Showing posts with label Sufism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sufism. Show all posts

2023/05/04

Ibn Arabi is not a follower of Pantheism - IBTimes.ID

Ibn Arabi is not a follower of Pantheism - IBTimes.ID

Ibn Arabi was not a Pantheist
By Angga Arifka

23/06/2022

4 Mins read

Wahdat al-wujud (unity of existence) is a term commonly used in Ibn Arabi's view of God and the universe, that God and the universe and its contents cannot be distinguished. Although in fact the term wahdat al-wujud was never strictly used by Ibn Arabi, the term is often paired with pantheism.

Pantheism comes from two words: pan means all, and theos means God. In simple terms, this term means that everything is God or God is immanent and identical with the universe.

We should be careful not to hastily match one view with another. That is, we must trace Ibn Arabi's views on God and the universe and also investigate the definition of pantheism, which we then see by juxtaposition whether the two are really the same.

Wahdat al-Wujud and Ibn Arabi's View

In language, wahdat al-wujūd consists of two words, wahdah and jasa . Wahdah means single or unity, and Being means existence or existence. In terms, wahdat al-wujūd describes the unity of being between God and other than God. Simply put, because God is Existent, it means that everything other than God has no form.

The word " being " in Ibn Arabi's system of thought is used to refer to the existence of God, that the only form is the form of al-Haqq or the form of God, and there is no form other than His form. Which means that, anything other than God has no form ( 'adam ).

In fact, Ibn Arabi uses the word "existent" also to indicate something other than God. However, he uses it in a metaphorical sense ( majazi ) to assert that existence only belongs to God. Meanwhile, the existence in the universe, as a metaphor, is basically God's existence lent to the universe. Or existence other than God is completely dependent on God's existence.
Also Read Muhammad Abduh's Philosophy of Education: Unity between West and East

Here, Ibn Arabi gives an analogy of sunlight. According to him, sunlight belongs only to the sun. The light is only lent to the inhabitants of the earth.

The relationship between God and the universe is often described as that between light and darkness. This meant that, without sunlight, the universe would be pitch black. In other words, this universe actually does not exist because existence belongs only to God.

Thus, the meaning of form shows that God's form is the only form. There is no existence other than His existence.

Simply put, this means that anything other than God has no form. Logically, it can be concluded that existence cannot be given to other than God ( ma siwa Allah ).

The central topic of wahdat al-wujud is the unity of God with the universe or in other words God encompasses all. Thus, the understanding of wahdat al-wujud means a teaching that equates God with the universe or equates the universe with God.
***

Roughly speaking, this understanding admits that there is no difference between God and creatures; if there is, then only on the belief that God is the totality. While creatures are part of the totality of it. God appears in everything in the universe. All are His appearances. There is nothing in this world but God.

If this is the case, then we can hastily conclude that wahdat al-wujūd is the same as “pantheism”. That is the answer if we hastily conclude and simplify this complex matter. In other words, it is that simple, but wahdat al-wujūd in Ibn Arabi's view is not so simple.

Although Ibn Arabi understood existence as a single being associated with God, he did not fully understand reality in a monorealistic sense. He uses the term al-Haqq which refers to God and al-khalq which refers to any creature or anything other than al-Haqq .

As we have previously understood that the only being is al-Haqq . Then the question is, "What is the ontological position of al-khalq (creature)? Is the universe really identical with al-Haqq or is this universe really without a cause, there is only al-Haqq ?”
Also Read It's Not Religion That Makes Us Left Behind

Ibn Arabi answered this question in a simple but very ambiguous way or taks. This universe is al-Haqq and not al-Haqq : “ huwa la huwa ” (He and not He). This means that this universe is al-Haqq , but at the same time, the universe is not al-Haqq (Noer, 1995).

There are two ontological sides proposed by Ibn Arabi. First , as is generally understood, God is immanent and similar to the universe. Second , which is often overlooked in Ibn Arabi's view, God is truly transcendent and distinct from the natural world.
***

These two points, although they contradict each other, are the views of Ibn Arabi, and we must affirm both, that one cannot choose one over the other.

It looks taxa. The inadequacy of such an explanation was acknowledged by Ibn Arabi himself. "There is no question more taxa or more strange or more mysterious than this problem" (Noer, 1995). Therefore, it is not surprising if many people misunderstand Ibn Arabi's ontological views and accuse him of equating God with creatures.

