A Commentary on Theistic Arguments
0%
Author: Ayatullah Jawadi Amuli
Translator: Hassan Allahyari
Publisher: Ansariyan Publications – Qum
Category: Monotheism
ISBN: 964-438-362-1
Author: Ayatullah Jawadi Amuli
Translator: Hassan Allahyari
Publisher: Ansariyan Publications – Qum
Category: ISBN: 964-438-362-1
visits: 15541
Download: 4394
- About the Author
- Translator’s Word
- Acknowledgements and Dedication
- The Author’s Preface
- Chapter One: Knowledge and Sophistry
- Priority of Ontology over Epistemology
- Metaphysical Sources of Knowledge
- Open and Latent Skepticism
- Incorporeality, Universality, Immutability, and Continuity of Knowledge
- Corollaries of Knowledge
- Knowledge and Mental Existence
- Divisions of Knowledge
- Knowledge, Faith, and Theoretical and Practical Reasons
- Self-evident and Primary Cognitions
- Necessary Truth of Primary Propositions
- Difference between Epistemic Certitude and Psychological Certitude
- Epistemic Certitude, Probability, and Social Conventions
- Foundation of Discursive Propositions on Primary and Self-Evident Propositions
- Primariness of the First Figure
- The Principle of Non-Contradiction
- The Principle of Non-Contradiction and the Validity of the First Figure
- The Principle of Non-Contradiction and Multiplicity of Definite Propositions
- The Principle of Non-Contradiction in the Traditions
- Abu Sa‛eed Abu al-Khayr’s Criticism of the Use of Syllogism
- Intuitive Knowledge and its Categories
- Soul and the Intuitive Knowledge thereof
- Abstraction and Universalization of Causation
- Knowledge and Epistemology
- Philosophy in its General and Specific Senses
- Philosophy and Particular Disciplines
- Chapter Two: Faith and Reason
- Sophistic Impartations and the Denial of Commensurability of Faith with Reason
- The Mutual Existential Necessitation between Faith and Reason in the Islamic Traditions
- The Ignorant Devout and the Unlearned Pious
- First Knowledge is the Cognition of the Almighty
- Disparagement of Acquired Knowledge and Mistrust of Theoretical Disciplines
- The Commensurability of Religious Tenets with Philosophic Arguments
- Rational Arguments in the Islamic Scriptures
- The Legacy of Nahj al-Balāgha to the History of Islamic Thought
- Non-questionability of Monotheism and Indemonstrability of Atheism
- Difference between the Arguments of Divine Existence and the Arguments of His Attributes
- Chapter Three: The Demonstration of Contingency and Necessity
- Notions of Contingency and Necessity and Signs of Contingency
- Argument from Contingents to the Necessary
- Instrumentality of the Mediates and the Efficacy of the Necessary
- Hudūth of the Mediates and Eternity of the Divine Grace
- Criticisms and Evaluations
- Evaluation of Hume’s Criticism
- The Denial of Philosophic Meaning of Necessity and its Answer
- Evaluation of the Epistemological Criticism
- Chapter Four: The Arguments from Motion and Huduth
- Premises of the Arguments from Motion and Hudūth
- Evaluation of the Argument from Causality
- Limitations of the Arguments from Motion and Hudūth
- Evaluation of Criticisms of the Arguments from Motion and Hudūth
- Chapter Five: The Demonstration of Contingency of Impoverishment
- Transition from Quidditative Contingency to Contingency of Impoverishment
- Contingency of Impoverishment and the Essential Independence of the Necessary
- Unique Qualities of the Demonstration of Contingency of Impoverishment
- Chapter Six: The Ontological Argument of Anselm
- Argument in the Form of Reductio ad Absurdum
- Gaunilo’s Criticism and its Adduction
- The Fundamental Flaw of Anselm’s Argument
- Failure to Make Distinction between Concept and Extension in the Demonstrations of Gnostics
- The Evaluation of Kant’s Tripartite Criticism of Anselm’s Argument
- Addendum
- Chapter Seven: The Demonstration of the Veracious
- The Demonstration of the Veracious in Ibn Sīnā’s Works
- The Demonstration of the Veracious in Transcendent Wisdom
- The Demonstration of the Veracious in ‛Allāmah Tabātabā’i’s Works
- Allamah Tabātabā’i’s Exposition of the Demonstration
- The Qualities of the Demonstration of the Veracious
- Chapter Eight: The Argument from Design
- What is Order?
- Does Order Exist?
- Why does Order Exist?
- The Argument from Design and the Noble Qur’ān
- The Argument from Design and the Problem of Evil
- Chapter Nine: The Argument from Miracles
- Miracles in the View of Islamic Philosophers and Western Theologians
- Extraordinary Events: Mu‛jiza, Karāma, I‛āna, and Ihāna
- Miracles as Rational Proofs
- Rational Possibility and Ordinary Impossibility of Miracles
- Chapter Ten: The Argument from Religious Experience
- Religious Experience and Demonstrative Reasoning
- Definite and Indefinite Shuhūds
- Deviation from Rational Cognition and Decline into Open and Latent Skepticism
- Chapter Eleven: The Moral Arguments
- Discursive Arguments based on Moral Commands
- The Common Criticism of the Moral Arguments
- The Affirmation of Incorporeal Existence through Analysis of Reason
- Kant’s Moral Arguments
- The First Criticism of Kant’s Moral Argument
- The Second Criticism of Kant’s Moral Argument
- Chapter Twelve: The Demonstration of Primordial Nature
- Usage of Reciprocity in the Demonstration of Primordial Nature
- Two Expositions of the Demonstration of Primordial Nature
- The Minor Premise of the Demonstration of Primordial Nature
- A Criticism and Its Evaluation
- The Demonstration of Primordial Nature in The Noble Qur’ān
- Notes