBS Unit 1 Nature and Scope of Marketing Research.
 Humans are metaphysically free  Our choices define us and as a result our intuitions about the human condition are satisfied.  Dualism  Kant  Existentialism.
SARTRE, FROM “EXISTENTIALISM IS A HUMANISM” PHILOSOPHY 224.
A Human Development View on Value Change Trends ( )
Confucianism 3 T AM Alexander Sun Kenneth Wong Johnny Ho.
Introduction to Christian Spirituality CS 501 Houston Graduate School of Theology.
OASIS Reference Model for Service Oriented Architecture 1.0
Caring in Nursing.
WHY DO WE PRAY? The Christian faith is to be believed, celebrated, and lived in an intense and personal relationship with the living and true God. Prayer.
HUMAN NATURE IN THE HEBREW BIBLE PHILOSOPHY 224. RELIGIOUS THEORIES OF HUMAN NATURE We are going to focus on the philosophical rather than religious significance.
WILSON, FROM ON HUMAN NATURE PHILOSOPHY 224. E. O. WILSON Edward O. Wilson is an Alabama-born entomologist currently teaching at Harvard. He’s known outside.
Chapter 8 The History of Life. Chapter 8A Worldviews and the History of Life.
Group Questions 1.Thinking about the origin of religion, what do you make of the Evolutionary Model of the development of religions? How does it square.
Definitions of Reality (ref . Wiki Discussions)
 Like Freud, personality develops in stages  Focuses on social experiences across the life span  Development of ego identity  Conscious sense of self.
Sartre, from “Existentialism is a Humanism”
PHIL/RS 335 The Problem of Evil Pt. 2. Hick, “Soul-Making Theodicy”  Hick begins by owning up. Unlike Cleanthes, Hick is willing to testify to the vast.
Five Worldviews Though there are 6,000+ distinct religions in the world today, they can be broken down into five major categories Adapted from “Christianity:
Performance Excellence and Organizational Change
Different Cultural View of Nature Our view of nature and the environment are culturally bound Western View of the Environment Judeo-Christian tradition.
Philosophy 224 Persons and Morality: Pt. 1. Ah Ha! Dennett starts by addressing an issue we’ve observed in the past: the tendency to identify personhood.
Aberdeen Consortium Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006.
LOGIC AND ONTOLOGY Both logic and ontology are important areas of philosophy covering large, diverse, and active research projects. These two areas overlap.
KANT ANTHROPOLOGY FROM A PRAGMATIC POINT OF VIEW PHILOSOPHY 224.
Philosophy 220 The Moral Status of the More Than Human World: The Environment.
Social Pragmatism Perspectives of John Dewey. Features of Social Pragmatism  Social conditions can be improved through mutual trust and cooperation;
Developmental Psychology Chapter 12: Cognitive Development.
Introduction to Christian Spirituality CS 501 Houston Graduate School of Theology.
Philosophy 224 Divine Persons: Broad on Personal Belief.
Philosophy 224 Responding to the Challenge. Taylor, “The Concept of a Person” Taylor begins by noting something that is going to become thematic for us.
You Are What You Do In Search of the Good, chapter 2.
EDUC 502: Introduction to Research August 29, 2005 Dr. Groth Note: This will be ed to your SU account after class tonight.
Traditional Judeo-Christian View of Human Nature
Mission and Vision Statements
What is Materialism?.
Visual Understanding. Purpose of Visual Understanding Understand what you see and communicate that to an audience. Understand the rhetorical purposes.
Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes. Answer the following questions with the response “agree” or “disagree” 1.Testing measures how smart you are. 2.Your.
Lecture №1 Role of science in modern society. Role of science in modern society.
THE NATURE OF LOVE: A SCIENTIFIC PERSPECTIVE ERICH FROMM THE ART OF LOVING.
Humanistic Psychology. Humanistic perspective Emphasizes the study of the whole person (holism) Humanistic psychologists look at human behaviour not only.
THE SEVEN DIMENSIONS OF CULTURE A DEFINITION. What are the Seven Dimensions of Culture? Trompenaars Hampden-Turner (THT) is a research- driven consulting.
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
Statistics World Population –> 7 billion Professing Christians –> 2.1 billion Religious Non-Christians –>3.7 billion.
Communicating for Results 9e 2 Key Ideas Formal and Informal communication Coordination of people and groups Organization Models Organizational Communication.
Transcendentalism Going Beyond Reason. Transcendentalism in philosophy and literature is a belief in a higher reality than that found in sense experience.
Leadership Susan C. Horky, LCSW Pediatric Pulmonary Division University of Florida.
COMPLIMENTARY TEACHING MATERIALS Farm Business Management: The Fundamentals of Good Practice Peter L. Nuthall.
IT’S TIME For theological reflection on children and Child Ministries
Caring in Nursing.
Romanticism.
Transcendentalism Going Beyond Reason.
Philosophy of Education
Divine Revelation – The Communication of God
Philosophy 1010 Class #8 Title: Introduction to Philosophy
Life After Death: The Soul (Lesson 4)
Ch. 1: God’s Good Creation: The Beginning of Salvation History
Christianity, Belief & Science
Human Nature in the Islamic Tradition Ayatullah Murtaza Mutahhari
Kant Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View
Being and matter as the philosophical categories
Wilson, from On Human Nature
Humanistic Psychology & Achievement Motivation
Ch. 1: God’s Good Creation: The Beginning of Salvation History
A Failure of Recognition Pt. 2
What Are Ethics? What are the objectives?
Why sacramental marriage?
Presentation transcript:

