Mahdi Afchangi; Yaser Salari
Abstract
Anthropology, along with cosmology and theology, are the three basic pillars of the underlying thought of any school of philosophy, theology and ideology. The identity and nature of man, the truth of his body and soul, the connection and interaction of soul and body, their story after death in the world ...
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Anthropology, along with cosmology and theology, are the three basic pillars of the underlying thought of any school of philosophy, theology and ideology. The identity and nature of man, the truth of his body and soul, the connection and interaction of soul and body, their story after death in the world of purgatory and then the resurrection day, and finally, the way the body and soul are intermingled are among the most important issues. The anthropology of Shaykhiya school has largely been affected with Sadrai school of anthropology. The impact can be attributed to Sheikh Ahmad Ahsaei’s deliberations with references to Mulla Sadra’s works. Although Ehsai accepts the essential movement of the soul and acknowledges the physical resurrection like Sadra, because of his difference with Sadra in his explanation of the human body and the nature of the world of examples, purgatory, the promise of the world of Horqalia, and finally, the resurrection day, he presents a picture different from the picture depicted in transcendental wisdom.
mohammad nejati; yaser shlary; mostafa majd
Volume 18, Issue 2 , January 0, , Pages 43-62
Abstract
The historicity of revelation considers the Qur'an a historical fact which is tied to the capacity and awareness of the audience of the Age of Descent and is subject to the social and cultural conditions of that period. Based on this emphasis on the interaction (effect and effect) of revelation with ...
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The historicity of revelation considers the Qur'an a historical fact which is tied to the capacity and awareness of the audience of the Age of Descent and is subject to the social and cultural conditions of that period. Based on this emphasis on the interaction (effect and effect) of revelation with various demands of the age of decline, denial of the Quran's worship is rejected, and the supremacy of Quran and Faramkhani reject propositions and divine decrees. The prophetic experience is one of the major theories in this field. Dr Soroush further explains this theory, claiming that the prophetic experience is rooted in the thinking of the Islamic world, and has received a great deal from Farabi to Ibn Sina, Khwaja and Mulla Sadra. The assessment of the theory suggests that the prophetic experience involves two serious damages (localization and erosion). Therefore, in view of the maximum amount of the two biblical scriptures of the Qur'an and the existing Bible, and the conceptual and reciprocal difference between the revelations in these two areas, the generalization of the issues discussed in the field of the revelation of Christianity to Islamic theology and the unification of the processes and results of the controversial nature of the word is called because Revelation in Christianity and Islam, except in the word, is not very similar to each other. Second, in claiming the rootedness of the Prophetic experience, regardless of the confusion between the two implied concepts and the power of imagination, the examination confirms that the claim of root is not at least in Sadra's thinking of the Sa'eb. Because Mulla Sadra, by neglecting the function of the devoted power, in transforming the revelation of reasoning into senses and details, based on the adaptation of the tripartite existential realms and by invoking the intuition, the two modes of the common sense and the imagination of the Prophet from the open minded world give explanation of the details of the revelation. Also, Sadr al-Mota'alīn believes in his philosophical foundations: the innocent person, in order to receive the revelation, ultimately receives clarity, clarity, and intuition, thus necessitating any possible manipulation of the powers of the soul.