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    Mulla Sadra, a 17th

    century Muslim sage, resemblance of his

    system to Whiteheads process philosophy

    By: Louwrens Willem Hessel, Leiden, Netherlands

    Introduction

    Of all the worlds religious systems Islam seems to be the furthest removed from

    Process Philosophy and theology. In this respect it is at the opposite end of

    Buddhism, of which its affinity to process thought has been noticed for a long

    time. Islam is usually characterised as static, rigid, inflexible. Of course it has

    not always been like that, but with the death of the great Al Ghazali (A.D. 1111)

    developments appear to have come to a dead end, at least in the major, Sunni

    branch of Islam. Even today the certainty of an unchanging revelation is the top

    value in Muslim universities.

    But development did not really stop; it shifted to the Shii branch of Islam and

    for a long time remained beyond the horizon of western philosophers. So at the

    same time that Descartes concluded that reality falls apart in two kinds of

    substances, each with its own adventures, but in themselves unchanging, and

    had to invoke God to keep his system from incoherence, there was this Muslim

    sage Mulla Sadra of Shiraz (died 1641) criticising the very concept of substance

    and replacing it by the idea that all reality is forever in a process of change. Not

    just moving, as atoms move in space, but changing internally. Changing into

    what he called ever higher levels of existence.

    Muslim philosophy is always under the suspicion that it is in fact theology,

    always under the spell of holy revelations in a holy book, invulnerable and

    immune against criticism. But such is not the case with Mulla Sadras

    philosophy. The basis of his thinking is human experience and although he uses

    verses from Koran and Hadith as illustrations and decorations (and sometimes as

    a display of orthodoxy, to save himself from persecution) he never appeals to

    them as proofs of the truth of what he was saying. The origin of his own highly

    original vision was neither Koran nor Hadith, but a series of mystic insights, orrather intellectual intuitions, experienced during the years of his forced

    seclusion, to which he was condemned by the religious establishment of his

    days.

    And far from appealing to these as a kind of privileged personal knowledge, he

    remained in discussion with the entire Islamic philosophical world and criticised

    it on rational, not religious, or mystic, grounds.

    Whitehead said that mysticism is a direct insight into depths as yet unspoken

    and that the purpose of philosophy is not to explain away but to rationalise

    mysticism and this is exactly what we see Mulla Sadra doing.

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    Substantive motion (haraka jauhariya)

    The key term of Sadras system is the idea of substantive motion or better

    transsubstantiation; it is the doctrine that the entire field of existence i.e. all

    things (he would call them grades of being) ceaselessly evolve into ever higher

    forms and that this happens by including and thereby transcending all lower, thatis previous, ones. This is evolution two centuries before Darwin, without a visit

    to the Galapagos islands, and without the unaccountable haphazardness which is

    at the base of Western evolutionary doctrine.

    Even more striking is the similarity of his entire system to Whiteheads process

    philosophy. All existence is inexorably temporal as it moves from more general,

    indeterminate levels to more concrete, determinate and integrated, unitary forms,

    which in their turn further evolve into ever higher stages. Even God is not

    outside this universal movement. God exists, an to exist is a verb. It sounds like

    Whiteheads bold statement that even God must be in the grip of creativity.

    Whitehead describes his Actual Occasions as growing into existence by

    integrating prehensions of their actual worlds into ever new unities which in turn

    are prehended and taken up in subsequent events. The many become one and

    are increased by one, and the process of becoming one is from vague and less

    determinate to ever greater determinateness and concreteness.

    It is not the accidents but the substances themselves that change, or rather:

    perish and are reborn. Becoming rather than being is the pre-eminent character

    of existence. The process is all there is: a unitary actuality is everything

    (Mulla Sadras words). Apart from Actual Occasions there is nothing, nothing

    (Whiteheads words).

    Existence vs essence

    It is not only in their ontology but also in their convictions about the task of

    philosophy itself that the similarity is striking. It seems that Mulla Sadra has

    experienced a kind of conversion from the then current idea that philosophy has

    to do with finding the essences of things, to the direct experience of what he

    calls the overwhelming presence of existence. He then tried to express it for

    others, knowing full well that it can never be captured or explained by any

    number or combination of essences. Whiteheads words are: The explanatorypurpose of philosophy is often misunderstood. It is a complete mistake to ask

    how concrete particular fact can be built up out of universals. The answer is: in

    no way. Philosophy must explain abstraction, not concreteness. He speaks of

    an instinctive grasp of ultimate truth: The sole appeal is to intuition. (It

    reminds and warns us of the Western trend to reduce God to a set of concepts

    and to reduce physics to physical laws plus initial conditions).

    What Mulla Sadra does is to make a new start: Not Platos unchanging ideas,

    neither Aristotles unchanging substances, nor Plotinus idea of timeless

    emanation, but real process is fundamental for all reality. Similar ideas in theWest had to wait till the times of C.S.Peirce, William James, Henri Bergson.

