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41. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 2 > Issue: 1
Muhammad Hozien The Metaphysics of the Healing: A parallel English-Arabic text (al-Ilahiḥyāt min al-Shifā’)
42. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 2 > Issue: 1
Ham idrez a Ayatollahy Principality of Existence and the Problem of Evil
43. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 2 > Issue: 1
Ali Sadeghi Utopia, the Philosopher, and the Pir: A Comparative Analysis of the Ideas of Plato and Rumi
44. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
Biographical Encyclopedia of Islamic Philosophy
45. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
Edward Omar Moad A Significant Difference Between al-Ghazālī and Hume on Causation
46. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
Mehdi Aminrazavi Mullā Ṣadrā’s Divine Occasionalism and David Hume’s Critique of Causality
47. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
The Teleological Ethics of Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī
48. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
The Construction of Knowledge in Islamic Civilization: Qudāma b. Ja‘far and his Kitāb al-kharāj wa-sinā‘at al-kitāba
49. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
Germana Porcasi On the Islamic Judicial Logic in al-Ghazālī’s ’Asās al-qiyās
50. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
Katelin Mason Chance and Determinism in Avicenna and Averroes
51. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
Organizing Knowledge
52. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
Muhammad Hozien Knowledge Triumphant: The Concept of Knowledge in Medieval Islam
53. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
Muhammad Hozien On Defining the Field: Islamic Philosophy, Arabic Philosophy, or Muslim Philosophy?
54. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
Kirk Templeton Avicenna, Aquinas, and the Active Intellect
55. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 3
Bibliography of Islamic Philosophy: Supplement
56. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 4
Macksood Aftab From the Editor
57. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 4
Jules Janssens, Ibn Sīnā and his Influence on the Arabic and Latin World
58. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 4
Peter Adamson, Al-Kindī
59. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 4
Simin Rahimi Divine Command and Ethical Duty: A Critique of the Scriptural Argument
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What is the relationship between divine commands and ethical duties? According to the divine command theory of ethics, moral actions are obligatory simply because God commands people to do them. This position raises a serious question about the nature of ethics, since it suggests that there is no reason, ethical or non-ethical, behind divine commands; hence both his commands and morality become arbitrary. This paper investigates the scriptural defense of the divine command theory and argues that this methodology is wrong as any interpretation of the text stands on a complex web of ethical and non-ethical presuppositions and as these presuppositions change so does the interpretation.
60. Journal of Islamic Philosophy: Volume > 4
Chelsea C. Harry Ibn Bājja and Heidegger on Retreat from Society
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Aristotle claimed that man is by nature social. Later philosophers challenged this assertion, questioning whether man is necessarily social or simply socialized. Ibn Bājja, a twelfth-century philosopher from Muslim Spain, and Martin Heidegger, a twentieth-century German philosopher, approached this question in paradoxical terms, claiming in their respective works that despite having been born into social origins (a necessary framework of existential and social conditions), human beings are able—and even mandated—to escape these origins, and thus society, to some degree. Through Ibn Bājja’s book, The Governance of the Solitary, and a portion of Heidegger’s magnum opus, Being and Time, I present what each of these thinkers posit to be a person’s social origins, and the respective epistemological justifications they provide to suggest that man should work to depart from them. To conclude, I appropriate the claims of Ibn Bājja and Heidegger to address the “real world” plausibility and potential benefits—both to society and to man himself—of man’s departure from society.