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Chapter 11
Ash’arism
Ash’arism by M. Abdul Hye, M. A, Ph.
D, Professor
of Philosophy, Government College,
Rajshahi
(Pakistan)
A
AL-ASHARI'S LIFE AND WORK
Asharism is the name of a philosophico-religious
school of thought in Islam that developed
during the fourth and fifth/tenth and
eleventh
centuries. This movement was "an
attempt
not only to purge Islam of all non-Islamic
elements which had quietly crept into
it
but also to harmonize the religious
consciousness
with the religious thought of Islam."
It laid the foundation of an orthodox
Islamic
theology or orthodox Kalam, as opposed
to
the rationalist Kalam of the Mu'tazilites;
and in opposition to the extreme orthodox
class, it made use of the dialectical
method
for the defence of the authority of
divine
revelation as applied to theological
subjects.
The position at the end of the third/ninth
century was such that the development
of
such a movement as orthodox Kalamwas
inevitable.
The rationalization of faith, which
developed,
at the beginning of the second century
of
the Hijrah as a systematic movement
of thought,
in the name of rationalism in Islam
or Mu'tazilite
movement, was, in its original stage,
simply
an attempt to put Islam and its basic
principles
on a rational foundation, by giving
a consistent
rational interpretation to the different
dogmas and doctrines of Islam. But
when the
Mu'tazilite rationalists began to study
the
Arabic translations of the works of
Greek
physicists and philosophers made available
to them by the early 'Abbasid Caliphs,
particularly
by al-Mansur and al-Mamun, they began
to
apply the Greek philosophical methods
and
ideas to the interpretation of the
basic
principles of Islam as well.
Some of the early 'Abbasid Caliphs,
particularly
al-Mamun, began to patronize the rationalism
of the Mu'tazilites in public. The
Mu'tazilite
speculation, in the hands of the later
Mu'tazilites,
those of the second and third generations,
under the influence of Greek philosophy
and
with the active support and patronage
of
the Caliphs, tended to be purely speculative
and "absolutely unfettered, and
in
some cases led to a merely negative
attitude
of thought." [1] They made reason
the
sole basis of truth and reality and
thus
identified the sphere of philosophy
with
that of religion. They tried to interpret
faith in terms of pure thought. They
ignored
the fact that the basic principles
of religion
are, by their very nature, incapable
of logical
demonstration or rational proof. The
basic
principles of Islam deal with supersensible
realities and, as such, they must first
be
accepted on the authority of revelation.
The Mu'tazilites, in their zeal to
judge
everything by reason alone, destroyed
the
personality of God and reduced Him
to a bare
indefinable universality or to an abstract
unity. This idea of an abstract, impersonal,
absolute God could not appeal to the
ordinary
Muslims. The orthodox section of the
people
reacted strongly against the Mu'tazilite
rationalism and began to consider the
Mu'tazilites
to be heretics. The extreme rationalistic
attitude of the later Mu'tazilites
was followed
by powerful reaction from the orthodox
section
of the people. This reaction was greatly
aggravated by the unfortunate attempt
of
the Caliph al-Mamun to force Mu'tazilism
(rationalist Kalam) on his subjects
by introducing
mihnah (a compulsory test of faith)
in the
Mu'tazilite doctrines, particularly
in their
doctrine of the createdness of the
Qur'an.
The whole of the third/ninth century
was
a time of reaction. The orthodox Muslims
(and among them were the Traditionists
[the
Muhaddithin]), the Zahirites (the followers
of Dawud ibn `Ali), and the Muslim
jurists
(fuqaha') adhered strictly to Tradition
and
literal interpretation of the Qur'an
and
the Sunnah, [2] and refused to admit
any
"innovation" (bid'ah) in
the Shari'ah
(the Islamic Code). Any theological
discussion
was considered an "innovation"
and was as such a cause of displeasure
to
them. [3] The reactionary influence
of Imam
Ahmad bin Hanbal and his Zahirite followers
was very strong at that period and
the orthodox
Muslims kept themselves safely aloof
from
the Mu'tazilites and the philosophers.
The
reaction against the rationalist Kalamwent
to such an extreme that even the anthropomorphic
verses of the Qur'an were interpreted
by
them in a purely literal sense. Malik
bin
Anas said: "God's settling Himself
firmly
upon His Throne is known, the how of
it is
unknown; belief in it is obligatory;
and
questioning about it is an innovation."
[4] Any speculation about sacred things
was
considered an innovation. Every dogma
was
to be befieved in without raising
the question
how or why (bila kaifa).
But such an attitude of blind faith
could
not be maintained for any length of
time.
Islam, as a universal religion and
as a living
force, had to adapt itself to new
thoughts
and to new surroundings. So, as time
went
on, there arose gradually a party,
from amongst
the orthodox section of the Muslims,
who
realized the necessity of putting
Islam
on a solid ground by advancing "reasons"
for the traditional beliefs, of defending
these beliefs against all sorts of
attacks
internal and external, and thus purging
their
faith of all the non-Islamic elements
that
had crept into it. They founded the
orthodox
theology of Islam by using Kalamor
the philosophical
method in order to meet the dialectical
reasoning
of the Mu'tazilites. These theologians
who
employed Kalamfor the defence of their
faith
were, therefore, known as the Mutakallimun
(orthodox theologians). [5] But, although
these thinkers used philosophical method
in their discussions, they obtained
the primary
materials from revelation. They developed
a rival science of reasoning to meet
the
Mu'tazilites on their own ground. In
the
beginning this new orthodox theological
movement
developed privately and secretly. It
was
at first a gradual unconscious drift.
It
could not come to the open for fear
of public
criticism. Al-Junaid, for instance,
had to
discuss the unity of God behind closed
doors.
Al-Shafi'i held that some trained people
might defend and purify the faith but
that
should not be done in public. Al-Muhasibi
and other contemporaries of Imam Ahmad
ibn
Hanbal incurred his displeasure for
defending
the faith with arguments or reason.
But gradually
the movement gathered strength and
began
to be openly preached almost at the
same
time in different places of the Muslim
world-in
Mesopotamia by abu al-Hasan `Ali bin
Isma`il
al-Ashari (d. 330 or 334/941 or 945),
in
Egypt by al-Tahawi (d. 331/942), and
in Samarqand
by abu Mansnr al-Maturidi (d. 333/
944).
But of these three, al-Ash'ari became
the
most popular hero, before whom the
Mu'tazilite
system (the rationalist Kalam) went
down,
and he came to be known as the founder
of
the orthodox philosophical theology,
and
the school founded by him was named
after
him as Ash`arism.
Al-Ash'ari was born at Basrah. Regarding
his date of birth there is difference
of
opinion. Ibn Khallikan, in his discussion
of the life of al-Ash'ari, mentions
that
he was born in
260 or 270/873 or 883 and died at Baghdad
in 330/941 or some time after that.
[6] According
to Shibli Nu'mani and ibn `Asakir (the
author
of Tabyin Kidhb al-Muftari, on the
life and
teachings of al-Ash'ari), he was born
in
270/873 and died in 330/941. [7] He
was buried
between Karkh and Bab al-Basrah (the
gate
of Basrah). He was a descendant of
abu Musa
al-Ash'ari, one, of the famous Companions
of the Prophet. Al-Ash'ari, in his
early
youth, came under the care of the great
Mu'tazilite
scholar of the Basrite school, abu
'Ali Muhammad
bin `Abd al-Wahhab al-Jubba'i, and,
as a
disciple of his, became an adherent
of the
Mu'tazilite school and continued to
support
its doctrines up to the age of forty.
After
that there happened a sudden change
in his
mind and one day he went to the Mosque
of
Basrah and declared: "He who knows
me,
knows who I am, and he who does not
know
me, let him know that I am abu al-Hasan
'Ali
al-Ash'ari, that I used to maintain
that
the Qur'an is created, that eyes of
men shall
not-see God, and that the creatures
create
their actions. Lo! I repent that I
have been
a Mu'tazilite. I renounce these opinions
and I take the engagement to refute
the Mu'tazilites
and expose their infamy and turpitude."
What brought about this sudden change
in
al-Aah'ari is not definitely known
to us.
Shibli in his `Ilm al-Kalam says that
"the
change came to him due to some directions
which he had obtained in a dream.."