Here we see that in fact Ibn Arabi never really asserted that this world is completely al-Haqq (God). If the term wahdat al-wujūd describes such a systemic view of Ibn Arabi, then the question is whether wahdat al-wujūd can still be understood as pantheism?
Definition of Pantheism

The most common definition of pantheism was put forward by Henry C. Thiessen: “Pantheism is the theory that considers God as one unit with the universe. God is all; all is God” (Thiessen, 1979). Other definitions of pantheism would sound similar.

For example, ER Naughton defines pantheism more clearly, “Pantheism ... is a view of reality that tends to identify nature with God or God with nature. Pantheism emphasizes God's immanence in nature and does not emphasize, or ignore, His transcendence over nature” (Naughton, 1967).
Read Also Debating the Truth of "Sprachspiel" in Religious Public Spaces

From the two definitions that have been proposed, we can highlight several important points of pantheism.

First , pantheism emphasizes God's immanence (God's likeness to nature) and ignores God's transcendence (God's incomparability to anything). Second , God and the universe are considered identical to each other and all are God.
Ibn Arabi was not a Pantheist

Of course, from these definitions we cannot at all assert that wahdat al-wujūd in Ibn Arabi's view is the same as pantheism, because Ibn Arabi still places great emphasis on God's transcendence over the universe. This last passage confirms that Ibn Arabi was not a pantheist.

That is, although wahdat al-wujud is a view of the unity of existence attributed to Ibn Arabi, in fact Ibn Arabi did not stop at the unity of existence alone, which equated God with the universe, but also firmly asserted God's transcendence, that God is completely unreachable by anything, so that God is absolutely not similar to anything.

Editor: Yahya FR


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Angga Arifka
ABOUT AUTHOR
Alumnus of Ushuluddin Faculty and Philosophy of UIN Sunan Ampel Surabayaarticles

Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi - YouTube Perennial Wisdom

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Hi! 
Welcome to this channel. The ultimate aim of this channel is to discuss the subject of Islamic(ate) worldview, in particular Islamic philosophy, Sufism (tasawwuf) or Islamic mysticism, Islamic thought, philosophical theology in Islam, modern and contemporary Islamic philosophy based on library research and the outlook of academic scholarship.

I'm Angga Arifka. I've observed that there have not been many videos specifically and intensively discussing philosophical worldview in Islam online on YouTube. Here, you will find videos exploring the ideas of Muslim philosophers, of Sufis, and of other eminent figures in the Islamic world. 





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The Writings of Ibn Arabi | al-Qashanï al-Kashani (d. 730/1329 or 736/1335–6),

The Writings of Ibn Arabi | Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society

The Chapter Headings of the Fusus (PDF) | William Chittick

This is a study of the significance of the chapter headings of the Fusus as understood by four major commentators on the work. 

The first was Sadr al-Din al-Qunawi (d. 673/1274), Ibn al-Arabi’s son-in-law, chief disciple, foremost interpreter and the author of al-Fukuk, a commentary on the central themes of each chapter of the Fusus. 

At his behest his disciple Mu’ayyid al-Din al-Jandi composed one of the earliest and most extensive commentaries on the Fusus itself. 

Two other commentaries were written by ‘Abd al-Razzaq al-Kashani (d. 730/1329 or 736/1335–6), who studied the Fusus with al-Jandi, and 
Dawud al-Qaysari (d. 751/1350), who studied it with al-Kashani. 

From the Journal of the Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi Society (Vol. II, 1984).

===


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Dhat syndrome - Wikipedia

Dhat syndrome - Wikipedia

Dhat syndrome

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dhat syndrome
SpecialtyPsychiatry

Dhat syndrome (Sanskrit: धातु दोष, IAST: Dhātu doṣa) is a condition found in the cultures of South Asia (including Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Sri Lanka) in which male patients report that they suffer from premature ejaculation or impotence, and believe that they are passing semen in their urine.[1] The condition has no known organic cause.[2]

In traditional Hindu spirituality, semen is described as a "vital fluid". The discharge of this "vital fluid", either through sex or masturbation, is associated with marked feelings of anxiety and dysphoria. Often the patient describes the loss of a whitish fluid while passing urine. At other times, marked feelings of guilt associated with what the patient assumes is "excessive" masturbation are noted.

