Showing posts with label Taoism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taoism. Show all posts

2021/10/14

09 Toshihiko Izutsu’s Legacy for Comparative Religion

 

INTELLECTUAL DISCOURSE, 2009

VOL 17, NO 2, 147-158

The Significance of Toshihiko Izutsu’s Legacy for Comparative Religion

Kojiro Nakamura*

Abstract: Toshihiko Izutsu explored the Oriental philosophies and clarified their comprehensive structural framework by using comparative philosophy and linguistic philosophy. Izutsu made three contributions that are deemed especially crucial to the study of comparative religion. 

  • First, the attitude of empathy he proposed and applied to himself, and his strict methodology of semantics in interpreting philosophical texts. This attitude is also important when one is trying to understand the faith of others. 
  • Second, his delineation of the scheme of the basic structure of Oriental philosophy for the comparative study of religions. 
  • Third, his study of Oriental (mystical) philosophy is a significant contribution to the study of mysticism. However, there are still problems which remain to be addressed in comparative religion.

Keywords:  Oriental philosophy,  Zen,  articulation,  Sufism,  mysticism, comparative religion,  comparative philosophy

*Kojiro Nakamura is Professor Emeritus at the Department of Islamic Studies, Faculty of Letters, University of Tokyo, Japan. E-mail: nakakoji@m3.gyao.ne.jp.

                  INTELLECTUAL DISCOURSEVOL 17, NO 2, 2009


In understanding Izutsu’s academic legacy, there are four points to bear in mind.


 The first is Izutsu’s relation to Buddhism, particularly Zen Buddhism. His father was a practicing lay Zen Buddhist, and Izutsu was strictly taught by his father to read Chinese classics in this field and to practice Zen meditation beginning in his childhood. Later he became interested in Western literature and culture, in reaction to this Orientalism of his family, and he went so far as to write a book in two parts in Japanese on ancient Greek mysticism. This is one of the titles he wrote in his twenties.1 Incredibly he wrote the second part of it, while bedridden with a serious illness. However, his implicit inner attachment to Buddhism, or something spiritual, can be seen in the fact that the main subject of the work was mysticism in ancient Greek thought. Since Zen is a type of mysticism in Izutsu’s view, this concern with mysticism continued to influence his later interest in Oriental philosophy at large.

The second point to bear in mind is his interest in language, which led him to get involved in the study of linguistics, especially semantics, linguistic philosophy and semiotics. Because of his extraordinary memory, he is said to have mastered more than twenty languages, and he showed particular interest in difficult languages as Arabic and Sanskrit, rather than modern Western languages.

He also reportedly read through the whole Qur´Én in Arabic only a month after he finished the Arabic grammar. This linguistic talent made it possible for him to have a deep understanding from inside of such major traditions of Oriental philosophy as Islamic mystical philosophy, Indian philosophy and Chinese philosophy, through his own philological and semantic interpretation of the original texts and sources.

His interest in language may also be traced back to Zen Buddhism, according to which the ultimate Truth (Satori, or Enlightenment) cannot be grasped by language (reason), or intellectual learning, but should be directly and personally experienced.  Thus the practice - especially sitting cross-legged in meditation (zazen) - is emphasised, as is often said, “Not to depend upon words (HuryË monji ),” and “No scriptures to rely upon (Kyoge betsuden).” In other words, a word or name (signifiant) is conventionally believed to have a fixed, delimited meaning or substance (signifié), exactly corresponding to the external object. This hypostatisation of the named or the semantic content is radically denied in Zen Buddhism, and the voidness of all things is advocated instead. This unique view of language, which is more or less commonly shared by MahÉyÉna Buddhism in general, may have aroused his interest in linguistics.2

Incidentally, being dissatisfied with traditional linguistics which deals with the language phenomena (langue) only at the surface level of human consciousness as a social institution, he drew attention to the deepest level of subconsciousness, called the Ólaya (Storehouse) - Consciousness in the YogÉcÉra School of Buddhism, and proposed to see the source of the language-producing process and called it the “Language -Ólaya - Consciousness.”3