[8] Ibn Khallikan mentions in this
connection
the story of a public discussion in
which
al-Ashari met his old Mu'tazilite teacher,
al-Jubba'i, on the problem of salah
un aslah,
i. e., the problem whether God's actions
are to be based on rational consideration
and whether He is bound to do what
is best
for His creatures. Al-Ash'ari came
to al-Jubba'i
and presented the case of three brothers,
one being God-fearing, another godless,
and
a third having died as a child, and
asked
him as to what would be their positions
in
the next world. Al-Jubba'i could not
give
a satisfactory and consistent reply
to that
question and, on his having failed
to justify
rationally the Mu'tazilite doctrine
of salah
wa aflah, al-Ash'ari abandoned the
Mu'tazilite
camp. [9]But whatever might have been
the
cause of this change, when he changed
he
was terribly in earnest. After the
change
he wrote a number of books and ibn
Furak
says that the number amounted to three
hundred.
Ibn `Asakir Dimashqi has given the
titles
of ninety-three of them, but only a
few have
been preserved and are enumerated by
Brockelmann.
His work al-Ibanah `an Usul al-Diyanah
was
printed at Hyderabad, Deccan (India),
in
1321/1903 and a small treatise Risalah
fi
Istihsan al-Khaud fi al-Kalam was printed
in 1323/1905 and reprinted at Hyderabad
in
1344/1925. Al-Ash'ari's other famous
works
are al-Maqalat al IsIamiyyin (published
in
Istanbul in 1348/1929), Kitab al-Sharh
wal-Tafsil,
Luma`, Mu'jaz, I`adah al-Burhan, and
Tab'in.
Of these books the Maqalat al Islamiyyin
wa Ikhtilaf al Musalliyyin is the most
authentic
book on the views of different schools
about
religious dogmas and doctrines. Al-Maqalat
was written much earlier than the other
books
on the same subject, such as Shahrastani's
Kitab al-Milal wal-Nihal, or ibn Hazm's
al-Fasl
fi al-Milal wal-Ahwa' wal Nihal. Ibn
Taimiyyah
said in his Minhaj al-Sunnah that the
most
comprehensive of the books he went
through
on the views of different people on
the basic
principles of Islam was al-Ash'ari's
al-Maqalat
al-Islamiyyin and that he (al-Ash'ari)
discussed
many of such views in details as were
not
even mentioned by others. Ibn al-Qayyim
also
spoke very highly of this work. In
his Hadi
al-Arwah and Ijtima` al-Juyush al-Islamiyyah,
he said, "Shahrastani, `Abd al-Qahir
Baghdadi, and other later writers on
the
subject simply copied from al-Ash'ari's
book
and did not discuss the views in details."
Al-Ash'ari's other famous book al-
Ibanah
`an Usul al-Diyanah seems to have been
written
by him just after his abandoning the
Mu'tazilite
views. In this book we find he is almost
a Zahirite. The reaction against the
Mu'tazilite
speculation might have been very strong
in
his mind at that period. Al-Maqalat
seems
to be a later work. The Risalah fi
Istihsan
al-Khaud deals with the objections
raised
by the extremely orthodox against the
use
of Kalam, and the replies given by
al-Ash'ari,
justifying its use in matters of faith.
Al-Ash'ari's
theology has been discussed mainly
in these
books. He had a good number of pupils
who
passed as famous theologians and who
spread
and developed his doctrines and dogmas.
Some
of those older Ash'arites were abu
Sahl Saluqi,
abu Quffal, abu Zaid Maruzi, Zahir
bin Ahmad,
Hafiz abu Bakr Jurjani, Shaikh abu
Muhammad
Tabari, and abu al-Hasan Bahili. Some
of
the pupils of these older Ash'arites
became
still more famous and the best known
among
them are Qadi abu Bakr Baqillani, abu
Bakr
bin Furak, abu al-Qasim al-Qushairi
and abu
Ishaq Isfra'ini and his pupil abu al-Ma'ali
al-Juwaini, known as Imam al-Haramain.
[10]
B
ASH'ARITE THEOLOGY
Al-Ash'ari maintaines an intermediary
position
between the two diametrically opposed
schools
of thought prevailing at the time.
He had
to fight against both the opposing
parties.
At the one extreme were the Mu'tazilites
who made reason in preference to revelation
the sole criterion of truth and reality
and,
thus, passed slowly into comparatively
innocuous
heretics. At the other extreme were
the orthodox
groups, particularly the Zahirites,
the Mujassimites
(anthropomorphists), the Muhaddithin
(Traditionists), and the Jurists, all
of
which were wholly opposed to the use
of reason
or Kalamin defending or explaining
religious
dogmas and condemned any discussion
about
them as innovation. Al-Ash'ari wrote
his
Istihsan al-Khaud mainly to meet the
objections
raised by the orthodox school against
the
use of reason in matters of faith.
In that
treatise he says: "A section of
the
people (i. e., the Zahirites and other
orthodox
people) made capital out of their own
ignorance;
discussions and rational thinking about
matters
of faith became a heavy burden for
them,
and, therefore, they became inclined
to blind
faith and blind following (taqlid).
They
condemned those who tried to rationalize
the principles of religion as `innovators.'
They considered discussion about motion,
rest, body, accident, colour, space,
atom,
the leaping of atoms, and attributes
of God,
to be an innovation and a sin. They
said
that had such discussions been the
right
thing, the Prophet and his Companions
would
have definitely done so; they further
pointed
out that the Prophet, before his death,
discussed
and fully explained all those matters
which
were necessary from the religious point
of
view, leaving none of them to be discussed
by his followers; and since he did
not discuss
the problems mentioned above, it was
evident
that to discuss them must be regarded
as
an innovation."
They further contended that these so-called
theological problems were either known
to
the Prophet and his Companions and
yet they
kept silent and did not discuss them
or they
were not known to them. If they knew
them
and yet did not discuss them, we are
also
to follow them in keeping silent, and
if
they could remain unaware of them we
can
also do so. In both cases discussion
about
them would be an "innovation."
These were, in brief, their objections
against
the use of Kalamin matters of faith.
Al-Ash'ari, then, proceeds to justify
theological
discussions about matters of faith.
He tries
to meet these objections in three ways.
First,
by turning the objections of the orthodox
against themselves by pointing out
to them
that the Prophet had not said that
those
who would discuss these problems were
to
be condemned and charged as innovators.
Hence,
their charging or condemning others
as innovators
was itself an innovation, for it amounted
to discussion about matters which the
Prophet
did not discuss, and condemn the action
of
those whom the Prophet did not condemn.
Secondly, "the Prophet was not
unaware
of all these problems of body, accident,
motion, rest, atoms, etc., though he
did
not discuss each of them separately.
The
general principles (usul) underlying
these
problems are present in general, not
in details,
in the Qur'an-and the Sunnah."
Al-Ash'ari
then proceeds to prove his contention
by
citing verses from the Qur'an and the
sayings
of the Prophet, and thereby showing
that
the principles underlying the problems
of
harkah, sukun, tauhid, etc., are, as
a matter
of fact, present in the Qur'an and
the Sunnah.
[11]
Thirdly, "the Prophet was not
unaware
of these matters and knew them in detail,
but as problems about them did not
arise
during his life-time, there was no
question
of his discussing or not discussing
them."
The Companions of the Prophet discussed
and
argued about many religious matters
which
appeared during their life-time, although
there was no direct and explicit "saying"
of the Prophet about them, and because
of
the absence of any explicit injunction
from
the Prophet they differed in their
judgments
about them. Had the question, for
instance,
of the creation of the Qur'an, or of
atoms
or substance, been raised in so many
words
in the life of the Prophet, he would
have
definitely discussed and explained
it as
he did in the case of all those problems
which were then raised. "There
is no
direct verdict (nass) from the Prophet,
for
instance, as to whether the Qur'an
is created
or uncreated. If to call the Qur'an
created
is an `innovation,' then, on the same
ground,
to call it uncreated must also be
an `innovation."'
Al-Ash'ari then concludes that Islam
is not
opposed to the use of reason; on the
other
hand, rationalization of faith is a
necessity
in Islam.
Al-Ash'ari discussed the main theological
problems in his Maqalat al-Islamiyyin
and
al-Ibanah `an Usul al-Diyanah. In these
books
al-Ashari selects a few principles
which
distinguish the Ash'arites from the
Mu'tazilite
school of thought. Later on al-Ghazali
put
them in a consolidated form in his
Ihya [12]as
the "Principles of Faith"
or Qawa'id
al-`Aqa'id, and Imam Fakhr al-Din al-Razi
explained them more elaborately. The
main
problems about which the Ash'arites
differed
from the Mu'tazilites are:
(1) The conception of God and the
nature
of His attributes.