Many doctors view dhat as a folk diagnostic term used in South Asia to refer to anxiety and hypochondriacal concerns associated with the discharge of semen, with discoloration of the urine, and feelings of weakness and exhaustion.

Dhat is thought to be a culture-bound syndrome similar to jiryan (South-East Asia), prameha (Sri Lanka), and shenkui (China).[3] Dhat syndrome might be related to other post-orgasmic diseases, such as post-coital tristesse (PCT), postorgasmic illness syndrome (POIS), and sexual headache.

Signs and symptoms[edit]

Young males are most often affected, though similar symptoms have been reported in females with excessive vaginal discharge or leucorrhea, which is also considered a "vital fluid". In addition, there are symptoms of fatigue and weakness.[4] Patients with Dhat condition most normally ascribe their semen misfortune (secretion of semen in urine) to reasons like inordinate masturbation, sensual dreams, and unreasonable sexual longing. Nocturnal emission and secretion of semen in urine are considered to be the most widely recognized symptoms of semen misfortune. Patients with Dhat condition frequently dread the result of semen misfortune and regularly have the conviction that it will lead to decrease in sexual performance. The most widely recognized side effects in patients with Dhat condition are shortcoming of the body, sluggishness, low energy, and low temperament.[5] Premature ejaculation and impotence are commonly seen. Other somatic symptoms like weakness, easy fatiguability, palpitations, insomnia, low mood, guilt and anxiety are often present. Males sometimes report a subjective feeling that their penises have shortened. These symptoms are usually associated with an anxious and dysphoric mood state.[6] Another sign of this syndrome is white discharge.[7] According to Ayurvedic, an Indian medical system, men who have experienced this have shown signs of anxiety issues.[8] This disease is a culture bound syndrome. Semen loss is generally viewed as taboo and harmful.[9] It is also associated with a lower socioeconomic class. Being able to produce semen is viewed as longevity of one's health and certain powers.[9] In Indian culture, it is important for a man to produce semen.

Treatment[edit]

Cognitive behavioral therapy is the mainstay of treatment. At other times counseling, anti-anxiety and antidepressant medications have been shown to be of use.[10] Doctors have found that antidepressant (PDE-5 inhibitors) medicines have shown positive results in controlling the Dhat syndrome's psychological causes."[11]

Epidemiology[edit]

Dhat syndrome has been reported throughout South Asia in several communities."[12]

History[edit]

The term Dhat gets its origin from the Sanskrit word Dhatu (धातु), which, according to the Sushruta Samhita, means "elixir that constitutes the body". Indian doctor Narendra Wig coined the term Dhat syndrome in 1960 and described it as being characterized by vague psychosomatic symptoms of fatigue, weakness, anxiety, loss of appetite, guilt, and sexual dysfunction, attributed by the patient to loss of semen in nocturnal emission, through urine or masturbation.[13] Literature describing semen as a vital constituent of the human body dates back to 1500 BC. The disorders of Dhatus have been elucidated in the Charaka Samhita, which describes a disorder called Shukrameha (शुक्रमेह) in which there is a passage of semen in the urine. In China, various names such as (Shen K'uei), Sri Lanka (Prameha) and other parts of South East Asia (Jiryan) symptoms and conditions are similar to dhatus.[2] The International Classification of diseases ICD-10 classifies Dhat syndrome as both a neurotic disorder (code F48.8) and a culture-specific disorder (Annexe 2) caused by "undue concern about the debilitating effects of the passage of semen".[14]

Society and culture[edit]

Some doctors believe Dhat syndrome to be either a culture-bound presentation of clinical depression, as a somatized set of symptoms, or a result of Western doctors' misinterpretation of patients' descriptions of their condition.[15][16]

Dhat syndrome is very common in Nepali culture as well. Most of them come with the complaints of "drops" and become extremely anxious about it and see it as loss of "male power". It is often related with obsessive ruminations and somatoform symptoms. Others[who?] see it as a distinct clinical entity which is less culture-bound than these critics assert, and describe it as one form of a syndrome of "semen-loss anxiety" which also occurs in other Eastern cultures as jiryan and shen-k'uei, as well as in Western cultures.