HUMAN NATURE IN THE ISLAMIC TRADITION AYATULLAH MURTAZA MUTAHHARI PHILOSOPHY 224

HUMANS AND ANIMALS Mutahhari begins by noting the continuity of humans with animals and characterizing the basic difference them: the presence in humans of “insights and beliefs” (70). For Mutahhari, this difference both distinguishes and elevates humans. Animals have a limited form of consciousness, but human consciousness is qualitatively distinct, both in terms of the depth of its understanding and in terms of the height of its aspirations. Animal awareness is limited to the senses and is thus external. It is essentially individual, localized and immediate. Human awareness is oriented by both the external and internal features of experience. It is capable of achieving universal insight and is free to roam across time and space. Animal desire is limited to the material. Human desire encompasses immaterial features of existence (ex. morality, devotion to ideals). It is general and inclusive, potentially universal in scope.

SCIENCE AND FAITH The cultural expression of these distinctive features of human consciousness are identified by Mutahhari as Science and Faith. Science: “the sum total of human contemplations on the universe,” characterized by, “a special system of logic” (72). Faith: the “elevated, ideal, supra-animal aptitudes” of human beings in an “ideational and credal infrastructure” (Ibid.). Corresponding to these two systematic accomplishments are two distinctively human capacities: insight and belief. When we recognize the distinctiveness of human beings in their production of these two cultural products, we can in turn define human beings by them, “…man is the animal distinguished from the other animals by the two features, ‘science’ and ‘faith’” (73).

FROM ANIMAL TO HUMAN This account of the distinctiveness of human beings highlights a proximity with the Christian account we’ve seen. For Islam as well, human beings are a spiritual double with both an animal and a properly human nature. This doubling produces two forms of human life: the material (animal) life and the cultural (human) life (73). The question becomes, “What is the nature of the relationship between the animal and human in us? Mutaharri reviews a range of social scientific answers, which all tend toward the conclusion that it is our ‘animal’ natures which are fundamental. Mutaharri’s opposes this view with a developmental one which focuses on our ‘human’ nature as a telos (end of goal(74, ¶3).

A DIFFERENCE WITH A DIFFERENCE The reinterpretation of the distinction between humans and animals allows a better understanding of the distinction between science and faith. In contrast to the tradition of the west, for which the fall of humans is commonly equated with reason (think about the account in Genesis), the Islamic understanding of the Fall does not oppose reason to faith. On Mutaharri's view, the are correlative (78, ¶3). Both are necessary, not only to us as humans, but to each other.

DIAGNOSIS AND PRESCRIPTION On Mutaharri’s account, the source of the problem for us is the temptation/tendency to live a life consumed by the animal aspect of our natures. It is a life without faith, either one in which “science” is dominant and thus without the capacities for belief that are co-constitutive of our full humanity, or one in which there is little or no human consciousness at all. We need science and faith, because faith alone can penetrate beyond the material and it is part of our nature to have faith (80, 82). That the ‘cure’ is faith is another significant overlap between the Christian and Islamic theories of human nature.