(2) Freedom of the human will.
(3) The criterion of truth and the
standard
of good and evil.
(4) The vision (ruyah) of God.
(5) Createdness of the Qur'an.
(6) Possibility of burdening the creatures
with impossible tasks.
(7) Promise of reward and threat of
punishment.
(8) The rational or non-rational basis
of
God's actions.
(9) Whether God is bound to do what
is best
for His creatures. [13]
The problems discussed by the Ash'arites
in their system may be broadly classified
into two categories : (i) theological,
and
(ii) metaphysical.
C
FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF THE ASH'ARITE
THEOLOGY
1. Conception o f God and the Nature
of His
Attributes - According to the Ash'arites,
God is one, unique, eternal, existent
Being;
He is not a substance, not a body,
not an
accident, not limited to any direction,
and
not in any space. He possesses attributes
such as knowledge, power, life, will;
He
is hearing and seeing and has speech.
About the nature of divine attributes
two
extreme views were held before the
Ash'arites.
On the one hand, there were the extreme
Attributists
(Sifatis), the Anthropomorphists
(Mujassimin), and the Comparers (Mushabbihin),
who maintained that God possesses all
the
attributes mentioned in the Qur'an
and that
all such attributes as God's having
hands,
legs, ears, eyes, and His sitting firmly
(istiwa) on His Throne must be taken
in their
literal sense. Such a view of the attributes
of God is pure anthropomorphism, implying
God's bodily existence. On the other
hand,
there were the Mu'tazilites who held
that
God is one, eternal, unique, absolute
Being,
having no touch of dualism in Him.
His essence
is self-contained. He does not possess
any
attributes apart from His essence.
His essence
is, for instance, knowing, powerful,
seeing,
willing, etc. They denied the attributes
of God as anything other than and addition
to His essence.
The Ash'arites maintained a view which
was,
so to say, a reconciliation between
the
two extreme views. In agreement with
the
Sifatis and in opposition to the Mu'tazilites
and the "philosophers" (those
who
were under Greek influence), the Ash'arites
held that God possesses attributes
in general.
They classified the attributes of God
into
two main groups: (i) sifat-i salbiyyah,
or
negative attributes, and (ii) sifat-i
wujudiyyah
or existential or positive attributes.
According
to them, the sifat-i wujudiyyah, which
they
also called sifat-i `aqliyyah or rational
attributes, were seven: knowledge,
power,
will, life, hearing, seeing, and speech.
The extreme Sifatis asserted that even
those
attributes of God which imply His bodily
existence are also to be taken in their
true
literal sense. As against them, the
Ash'arites
maintained that God possesses the apparently
anthropomorphic attributes no doubt,
but
these should be understood not in their
literal
sense. They are to be believed in bila
kaifa,
without asking "how," and
bila
tashbih, without drawing any comparison.
[14]
The Ash'arites here introduced a principle
that the attributes of God are unique
and
fundamentally different from those
of the
created beings and as such should not
be
compared to them. This is known as
the doctrine
of mukhalafah, or absolute difference.
This
doctrine signifies that if any quality
or
term is applied to God, it must be
understood
in a unique sense and never taken in
the
sense in which it is normally used
when applied
to created beings. Because of the doctrine
of mukhulafah, the Ash'arites held
that we
are not allowed to ascribe any attribute
to God unless it is expressly so applied
in the Qur'an. God's attributes differ
from
those of the creatures, not in degree
but
in kind, i. e., in their whole nature.
The Ash'arites, as against the Mu'tazilites,
held that "God has attributes
which
inhere eternally in Him and are in
addition
to His essence." [15] These attributes
are eternal, but they are neither identical
with His essence, nor are they quite
different
from or other than His essence. God
is knowing,
for instance, means that God possesses
knowledge
as an attribute, which is inherent
in God,
and although it is not exactly the
same as
His essence, yet it is not something
quite
different from and other than His essence.
The Ash'arites, here, maintained a
very difficult
position. They were between the two
horns
of a dilemma. They could neither assert
the
eternal attributes of God to be identical
with nor wholly different from the
essence
of God.
They could not agree to the Mu'tazilite
view
and assert the identity of the attributes
with the essence of God, because that
would
be a virtual denial of the attributes.
They
could not also assert that these eternal
attributes are something absolutely
different,
or other than and separate, from God,
as
that would lead to multiplicity of
eternals,
and go against divine unity. They,
therefore,
maintained that these attributes are,
in
one sense, included in and, in another
sense,
excluded from, the essence of God.
[16] It
is common knowledge that the Asharites
contended
that essence (mahiyyah), and attributes
(sifat) are two different things and
they
cannot be otherwise in the case of
God, the
Supreme Being. The Ash'arites made
a distinction
between the meaning or connotation
(mafhum)
of a thing and its reality (haqiqah).
So
far as their meaning is concerned,
the attributes
and the essence of God are not the
same and
as such the attributes are in addition
to
the essence of God, i. e., they have
different
meanings. The meaning of dhat (essence)
is
different from the meanings of different
attributes. God's essence, for instance,
is not knowing or powerful or wise,
but so
far as their ultimate haqiqah (reality
or
application) is concerned, the attributes
are inherent in the divine essence,
and hence
are not something quite different from
or
other than the essence of God. [17]
In support of the above view of theirs,
the
Ash'arites advanced the following arguments.
The analogical argument of the Ash'arites
of the older generation: God's actions
prove
that He is knowing, powerful, and willing;
so they also prove that He possesses
knowledge,
power, will, etc., because the ground
of
inference cannot differ in different
things.
What is true in the case of a created
being
must also be true in the case of the
Divine
Being. [18] In the case of a human
being,
by "knowing" we mean one
who possesses
knowledge and even common sense and
draws
a line of demarcation between an essence
and its attributes. On the same analogy,
distinction must be drawn between the
essence
of God and His attributes. The essence
and
the attributes should not be supposed
to
be blended in the Divine Being. Hence
the
attributes of God cannot be identical
with
His essence, as the Mu'tazilites held.
But
this analogical reasoning is very weak,
for
what is true of a finite being need
not necessarily
be true of an infinite being. But,
according
to the doctrine of mukhalafah, God's
knowledge
or power or will and, as a matter of
fact,
all His rational attributes signify
quite
different meanings when applied to
created
beings.
Secondly, they argued that if all the
attributes
of God are identical with His essence,
the
divine essence must be a homogeneous
combination
of contradictory qualities. For instance,
God is merciful (rahim) and also revengeful
(qahhar); both the contradictory attributes
would constitute the essence of God,
which
is one, unique, and indivisible (ahad),
and
that is absurd.
Further, if the attributes are identical
with God's essence, and if, for instance,
His being knowing, powerful, and living
is
His essence itself, no useful purpose
will
be served by ascribing them to Him,
for that
would ultimately be the virtual application
of His essence to itself, which is
useless.
Hence the divine attributes cannot
be identical
with the divine essence.
Thirdly, if the attributes of God are
not
distinct from His essence, the meanings
of
the different attributes will be exactly
the same, for God's essence is a simple
and
indivisible unity. The meanings of
knowing,
willing, and living, for instance,
will be
exactly the same, and thus knowledge
will
mean power, or power will mean life,
and
so on. [19] This also is an absurdity.
These
different attributes imply different
meanings
and hence they cannot be identical
with God's
essence. His essence is one and He
possesses
many attributes which eternally inhere
in
Him and, though not identical with
His essence,
yet they are not absolutely different
from
His essence.
2. Free-will - On the question of free-will
or on the ability of man to choose
and produce
actions, the Ash'arites-took up again
an
intermediary position between the libertarian
and fatalistic views, held by the Mu'tazilites
and the Jabrites respectively. The
orthodox
people and the Jabrites maintained
a pure
fatalistic view. They held that human
actions
are-predetermined. and predestined
by God.
Man has no power to produce any action.
"Everything,"
they contended, "is from God."
God has absolute power over everything
including
human will and human actions. The Mu'tazilites
and the Qadarites, on the other hand,
held
that man has full power to produce
an action
and has complete freedom in his choice,
though
the power was created in him by God.
The Ash'arites struck a middle path.
They
made a distinction between creation
(khalq)
and acquisition (kasb) of an action.