Chlamydia infection might also be related to it because of similar symptoms in case of infection of the urethra (urethritis), which is usually symptomatic, causing a white discharge from the penis with or without pain on urinating (dysuria).

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Ajit Avasthi, Om Prakash Jhirwal (2005). "The Concept and Epidemiology of Dhat Syndrome"Journal of Pakistan Psychiatry Society2 (1).
  2. Jump up to:a b Mehta, Vandana; De, Abhishek; Balachandran, C. (2009). "Dhat syndrome :A reappraisal"Indian Journal of Dermatology54 (1): 89–90. doi:10.4103/0019-5154.49002PMC 2800886PMID 20049284.
  3. ^ American Psychiatric Association. (2000). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (DSM-IV-TR) (4th ed., text revision). Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric Association. Pages 897-903.
  4. ^ Mehta, Vandana; De, Abhishek; Balachandran, C (2009). "Dhat syndrome :A reappraisal"Indian Journal of Dermatology54 (1): 89–90. doi:10.4103/0019-5154.49002ISSN 0019-5154PMC 2800886PMID 20049284.
  5. ^ Prakash, Om; Kar, Sujita Kumar (July 2019). "Dhat Syndrome: A Review and Update"Journal of Psychosexual Health1 (3–4): 241–245. doi:10.1177/2631831819894769ISSN 2631-8318S2CID 209522985.
  6. ^ A., Avasthir., O. P., Jhirwai. (2005). "The concept and epidemiology of dhat syndrome".The Journal of Pakistan Psychiatric Society.2(6). [1]
  7. ^ Grover, Sandeep; Kate, Natasha; Avasthi, Ajit; Rajpal, Nikita; Umamaheswari, V. (2014). "Females too suffer from Dhat syndrome: A case series and revisit of the concept"Indian Journal of Psychiatry56 (4): 388–392. doi:10.4103/0019-5545.146537ISSN 0019-5545PMC 4279300PMID 25568483.
  8. ^ Grover, Sandeep; Avasthi, Ajit; Gupta, Sunil; Hazari, Nandita; Malhotra, Nidhi (2016). "Do female patients with nonpathological vaginal discharge need the same evaluation as for Dhat syndrome in males?"Indian Journal of Psychiatry58 (1): 61–69. doi:10.4103/0019-5545.174376ISSN 0019-5545PMC 4776585PMID 26985107.
  9. Jump up to:a b Malhotra, H. K.; Wig, N. N. (1975-09-01). "Dhat syndrome: A culture-bound sex neurosis of the orient"Archives of Sexual Behavior4 (5): 519–528. doi:10.1007/BF01542130ISSN 1573-2800PMID 1191004S2CID 31611632.
  10. ^ Ruterbusch, K. (2012, July 20) "Dhat Syndrome in the Indian Subcontinent", Retrieved March 29, 2013, from anthropology.msu.edu.[2]
  11. ^ Ohman, Dhat Syndrome Treatment
  12. ^ Khan, Nashi (2005). "Dhat syndrome in relation to demographic characteristics"Indian Journal of Psychiatry47 (1): 105–10. doi:10.4103/0019-5545.46077PMC 2918320.
  13. ^ Narendra Wig, "Problems of Mental Health in India", Journal of Clinical Social Psychiatry, 1960; 17: 48–53.
  14. ^ El Hamad, Issa; Scarcella, Carmelo; Pezzoli, Maria Chiara; Bergamaschi, Viviana; Castelli, Francesco (2009). "Forty Meals for a Drop of Blood …"Journal of Travel Medicine16 (1): 64–65. doi:10.1111/j.1708-8305.2008.00264.xPMID 19192133.
  15. ^ Sumathipala A, Siribaddana SH, Bhugra D (March 2004). "Culture-bound syndromes: the story of dhat syndrome"Br J Psychiatry184 (3): 200–9. doi:10.1192/bjp.184.3.200PMID 14990517.
  16. ^ Dhikav V, Aggarwal N, Gupta S, Jadhavi R, Singh K (2008). "Depression in Dhat syndrome". J Sex Med5 (4): 841–4. doi:10.1111/j.1743-6109.2007.00481.xPMID 17451483.