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    If becomings are all, what is it that keeps the world together? There must be

    some activity that binds the units of becoming into an overall process. Mulla

    Sadra uses the word ilm, usually translated as knowledge, but in his more

    careful statements he says it is marifa, better translated as direct or intuitiveknowledge. It is not an external relation between knower and known. but a

    form of existence in which the intellect and the intelligible become

    identical: attainment and possession are of the essence of knowledge and

    the knowable is the complete nature of the knower. Existing is knowing and

    knowing is interpenetration. The words are neoplatonic, but it is a neoplatonism

    that takes time seriously. The corresponding words in Whitehead are: to prehend

    and prehension, words to indicate the internal relationship between the growing

    actual entity and the facts of its actual world.

    One and yet many (tashkik)

    Mulla Sadra harmonises his doctrine of universal process with the doctrine of

    the unity of God (tauheed, main pillar of Muslim faith) by his concept of

    tashkik, which he describes as unity which by virtue of being one is many.

    He explains that this concept of unity is systematically ambiguous and that it

    applies to God and to everything which is truly existent but to nothing else.

    Reading his pronouncements one sees the image of a fountain which spurts forth

    an ever increasing multitude of jets in endless streams, for ever renewing itself,

    and yet remaining the same fountain. It seems as if many exegetes, Muslim as

    well as Western dont really believe that Mulla Sadra means what he says: thatthere is a true inner becoming and an ongoing and universal development. They

    translate tashkik by gradation, meaning intensification and diminution in

    existence, which masks its temporal aspect. This comes from Suhrawardi, an

    earlier mystic and philosopher for whom the unity of God had a static character,

    in accordance with traditional Muslim (and Christian) philosophy. Mulla Sadras

    vision is of a dynamic unity, of which the mathematical idea of unity is only an

    abstraction. It is a dynamised neoplatonism in which temporal coherence has

    taken the place of static unity.

    Universal knowledge of God

    For Mulla Sadra and for Whitehead novelty is a fundamental feature of the

    world and both recognise the Eternally One as its source. There is a universal

    intuitive knowledge of God in all of nature, from man down to even the

    seemingly lifeless events in inorganic nature. These are Mulla Sadras words.

    He speaks of low degrees of consciousness in all of subhuman nature.

    Whitehead has a separate word for this low degree of consciousness. It is

    mentality or mental feelings, which only in advanced creatures like man

    reach the level of consciousness. And even in man it is only in rare cases thatconsciousness of the Eternal One begins to dawn. It is comparable to ordinary

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    human sensation: only in rare cases are we conscious of our eyes, although

    without the eyes we would see nothing.

    Sadras thinking had its origin in a trans-conceptual vision of divine existence

    having this character of being one, such that by virtue of being one it is many.

    Now we seem far removed from Whitehead. Being one by giving birth to themany is like the mirror image of Whiteheads the many become one and are

    increased by one It is more like: The One gives rise to the many, and yet

    remains the One. The difference will be shown to be a contrast, rather than a

    contradiction.

    Eternal objects and God

    With Mulla Sadra there is no parallel of Whiteheads envisagement of Eternal

    Objects by God. Mulla Sadras ultimate is God Himself, rather than universal

    creativity, and it is not Eternal Objects that He envisages but it is Himself

    Whom He contemplates. This contemplation is not a state, but an act, and so the

    world is understood as a shining forth of the Divine Unity. Self-unfolding

    existence is another description, and when we look at it from our human

    situation it is called Breath of the Merciful. Mulla Sadra is certainly more

    poetical than Whitehead usually is.

    Yet, with this qualification in mind, there is a further parallel with Whiteheads

    concept of concrescence.

    The actual world from which Actual Occasions arise Mulla Sadra calls

    preparatory conditions, environment or context

    Whiteheads Eternal Objects are Sadras platonic forms, which in accordancewith tradition he calls intelligences, and which become attributes of God.

    God as the only giver of existence in Sadra is comparable to the Primordial

    Nature of God who is the source of novelty and the enticer to definiteness in

    Whiteheads system.

    Thus Mulla Sadras doctrine of God issues into a concept of forms whereas for

    Whitehead the Eternal Objects necessitate a doctrine of God.

    Ultimates

    It is exactly at these points that Whitehead has been criticised for beingincoherent. There is the category of the Ultimate, in which One, Many and

    Creativity form a coherent, dynamic trinity. But there are also Eternal Objects,

    which, although not actual, yet form a separate realm i.e. an infinite realm of

    possibilities, or pure potentiality. But the coherence of this entire realm of

    Eternal Objects with the three notions of the Ultimate is far from clear, and

    many interpreters of Whitehead regard the Eternal Objects as a kind of undue

    Platonism which they would like to eliminate.