God,
according to the Ash'arites, is the
creator
(khaliq) of human actions and man is
the
acquisitor (muktasib). "Actions
of human
beings are created (makhluq) by God,
the
creatures are not capable of creating
any
action." [20] "There is no
creator
except God and the actions of man are,
therefore,
His creation." [21] Power (qudrah),
according to them, is either (i) original
(qadamah) or
(ii) derived (hadithah). The original
power
alone is effective. Derived power can
create
nothing. The power possessed by man
is given
by God and as such it is derived. [22]
Al
Ash’ari said, "The true meaning
of acquisition
is the occurrence of a thing or event
due
to derived power, and it is an acquisition
for the person by whose derived power
it
takes place." [23]God is, thus,
the
creator of human actions and man is
the acquisitor.
Man cannot create anything; he cannot
initiate
work. God alone can create, because
absolute
creation is His prerogative. God creates
in man the power and the ability to
perform
an act. He also creates in him the
power
to make a free choice
(ikhtiyar) between two alternatives-between
right and wrong. This free choice of
man
is not effective in producing the action.
It is the habit or nature of God to
create
the action corresponding to the choice
and
power created by Himself in man. Thus,
the
action of man is created by God, both
as
to initiative and as to production
or completion.
Man is free only in making the choice
between
alternatives and also in intending
to do
the particular action freely chosen:
Man,
in making this choice and intending
to do
the act, acquires (iktisab) either
the merit
of appreciation and reward from God
if he
makes the right choice, or the demerit
of
condemnation and punishment if he makes
the
wrong choice. The Ash`arites, thus,
in order
to avoid the fatalistic position, introduced
the doctrine of acquisition by which,
they
thought, they could account for man's
free-will
and lay responsibility upon him. Man
has
no free-will in the Mu'tazilite sense;
he
has no real and effective power, but
has
some derived power by which he acquires
a
share in the production of the act:
In the
case of voluntary actions of human
beings,
there are, so to say, two causes. The
action
is the combined effect of the real
cause,
God, and the choice and intention of
man,
the acquisitor, the possessor of ineffective
power because of its being derived
power.
God creates in two ways: either with
a locus
(mahall) or without a locus. Human
actions
are His creation with a locus. [24]
"God
creates, in man, the power, ability,
choice,
and will to perform an act, and man,
endowed
with this derived power, chooses freely
one
of the alternatives and intends or
wills
to do the action, and, corresponding
to this
intention, God creates and completes
the
action." [25] It is this intention
on
the part of man which makes him responsible
for his deeds. Man cannot take the
initiative
in any matter, nor can he originate
any action.
But the completion of the act is partially
due to his intention: He, thus, acquires
the merit or demerit of the action
because
of his intending to do a good or bad
action.
Man's free choice is, so to say, an
occasion
for God's causing the action corresponding
to that choice. In this the Ash`arites
come
very close to the occasionalism of
Malebranche
which was expounded in Europe eight
centuries
and a half later. This correspondence
and
harmony between the choice of man and
God's
creation, according to the Ash'arites,
is
not due to a harmony established by
God previously,
but because of His habit or nature
to create
the harmony whenever human action is
done.
This, in short, is the solution of
the problem
of free-will offered by the Ash'arites.
The
Ashh'arite view on this problem is
not free
from logical and ethical difficulties.
It
was really very difficult for them
to reconcile
the absolute determination of all events
by God with man's accountability and
responsibility
for his deeds. Some, of the later Ash'arites,
particularly Imam Fakhr al-Din al-Razi,
discarded
the veil of acquisition in order to
escape
the charge of fatalism, and advocated
naked
determinism. [26]
3. The Problem of Reason and Revelation
and
the Criterion of Good and Evil - The
Ash`arites
differ from the Mu'tazilites on the
question
whether reason or revelation should
be the
basis or source of truth and reality:
Both
the schools admit the necessity of
reason
for the rational understanding of faith,
but they differ with regard to the
question
whether revelation or reason is more
fundamental
and, in case of a conflict, whether
reason
or revelation is to get preference.
The Mu'tazilites
held that reason is more fundamental
than
revelation and is to be preferred
to revelation.
Revelation merely confirms what is
accepted
by reason and, if there be a conflict
between
the two, reason is to be preferred
and revelation
must be so interpreted as to be in
conformity
with the dictates of reason.
The Ash`arites, on the other hand,
held that
revelation is more fundamental as
the source
of ultimate truth and reality, and
reason
should merely confirm what is given
by revelation.
The Ash`arites prefer revelation to
reason
in case of a conflict between the two.
As
a matter of fact, this is one of the
fundamental
principles in which the rational Kalam
of
the Mu'tazilites differs from the orthodox
Kalam of the Ash'arites. If pure reason
is
made the sole basis or source of truth
and
reality, including the truth and reality
of the most fundamental principles
or concepts
on which Islam is based, it would be
a pure
speculative philosophy or at best a
rational
theology in general and not a doctrinal
theology
of a particular historic religion,
i. e.,
that of Islam in particular. Islam
is based
on certain fundamental principles or
concepts
which, being suprasensible in nature,
are
incapable of rational proof. These
principles,
first, must be believed in on the basis
of
revelation. Revelation, thus, is the
real
basis of the truth and reality of these
basic
doctrines of Islam. This faith, based
on
revelation, must be rationalized. Islam
as
a religion, no doubt, admits the necessity
of rationalizing its faith. But to
admit
the necessity of rationalizing faith
is not
to admit pure reason or analytic thought
to be the sole source or basis of Islam
as
a religion. Reason, no doubt, has the
right
to judge Islam and its basic principles,
but what is to be judged is of such
a nature
that it cannot submit to the judgment
of
reason except on its own terms. Reason
must,
therefore, be subordinated to revelation.
Its function is to rationalize faith
in the
basic principles of Islam and not to
question
the validity or truth of the principles
established
on the basis of revelation as embodied
in
the Qur'an and the Sunnah. The problem
of
the criterion of good and evil follows
as
a corollary to the problem of reason
and
revelation. The problem of good and
evil
is one of the most controversial problems
of Islamic theology. The Mu'tazilites
held
that reason, and not revelation, is
the criterion
or standard of moral judgment, i. e.,
of
the goodness and badness of an action.
The
truth and moral value of things and
human
actions must be determined by reason.
They
contended that moral qualities of good
and
evil are objective; they are inherent
in
the very nature of things or actions
and
as such can be known by reason and
decided
to be good or bad.
The Ash'arites, as against the Mu'tazilites,
held that revelation and not reason
is the
real authority or criterion to determine
what is good and what is bad. Goodness
and
badness of actions (husn wa qubh) are
not
qualities inhering in them; these are
mere
accidents (a'rad). Actions-in-themselves
are neither good nor bad. Divine Law
makes
them good or bad.
In order to make the ground of controversy
between the Mu'tazilites and the Ash'arites
clearer, we may explain here the three
different
senses in which these two terms, good
and
evil, are used. [27]
(i) Good and evil are sometimes used
in the
sense of perfection and defect respectively.
When we say that a certain thing or
action
is good or bad (for instance, knowledge
is
good and ignorance is bad), we mean
that
it is a quality which makes its possessor
perfect or implies a defect in him.
(ii) These terms are also used in a
utilitarian
sense meaning gain and loss in worldly
affairs.
Whatever is useful or has utility in
our
experience is good, and the opposite
of it
is bad. So whatever is neither useful
nor
harmful is neither good nor bad.
Both the Ash'arites and the Mu'tazilites
agree that in the two senses, mentioned
above, reason is the criterion or standard
of good and evil. There is no difference
of opinion in the above two senses.
But good
and bad in the second sense may vary
from
time to time, from individual to individual,
and from place to place. In this sense
there
will be nothing permanently or universally
good or bad; what is good to one may
be bad
to others and vice versa. This implies
that
good and evil are subjective and not
objective
and real. Hence actions are neither
good
nor bad, but experience or workability
would
make them so and, therefore, they can
be
known by reason without the help of
revelation.
(iii) Good and evil are also used in
a third
sense of commendable and praiseworthy
or
condemnable in this world and rewardable
or punishable, as the case may be,
in the
other world.
The Ash'arites maintained that good
and evil
in their third sense must be known
through
revelation, not by reason as the Mu'tazilites
had held. According to the Ash'arites,
revelation
alone decides whether an action is
good or
bad. What is commanded by Shar' is
good,
and what is prohibited is bad. Shar`
can
convert previously declared good into
bad
and vice versa. As actions by themselves
are neither good nor bad, there is
nothing
in them which would make them rewardable
(good) or punishable (bad). They are
made
rewardable or punishable by revelation
or
Shar'. As there is no quality of good
or
evil seated in the verypature of an
act,
there can be no question of knowing
it by
reason.
4. The Problem of the Eternity of the
Qur'an
- There was a great controversy over
the
question whether the Qur'an is created
or
unereated and eternal. This question
is bound
up with another question whether speech
is
one of God's attributes or not. The
orthodox
section of the Muslims, including the
Ash'arites,
held that God has it as one of His
seven
rational attributes, and as His attributes
are eternal, divine speech, i. e.,
the Qur'an,
is also eternal.
As regards the eternity of the Qur'an,
the
Ash'arites adopted again an intermediary
position between the extreme views
of the
Zahirites and the Mu'tazilites. The
Hanbalites
and other Zahirites (extreme orthodox
schools)
held that the speech of God, i. e.,
the Qur'an,
is composed of letters, words, and
sounds
which inhere in the essence of God
and is,
therefore, eternal. Some of the Hanbalites
went to the extreme and asserted that
even
the cover and the binding of the Qur'an
are
eternal. [28] The Mu'tazilites and
a section
of the Rafidites went to the other
extreme
and maintained that the Qur'an was
created.
They denied all attributes of God,
including
the attribute of speech, on the ground
that
if it be an eternal attribute of God,
there
would be multiplicity of eternals,
to believe
which is polytheism and contrary to
the basic
principles of Islam. They further argued
that "the Qur'an is composed of
parts,
successively arranged parts, and whatever
is composed of such parts must be temporal."
[29] Hence the Qur'an must be created.
The
Ash'arites maintained that the Qur'an
is
composed of words and sounds, but these
do
not inhere in the essence of God. They
made
a distinction between the outward and
concrete
expression of the Qur'an in language,
and
the real, self-subsistent meaning
of it,
and held that the Qur'an, as expressed
in
words and sounds, is, no doubt, temporal
(hadath); but against the Mu'tazilites
they
asserted that the Qur'an in its meanings
is uncreated and eternal. The "self-subsisting
meaning" eternally inheres in
the essence
of God. These meanings are expressed;
their
expression in language is temporal
and created.
It is so because the same meaning,
while
remaining the same, might be expressed
differently
at different times, in different places
by
different persons or nations. They
further
maintained that this meaning is an
attribute
other than knowledge and will and,
as such,
inheres eternally in the essence of
God and
is, therefore, eternal. [30]
In support of this contention the Ash`arites
advanced the following arguments:
[31]
(i) The Qur'an is "knowledge from
God";
it is, therefore, inseparable from
God's
attribute of knowledge which is eternal
and
uncreated. Hence it is also eternal
and uncreated.
(ii) God created everything by His
word kun
(be) and this word, which is in the
Qur'an,
could not have been a created one,
otherwise
a created word would be a creator,
which
is absurd. Hence God's word is uncreated,
i. e.. eternal.
(iii) The Qur'an makes a distinction
between
creation (khalq) and command (amr)
when It
says, "Are not the creation and
command
His alone?" Hence God's Command,
His
word or Kalam, which is definitely
something
other than created things (makhluq),
must
be unereated and eternal.
(iv) Further, God says to Moses, "I
have chosen thee over mankind with
My apostolate
and My word." This verse signifies
that
God has speech. Again, Moses is addressed
by God with the words: "Lo, I
am thy
Lord." Now, if the word which
addresses
Moses is a created thing, it would
mean that
a created thing asserts that it is
Moses
Lord (God), which is absurd. God's
word,
therefore, must be eternal. The Ash'arites
further pointed out that all the different
arguments advanced by the Mu'tazilites
(and
in Sharh-i Mawaqif as many as eight
such
arguments have been mentioned), in
support
of their view that the Qur'an is created,
would apply only to the expressed Qur'an
and not to the real Qur'an, the latter
being
the "meanings of the Qur'an."
[32]
5. The Problem of the Beatific Vision
- On
the question of the beatific vision,
the
Ash`arites, true to their attitude
of reconciliation,
again tried to adopt a course lying
midway
between the extreme anthropomorphic
view
of the Zahirites and other orthodox
Muslims
on the one hand and the view of the
Mu'tazilites
and the "philosophers" on
the other.
The extreme orthodox Muslims and the
Zahirites,
in particular, held that it is possible
to
see God and the righteous persons would
actually
have His vision as the chief reward
for their
good actions. They further held that
God
is settled firmly on His Throne, He
exists
in different directions, and is capable
of
being pointed out. The Mu'tazilites
and the
"philosophers" denied the
possibility
of seeing God with eyes, as that would
imply
His bodily existence, which is absurd.
The
Ash'arites, as against the Mu'tazilites
and
the "philosophers," and in
agreement
with the orthodox class, held that
it is
possible to see God; [33] but they
could
not agree to their view that God is
extended
and can be shown by pointing out. They
accepted
the philosophical principle that whatever
is extended or spatial must be contingent
and temporal, and God is not an extended
and temporal being. This admission
landed
them into a difficulty, for if God
is not
extended and only extended things can
be
seen, God cannot be seen; [34] but
this conclusion
conflicts with their position that
beatific
vision is possible. So, in order to
get out
of this difficulty, they asserted the
possibility
of seeing an object even if it is not
present
before the perceiver. [35] This was
a very
peculiar and untenable position, for
it repudiated
all the principles of optics.
It is possible to see God even though
our
sense of vision does not receive the
corresponding
"impression" of the object
on it.
Besides, it is possible for God to
create
in human beings the capacity to see
Him without
the necessary conditions of vision,
such
as the presence, in concrete form,
of the
object itself in space and time, normal
condition
of the appropriate sense-organ, absence
of
hindrance or obstruction to perception,
and
so on; and though God is unextended
and
does not exist in space and time, "yet
He may make Himself visible to His
creature
like the fall moon." They further
contended
that the vision of God is possible
without
any impression on our sense-organ for
another
reason. There is practically no difference
between a "sensation" and
an "after
image" except that the sensation
possesses
an additional quality over and above
the
common qualities present in both, and
this
additional quality, i. e, impression
on the
sense-organ produced by the external
object,
does not make any difference in the
perception
of an object. Hence, though this impression
is missing in the case of seeing God,
it
may still be called "seeing."
The
weakness of this argument is apparent
to
any student of psychology, because
an after-image
is possible only when it is preceded
by an
actual impression of the object on
the sense-organ.
The actual impression of the object
is, therefore,
a precondition of an after-image in
the case
of beatific vision too.
The Ash'arites were faced with another
difficulty.
The Mu'tazilites had pointed out that
if
seeing of God is possible, it must
be possible
under all circumstances and at all
times,
for this possibility is due either
to His
essence or to an inseparable attribute
in
Him. In either case, it should be possible
at all times. And if it is possible
at all
times, it must be possible now; and
if it
is possible to see Him now, we must
see Him
now, for when all the conditions of
"vision"
are present, the actual seeing must
take
place. The Ash`arites met this objection
in a very naive manner by saying, "We
do not admit the necessity of actual
seeing
taking place, even when all its eight
conditions
are present."
The Ash'arites supported their views
on the
basis of revelation. According to the
Qur'an,
Moses asked of God, "O, my Lord,
show
Thyself to me so that I can see Thee."
Had seeing been impossible, Moses would
not
have said so, for, otherwise, it must
be
assumed that either he knew its impossibility
or did not, and both the alternatives
are
absurd, because an intelligent person
like
him could not have been ignorant of
this
impossibility and could not have asked
for
what he knew was impossible.
Again, according to the Qur'an, God
said
to Moses, "If the mountain remains
fixed
in its place, you can see Me,"
and if
the antecedent is possible the consequent
must be possible. Here, evidently,
the antecedent,
fixity of the mountain, is in itself
a possible
thing. Therefore, the consequent, the
vision
of God, must also be possible. Some
other
verses also support the conclusion.
[36]
There are a few more controversial
problems
of secondary importance, in which the
Ash`arites
differed from the Mu'tazilites. These
are,
for example, promise of reward and
threat
of punishment by God; whether God can
make
His creatures responsible for the actions
for which they have no ability; whether
God's
actions are bound to be based on rational
considerations and on purpose; whether
He
is bound to do what is best for His
creatures;
and whether the knowledge of God or
recognition
of His existence is based on reason
or revelation.
These theological problems of secondary
importance
are more or less the corollaries of
the
main principles in which the Ash'arites
and
Mu'tazilites differed.