    Once Eternal Objects have been introduced, Whitehead needs the notion of God

    as a principle of concretion to envisage this infinite realm of eternal possibilitiesand to arrange them into grades of relevance on behalf of temporal actual

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    occasions. There is a strong current in process thinking which regrets that

    process philosophy has thus come to be dominated by theologians, some of

    whom even say that there must be two ultimates: one philosophical, one

    religious. They point to a serious lack of evidence for such or any, conception of

    God, and they label their project as decentring Whitehead.

    For Mulla Sadra problems about Eternal Objects and the lack of evidence for

    the existence of God do not arise: there is only one Ultimate, and this is The

    One, from whom everything sprouts and to whom everything returns. It seems

    that Sadra never has doubted this doctrine, in the same way as Whitehead never

    has doubted the existence of Eternal Objects. The question is: can Mulla Sadra

    make his doctrine acceptable by generalising from human experience in the way

    Whitehead said he did for his metaphysics.

    Whiteheads usual approach is anthropological but in Religion in the Making

    we find this other route: metaphysics starting from religion, and there the

    outcome is quite remarkably close to Mulla Sadra. Rather than classifying the

    concept of God under the derivative notions as in Process and Reality we

    now find God as one of the three formative elements of the actual world, on

    the same level as Creativity and Eternal Objects. But his concept of God seems

    unstable. After finding that religious experience in general does not include

    direct intuition of a definite person or individual and saying that there is only a

    character of permanent and essential rightness in things, a completed ideal

    harmony which is God, at other places we find that God has a purpose (the

    attainment of value in the temporal world) and that it is a creative purpose. Thebook ends with a confession of faith that declares that three things survive the

    birth and decay of all imaginable types of order in the world: Eternal Objects,

    Creativity and God, upon whose wisdom all forms of order depend.

    The reason for the difference in outcome between these two approaches to

    metaphysics is not far to seek: religion springs from supernormal experiences

    of mankind in its moments of finest insight but a metaphysics based on such a

    direct intuition by special occasions must be shown to have universal validity if

    it should be metaphysics at all. Now we are again in the vicinity of Mulla Sadrawho has the term prophesy for such intuitions and said that they cannot be

    doubted by the one who has experienced them.

    Mulla Sadras way of universalising them parallels Whiteheads criticism of

    Hume. He points out that there is a knowledge (intellectual intuition, marifa,

    see above) which is more basic and more reliable than our ordinary way of

    knowing by the senses (ilm). His entire life after his return to the community of

    man was dedicated to attempts to make these intuitions accessible to others. It is

    more like pointing at than like conceptualising. The whole enterprise stands in

    the context of the essence existence dichotomy which he had inherited fromhis predecessors. Reasoning depends on the use of essences or concepts, and

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    using essences freezes existence, which itself always flows. Essences are

    attempts to halt time.

    Along Whiteheads way we may point in the direction of further broadening the

    scope of prehension. We prehend more than what we are normally conscious of.

    We not only prehend states of affairs as they are for us here and now, but there

    are also direct prehensions of possibilities, not as inferences but as direct

    experience. It is the change from Humes sensationalism to a more adequate

    concept of experience. Maybe it can be further widened to a direct experience,

    of an overarching dynamic unity of all reality. Dynamic, because its unity

    expresses itself in our moral and aesthetic judgments. It would be a kind of

    cognizance by relatedness. Events whose characters are not discerned are yet

    known to exist by being signified by other events. Complementary cognizance

    by adjective would be restricted to special occasions and perhaps to special

    persons i.e. to what theologians would call personal revelations. By this move, if

    validated, Whiteheads system would remain centred.

    The alternative would imply that there is a spontaneous generation and a

    spontaneous disappearance of value. Not that value disappears with the

    perishing of each occasion, but when the network of occasions in the present

    epoch of the universe peters out all value will be gone.

    Whitehead said that in the real world it is more important that a proposition be

    interesting than that it be true, in other words: how it functions is more

    important than its truth value. It leads to the question how philosophicalpronouncements function in real life or, in this case, to a comparison of the

    moral implications of Mulla Sadras theologically oriented process philosophy

    with Whiteheads humanistic process philosophy, in its centred as well as in its

    decentred version. The answer depends on what we conceive as the character of

    the centre. That the centre is an immutable, omnipotent and emotionless Being

    has for a long time been standard orthodoxy in Christianity and in Islam. It

    would come as a relief that there is no evidence for such a centre. Whiteheads

    concept of God very explicitly does not have this character; His power is

    described as a tenderness which looses nothing that can be saved. For him thecentre is not just a unity (whatever that may mean), but it is a personal unity

    with ths character, without which all value becomes trivial.

    In a less explicit way but very clearly there is a similar trait in Sadras thinking

    as when he points to the opening surah of the Koran speaking of The

    Compassionate, The Benificent, and when he openly goes against Muslim

    orthodoxy by pointing out the essential connection between the rise of Islamic

    tyrants and the then dominant Muslim conception of God as an arbitrary

    monarch, unbounded by reason.

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