The Ash'arites held that God is the
only
real cause of everything; He alone
possesses
real and effective power and this power
is
unlimited; His will is absolutely free-not
determined by anything. Whatever power
human
beings apparently possess is given
by God.
Man does not possess any real and effective
power. God, being absolutely free in
His
action, is not bound to act on rational
purpose.
He does not act teleologically for,
otherwise,
His actions would be determined by
something
external to and other than Himself
and He
would not remain absolutely free. External
purpose would put a limit to God's
omnipotence.
Like Spinoza, al-Ash'ari held that
there
is no purpose in the mind of God which
would
determine His activity. From thus anti-teleological
view it follows that as God's action
is not
teleological, He is not bound to do
what
is best for His creatures. He does
whatever
He wills. But as He is an absolutely
intelligent
and just being, His actions, as a matter
of fact, are all full of wisdom. [37]
As against the Mu'tazilites, the Ash'arites
held that God can make us responsible
for
the actions which we have no power
to do.
The Mu'tazilites held that God cannot
do
so, because that would be an irrational
and
unjust act on His part. It is admitted
by
all schools of thought in Islam that
power
or ability of men to do a thing is
given
by God. But opinions differ on the
question
whether this power or ability is really
effective
in producing any action. The Mu`tazilites
and the Qadarites held that man's power
is
fully effective and can produce an
action.
But the Ash'arites maintained that,
being
derivative, it can have no effective
force.
Similar are their respective positions
with
regard to the ability to act. This
ability
is no doubt given by God as an accident,
but the Mu'tazilites, particularly
abu al-Hudhail
`Allaf, held that this ability is given
to
man simultaneously with the performance
of
the act. But the Ash'arites maintained
that
it is given before the actual performance
of the act; [38] but being a mere accident
in man, it has only a momentary existence
and is of no practical use to man in
performing
the act. As a matter of fact, it ceases
to
exist when the actual action takes
place.
Man, therefore, does the act, practically
without having the power and the ability
to do so. He is held responsible for
his
actions because of his choosing freely
one
of the two alternative actions and
intending
to do the action so chosen. But neither
his
choice nor his intention can produce
the
action. It is God who creates the action
and is thus its effective and real
cause
. [39]
There is an almost similar controversy
over
the question of God's promise of reward
to
the virtuous and His threat of punishment
to the wrong-doer. This was one of
the five
main problems with which the Mu'tazilite
movement started. [40] The Mu'tazilites
held
that God is bound to fulfil His promises
of reward and punishment. Every action,
good
or bad, must take its own course and
be followed
by its logical and normal consequence.
A
right action, therefore, must be followed
by its reward and a wrong one by punishment.
God has made promises in the Qur'an
and He,
being a just being, cannot do otherwise,
i. e., He cannot punish the virtuous
and
forgive the wrong-doer.
On the other hand, the Ash'arites maintained
that, being all-powerful and absolutely
free
in His will, God can punish His creatures
even if they have not committed any
sins
or reward His creatures even though
they
have done no virtuous deeds. There
is nothing
binding on God; His will is not subject
to
teleological considerations. It is
by the
inner necessity of His own nature that
He
fulfils His promises of reward to the
virtuous
and does not do otherwise. And it is
in His
infinite mercy that He may forgive
any wrongdoer
or vicious person, in spite of the
threats
of punishment for his vicious acts.
This
act of forgiveness will also be in
accordance
with His nature as the most generous
and
gracious being.
D
ASH'ARITE METAPHYSICS
Al-Ash'ari's interest was purely theological
and his discussions did not contain
much
metaphysics. [41] But the subsequent
Ash'arites
found it impossible to achieve their
main
object of defending the faith and harmonizing
reason with revelation without making
reference
to the ultimate nature of reality.
Al-Ash'ari's
theological system was, thus, considered
to be incomplete without a support
from metaphysics.
The system was fully developed by the
later
Ash'arites, particularly by Qadi abu
Bakr
Muhammad bin Tayyyib al-Baqillani who
was
one of the greatest among them. He
was a
Basrite, but he made Baghdad his permanent
residence and died there in 403/1013.
He
was a great original thinker and wrote
many
valuable books on theology and various
other
subjects. He made use of some purely
metaphysical
propositions in his theological investigations,
such as substance is an individual
unity,
accident has only a momentary existence
and
cannot exist in quality, and perfect
vacuum
is possible, and thus gave the school
a metaphysical
foundation. About him a Western scholar
has
remarked: "It is his glory to
have contributed
most important elements to, and put
into
fixed form what is, perhaps, the most
daring
metaphysical scheme, and almost certainly
the most thorough theological scheme,
ever
thought out. On the one hand, the Lucretian
atoms raining down through the empty
void,
the self-developing monads and pre-established
harmony of Leibniz; and all the Kantian
"things-in-themselves"
are lame and impotent in their consistency
beside the parallel Ash'arite doctrines;
and, on the other, not even the rigours
of
Calvin; as developed in Dutch confessions,
can compete with the unflinching exactitude
of the Muslim conclusions. [42]
The Ash'arites, being primarily interested
in theological problems, kept their
philosophical
discussions mainly confined only to
those
questions which they thought had a
direct
or indirect bearing on these problems.
[43]
Willingly or unwillingly, they had
to philosophize
"in order to meet the contemporary
philosophers
on their own ground." But when
they
began philosophizing, they were very
earnest
and became great metaphysicians.
In dealing with the most important
basic
principles of Islam: (i) the existence
of
God, as the creator of the universe,
and
His unity and oneness, and (ii) the
belief
in the prophethood of Muhammad, they
had
to use certain proofs which necessitated
some metaphysical and epistemological
discussions.
Hence they had to develop a theory
of knowledge
and a theory of reality, which were
peculiarly
their own. God, the ultimate principle,
is,
according to the Ash'arites, a necessary
existent; His existence is identical
with
His essence. In proving God's existence
the
Ash'arites used three arguments. Their
argument
from the contingent nature of motion
is not
of much importance to our discussion.
The
other two are
(i) All bodies, they argued, are ultimately
one in so far as their essence is concerned.
But, in spite of this basic unity,
their
characteristics are different. Hence
there
must be an ultimate cause for these
divergent
characteristic, and that ultimate cause
is
God.
(ii) The world is contingent. Every
contingent
thing must have a cause; therefore,
the world
must have a cause, and as no contingent
thing
can be the cause, that cause must be
God.
The major premise (i. e., every event
must
have a cause) does not require a proof.
The
minor premise-the world is contingent-they
proved in the following manner: Everything
that exists in the world is either
a substance
or a quality. The contingent character
of
a quality is evident, and the contingence
of substance follows from the fact
that no
substance could exist apart from qualities.
The contingence of quality necessitates
the contingence of substance; otherwise,
the eternity of substance would necessitate
the eternity of quality. [44]
The Ash'arites believed in miracles
which
were considered to be the basis of
the proof
of prophethood and, in order to defend
this
view, they had to deny the laws of
nature.
They also denied causality in nature
and
made God the only cause of everything.
Now, in order to explain the full implication
of the above arguments, it was necessary
for them to develop a theory of knowledge
and a metaphysics.
The world consists of things. Now,
the question
arises: What is meant by a thing, what
is
its nature, and how far do we know
it?
Al-Baqillani defined knowledge as the
cognition
of a thing as it is in itself. [45]
A thing
is defined by the Ash'arites as "that
which is existent." Everything
is an
existent and every existent is a thing.
[46]
So, according to the Ash'arites, existence,
whether necessary or contingent, is
the thing
or the essence of the thing-in-itself
and
not a quality in addition to it, as
the Mu'tazilites
held. Al-Jahiz, al-Jubba'i, and some
other
Mu'tazilites of the Basrite school
defined
a "thing" as that which is
known,
[47] and held that existence is a quality
of it, added to its essence. The Ash'arites,
as against these Mu'tazilites, contended
that if existence is an additional
quality,
the essence-in-itself would be a nonexistent
and hence a non-entity and the subsequent-addition
of the quality of "existence"
to
it would involve a clear contradiction
in
so far as it would make the non-existent
existent. [48] This is an absurdity.
The
thing-in-itself which is the object
of knowledge
according to the-Ash'arites, is, therefore,
an existent thing or a body. Everything
that
exists in the world has a contingent
existence
and is either substance or quality.
In this
sense God is not a thing.
The Aristotelian categories of thought
were
subjected by the Ash'arites to a searching
criticism. Only two of those categories,
substance and quality, were retained
by them.
The other categories, quality, place,
time,
etc., are nothing but relative characteristics
(i'tibarat) that exist subjectively
in the
mind of the knower, having no corresponding
objective reality. Like Berkeley, the
Irish
philosopher, they also did not make
any distinction
between the primary and secondary qualities
of objects. The world, therefore, consists
of substance, on which the mind reflects,
and qualities, which are not in the
thing-in-itself
but only in the mind of the knower.
The qualities
are mere accidents which are fleeting,
transitory,
and subjective relations, having only
a momentary
existence. A quality or accident cannot
exist
in another accident but only in a substance.
No substance could ever exist apart
from
a quality. The substance, being inseparable
from its accidents, must also be transitory,
having only a moment's duration, just
as
the accidents are. Everything that
exists,
therefore, consists of mere transitory
units
(subjective), having only a moment's
duration.
The Ash'arites, thus, rejected the
Aristotelian
view of matter as "a permanent
potentiality
(hayula) of suffering the impress of
form
(surah)," because a possibility
is neither
an entity nor a non-entity but purely
a subjectivity.
With inert matter, the active form
and all
causes must also go. They, too, are
mere
subjectivities. This led them straight
to
the atomists and, as a matter of fact,
they
did become atomists after their own
fashion.
In this connection we may observe that
the
object of the Ash'arites was, like
that of
Kant, to fix the relation of knowledge
to
the thing-in-itself; and they showed
here
a great originality in their thought.
On
this question they not only anticipated
Kant
but, in reaching the thing-in-itself,
they
were much more thorough than Kant.
"In
his examination of human knowledge
regarded
as a product and not merely a process,
Kant
stopped at the idea of ‘Ding an sich’
[thing-in-itself],
but the Ash'arite endeavoured to penetrate
further, and maintained, against the
contemporary
Agnostic-Realism, that the so-called
underlying
essence existed only so far as it was
brought
in relation to the knowing subject."
[49]
Ash'arite Atomism - The substances
perceived
by us are atoms which come into existence
from vacuity and drop out of existence
again.
The world is made up of such atoms.
The Ash'arite
atoms are fundamentally different from
those
of Democritus and Lucretius. The Ash`arite
atoms are not material; they are not
permanent;
they have only a momentary existence;
they
are not eternal but every moment brought
into being, and then allowed to go
out of
existence by the Supreme Being, God,
the
only cause of everything in the universe.
These atoms are not only of space but
of
time also. They are nonmaterial or
ideal
in character. They resemble the monads
of
Leibniz. But the Ash'arite monads differ
from those of Leibniz in having no
possibility
of self-development along certain lines.
Each monad has certain qualities but
has
extension neither in space nor in time.
They
have simply position, not bulk, and
are isolated
from and independent of one another.
There
is absolute void between any two monads.
Space and time are subjective. All
changes
in the world are produced by their
entering
into existence and dropping out again,
but
not by any change in themselves. The
Ash'arite
ontology necessitated the existence
of God.
Their monads must have a cause, without
which
they could not have come into being,
nor
could there be any harmony or connection
between them. This cause must be a
cause
sui; otherwise there would be an infinite
regress of the causal nexus. The Ash'arites
found this cause in the free-will of
God.
It creates and annihilates the atoms
and
their qualities and, thus, brings to
pass
all motion and change in the world.
The Ash'arites were, thus, thoroughgoing
metaphysicians. Being was all important
in their ontology. The will of that
Being
or God must, therefore, be the ground
of
all things. Hence they did not find
any difficulty,
as Leibniz did, in explaining the harmony
and coherence among the isolated, windowless,
and independent monads, constituting
the
one orderly world. Leibniz had to bring
in,
in his monadology, a Monad of monads
or God,
and fall back upon the Theory of Pre-established
Harmony to bring his monads into harmonious
and orderly relations with one another,
and
this he could do only at the cost of
his
monadology, and by abandoning his pluralistic,
and individualistic metaphysics. But
the
Ash'arites, consistently with their
ontology,
fell straight back upon God, and found
in
His will the ground of orderliness
and harmony
in the universe. They were, thus, more
thorough
and consistent than Leibniz in their
theory
of monads. The Ash'arite atomism approaches
that of Lotze's, who in spite of his
desire
to save external reality, ended in
its Complete
reduction to ideality. But, like Lotze,
they
could not believe their atoms to be
the inner
working of the infinite Primal Being.
The necessary consequence of their
analysis
is a thorough going idealism like that
of
Berkeley. Their theory of knowledge
reduced
the universe to a mere show of ordered
subjectivities
which, as they maintained like Berkeley,
found their ultimate explanation in
the will
of God. Their interest, as we have
already
pointed out, was mainly theological.
Interest
in pure monotheism was very strong
with them.
Their metaphysical and epistemological
discussions
were actuated by a pious desire to
defend
the idea of divine creations, to drive
men
back to God and His revelation and
compel
them to see in Him the one grand fact
of
the universe.
The Ash'arites are here more consistent
than
Berkeley. God, according to them, is
the
only cause in the true sense of the
term.
No created thing, having created power,
could
be the cause of anything.
The attitude of the Ash'arites towards
the
law of causation was sceptical. They
denied
objective validity of causality in
nature.
No created thing or being can be the
cause
of anything. Things or beings in nature
do
not possess any power or quality which
could
produce any effect. The so-called power
which
men and objects of nature seem to possess
is not an effective power, for it is
a derived
power, not an original power which
alone
can produce effect. [50] Whatever power
the
creatures might possess must have been
given
by God, who alone possesses all real
power.
Being (God) is the only Ultimate Reality.
The things of the world are composed
of indivisible
units monads which, every moment, are
created
and annihilated; and it is God who
creates
and annihilates them and their qualities,
thereby bringing about all the motion
and
change in the world. There is, thus,
no such
thing as a law of nature and the world
is
sustained by a constant, ever repeated
activity
of God. There is no such thing as a
secondary
cause; when there is the appearance
of such
a cause, it is only illusionary. God
produces
the appearance of the effect as well
as the
effect. Things of the world do not
possess
any permanent nature. Fire, for instance,
does not possess the nature or quality
of
burning; it does not burn. God creates
in
a substance "a being burned"
when
fire touches it.
The Ash'arites thus denied power in
the cause
as well as the necessary connection
between
the so-called cause and effect. Shibli
mentions
that the Ash'arites rejected the idea
of
causation with a view to defending
the possibility
of miracles on the manifestation of
which,
according to them, prophethood depended.
The orthodox school believed in miracles
as well as in the universal law of
causation;
but they also maintained that, at the
time
of manifesting a miracle, God suspends
the
operation of this law and thus brings
about
an exception. Asha`ari, however, maintained
that a cause must have always the same
effect
(i. e., the effect of one and the cause
cause
could not be different at different
times).
Having accepted this principle as formulated
by their leader, the Ash'arites could
not
agree to the orthodox view and, therefore,
to prove the possibility of miracles
they
rejected the law of causation altogether,
According to them, there is no power
in the
antecedent to produce the consequent.
"We
know nothing but floating impressions,
the
phenomenal order of which is determined
by
God." [51]
Objection might be raised against the
Ash'arite
metaphysics that it establishes in
effect
a relationship between God and the
atoms,
but relationships, according to the
Ash'arites,
are subjective illusions. In reply
to this
objection it may be pointed out that
all
relationship applies only to contingent
beings
or things perceived by the senses.
It would
not hold in the case of the Necessary
Being,
God, who is suprasensible. And according
to their principle of mukhalafah, nothing
which is applied to created things
or beings
can be applied to God in the same sense.
God is not a natural cause but a free
cause.
This is the Ash'arite system as completed
by Qadi abu Bakr al-Baqillani. It faced
a
strong opposition from the orthodox,
particularly
from the followers of Abmad bin Hanbal.
Al-Ashari's
opinions did not get much recognition
outside
the Shafi'ite group to which he belonged.
The Hanafites preferred the doctrines
of
his contemporary al-Maturidi who differed
from al-Ash'ari in certain minor controversial.
points. Shibli has mentioned nine such
points.
[52] In Spain, ibn Hazm (d. 456/1063)
opposed
the Ash'arite doctrines. The Saljuq
Sultan
Tughril Beg, who was an adherent of
the Hanbalite
school, treated the Ash'arites very
badly,
but his successor Sultan Alp Arsalan
and
especially his famous vizier, Nizam
al-Mulk
supported the Ash`arites and put an
end to
the persecution to which they had been
exposed.
Nizam al-Mulk founded the Nizamite
Academy
at Baghdad in 459/1066 for the defence
of
Ash'arite doctrines. It is under his
patronage
that abu al-Ma'ali `Abd al-Malik al-Juwaini
got the chance of preaching the Ash'arite
doctrine freely.
The Ash'arite system could not obtain
widespread
acceptance until it was popularized
by a1-Juwaini
and al-Ghazali in the East and by ibn
Tumart
in the West. It was al-Juwaini who
could
legitimately claim the credit of making
the
Ash'arites' doctrines popular. His
vast learning
and erudite scholarship brought him
the title
of Dia' al-Din(the light of religion).
Al-Juwaini
received his early education from his
father,
Shaikh abu Muhammad `Abd Allah, and
after
the death of his father, he got further
education
from his teacher, abu Ishaq al-Isfara'ini,
a great Ash'arite scholar. Al-Juwaini,
in
course of time, was recognized by the
scholars
of the time to be Shaikh al-Islam
(the chief leader of Islam) and Imam
al Haramain
(the religious leader of Makkah and
Madinah).
For thirty years, he continued teaching
and
preaching the Ash'arite doctrines.
Al-Juwaini
was the teacher of al-Ghazali. He wrote
many
books on various subjects. Some of
these
are: al-Shamil, on the principles of
religion;
al-Burhan, on the principles of jurisprudence;
al-`Aqidat al-Nizamiyyah; and Irshad,
on
theology. He was born in 419/1028 and
died
at Nishapur in 478/1085.53 Being the
Shaikh
al-Islam and the Imam of Makkah and
Madinah,
al-Juwaini's Fatawa (judgments on religious
matters) used to be respected by people
in
general throughout the Muslim world;
and
for this reason, his writings got the
widest
circulation and, through these writings,
Ash'arite doctrines became known everywhere.
One great theological result of the
Ash'arite
system was that it checked the growth
of
free thought which tended to dissolve
the
solidarity of the Islamic Shari'ah.
The Ash`arite
mode of thought had its intellectual
results
also.
It led to an independent criticism
of Greek
philosophy and prepared the ground
for philosophies
propounded by men like al-Ghazali and
Fakhr
al-Din al-Razi. Al-Ghazali is generally
included
among the Ash'arites and it is he who
maybe
said to have completed the Ash'arite
metaphysics.
It was he who, by giving a systematic
refutation
of Greek philosophy in his famous work,
Tahafut
al-Falasifah, completely annihilated
the
dread of intellectualism which had
characterized
the minds of the orthodox. It was chiefly
through his influence that people began
to
study dogma and metaphysics together.
[54]
Strictly speaking, al-Ghazali was
not an
Ash'arite, though he admitted that
the Ash'arite
mode of thought was excellent for the
masses.
"He held that the secret of faith
could
not be revealed to the masses; for
this reason
he encouraged exposition of the Ash`arite
theology, and took care in persuading
his
disciples not to publish the results
of his
private reflection." [55]
Al-Ghazali made the Ash'arite theology
so
popular that it became practically
the theology
of the Muslim community in general
and has
continued to remain so up to the present
time.
Notes:
[1] Iqbal, The Development of Metaphysics
in Persia, p. 53.
[2] Ahmad Amin, Duha al-Islam, p. 36.
[3] Al-Ash'ari, Istihsan al-Khaud,
p. 4.
[4] Al-Shahrastani, al-Milal wal-Nihal,
p.
50.
[5] The subject originally was not
called
`Ilm al-Kalam. This name was given
afterwards,
during al-Mamun's time. See Shibli,
`Ilm
al-Kalam, p. 31.
[6] Ibn Khallikan, Wafayat al-A'yan,
p. 454.
[7] Shibli, op. cit., p. 56.
[8] Ibid.
[9] Ibn Khallikan, op. cit., p. 55.
[10] Shibli, op. cit., pp. 56. 57.
[11] Al-Ash'ari, op. cit., pp. 4-9
[12] Al-Ghazali, Ihya Ulum al-Din,
p. 53.
[13] Shibli, op. cit., p. 59.
[14] Al-Ash'ari, al-Ibanah, p. 47.
[15] Idem., al-Maqalat, p. 291.
[16] Abu al-`Ala, Sharh-i Mawaqif,
p. 571.
[17] Ibid., .pp. 581-82.
[18] Al-Shahrastani, op. cit., p. 51.
[19] Al-Ash’ari, al-Maqalat, p. 484.
[20] Ibid., .p. 291.
[21] Al-Ash’ari, al-Ibanah, p. 9.
[22] Idem, al-Maqalat,, pp. 539-54:
[23] Ibid., p. 542.
[24] Abu al-`Ala, op. cit., p. 625.
[25] Al-Shahrastani, op. cit., p. 53.
[26] Shibli, op. cit., p. 72.
[27] Qadi Add and Sayyid Sharif, Mawaqif,
vol. IV, p. 182; Musallam al-Thubut,
p. 114.
[28] Baihaqi, Kitab al-Asma' wal-Sifat,
p.
198.
[29] Qadi `Add and Sayyid Sharif, op.
cit.,
p. 601.
[30] Sharh-i Mawaqif, p. 602; al-Ibanah,
pp. 23-42.
[31] Al-Maqalat, p. 292.
[32] Dhahabi, Mizan al-I`tidal (Allahabad
edition), pp. 179-93; al-Ash'ari, al
Maqalat,
pp. 582-602.
[33] Al-Ibanah, p. 9.
[34] Shibli, op. cit., p. 63.
[35] Sharh-i Mawaqif, pp. 610-24.
[36] Al-Ibanah, pp. 13-20.
[37] Al-Maqalat, p. 252; Shibli, `Ilm
al-Kalam,
p. 59.
[38] Al Maqalat, p. 43.
[39] Al-Shahrastani, op. cit., p. 53.
[40] Mas'udi, Muruj al -Dhahab.
[41] Shibli, op,. cit., p. 57; Iqbal,
op.
cit., p. 55.
[42] Macdonald, Development of Muslim
Theology,
Jurisprudence and Constitutional Theory.
pp. 200-01.
[43] Sharh-i Mawaqif, p. 15.
[44] Shibli, op. cit., pp. 87, 88.
[45] Sharh-i Mawaqif, p. 15.
[46] Ibid., p. 128.
[47] Al-Maqamat, p. 520.
[48] Sharh-i Mawaqif, p. 109.
[49] Iqbal; op. cit., p. 57.
[50] Sharh-i Mawaqif, p. 262; al-Maqalat,
p. 539
[51] Shibli, op. cit., p. 64.
[52] Ibid.. p. 92.
[53] Ibn Khallikan, vol. I, p. 312.
[54] Iqbal, op. cit., p. 59.
[55] Shibli, op. cit., p 66.
Abu al-Hasan bin Isma'il al-Ashari,
Kitab
al-ibanah `an Usul al-Diyanah, Hyderabad,
Deccan, 1321/1903; Risalah fi Istihsan
al-Khaud,
Hyderabad, Deccan, 1323/1905,
1344/1926; Maqalat a1-Islamiyyin wa
Ikhtilaf
al-Musalliyyin, 2 Vols., Istanbul,
1929;
`Abd al-Karim al-Shahrastani, Kitab
al-Milal
wal-Nihal, ed. Cureton; Shibli, `Ilm
al-Kalam,
4th edition, Ma'arif Press, Azamgarh,
1341/1923;
Qadi `Add and Sayyid Sharif, Sharh
al Mawaqif;
abu al-`Ala, Sharh-i Mawaqif, Newal
Kishore,
Lucknow; al- Ghazali, Ihya' ` Ulum
al-Din,
Newal Kishore, Lucknow ; ibn Khallikan,
Wafayat
al-A'yan, 2 Vols; Shaikh Muhammad Iqbal,
The Development of Metaphysics in Persia,
Bazm-i Iqbal, Lahore; al-Mas'udi, Muruj
ad-Dhahab;
Dhahabi, Mizan al-I`tidal; Baihaqi,
Kitab
al-Asma' w-al-Sifat; D. B. Macdonald,
Development
of Muslim Theology, Jurisprudence and
Constitutional
Theory, Charles Scribner's Sons, New
York,
1926; Ahmad Amin, Duha al-Islam, 4th
edition,
Cairo, 1946; Taftazani, Sharh `Aqa'id-i
Nasafi;
Khayali, Sharh-i `Aqa'id-i Nasafi.
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