The third point to be considered is his inclination towards postmodernism, namely, the current of the contemporary new thought since Ferdinand de Saussure, represented by Roland Barthes, Jacque Lacan, and Jacque Derrida. Izutsu had a personal acquaintance with Derrida, about whom he says, “The ‘deconstructed’ world as depicted by Derrida is … anything but stable, constant and solid, and all is floating. This image - experience of his is, I find, the most interesting point of his thought. For this is the world, according to the Buddhist viewpoint, to be seen in contemplation next to the stage of the annihilation of the ten thousand things.”4 Izutsu also wrote, “I think mysticism in general is in a sense an operation of déconstruction in the traditional religion.”5 These words evidently show a close affinity between the thought of déconstruction and Buddhism, and Oriental thought at large.

The fourth and final point is his interest in comparative philosophy. According to Izutsu, it was at a low ebb at that time, due to a lack of systematic methodology. In order to make this field of study truly successful, therefore, it was necessary to establish the common basis for comparison, namely, the “meta-philosophy” of philosophies. As the first step, he explored the basic structure of all the Oriental philosophy. Thus, he started “a careful semantic analysis of the structure of the key-concepts of each philosophical system.”6 Behind this interest in comparative philosophy, we see his existential concern with the uniqueness and present-day significance of Oriental philosophy, at the time when the traditional paradigm of  Western civilisation “began to show bankruptcy in various aspects.”7

This thought seems to have been strengthened after 1967, when he began to participate in the Eranos Conference in Switzerland and give lectures on Oriental philosophy. He came back to Japan from Iran after the Revolution in 1979, and he wrote, seemingly more assiduously, many books and articles in Japanese on Oriental thought and its significance.

At this juncture, the name of Daisetsu Suzuki (1870-1966) comes to mind. He was a great Zen master and scholar, who introduced for the first time Zen Buddhism widely to the West by writing many books and essays on Zen in English. He also asserted the limitation of Western civilisation based on ego-centrism and the subject-object dichotomy in cognition (Hunbetsu) or discursive thinking. Furthermore he stressed the significance of the Zen Buddhist state of “consciousness of nothing” (Muhunbetsu) or the metaphysical state of emptiness and nothingness (Muga, or Non-ego). In passing, Suzuki’s friend and world-famous philosopher, Kitaro Nishida (18701945) is well known for his unique philosophical system, constructed upon this Zen experience (“pure experience”) in Western philosophical terms and methods.

Izutsu and Suzuki apparently shared the same concern in this way, but they differed greatly in their styles of expression and presentation. On the one hand, Suzuki taught directly the unique logic of Zen Buddhism as Oriental religion and its present-day significance, that is, Sokuhi no ronri, or the logic of “Identity of contradiction,” namely, “A is A, because A is non-A.”  On the other hand, Izutsu explored the inner structure common to the various schools of Oriental philosophy at large, including Zen Buddhism, by way of comparison based on strict methodology. Thus, Izutsu, as an Oriental intellectual, provided more systematic, general and persuasive arguments and clarified to the Westerners the importance of Oriental philosophy.

The Basic Structure of Oriental Philosophy

Izutsu studied the various systems of Oriental philosophy one by one with a view to constructing their meta-philosophy. The basic structure was already shown in his early English work published in two volumes in 1966-67, entitled A Comparative Study of the Key Philosophical Concepts in Sufism and Taoism, a comparative study of Ibn ÑArabÊ, Lao-Tzu, and Chuang-Tzu.8

Both Sufism and Taoism contend that there is a five-layered structure of being, the first layer of which is called “an absolute Mystery” or “Zero-point of being,” meaning the absolutely unknown-unknowable stage transcending all differentiation, articulation and limitation (AÍad, WujËd, Mystery of Mysteries, Chaos). It is the world of voidness or nothingness, not in the sense of nihil or vacuum, contrary to existence or being; it is the world beyond both existence and non-existence. It is the world of plenitude, full of energy, with no name and thus chaotic. There are, under this first layer, four levels, the last of which is the phenomenal world. Each layer is the process of the ontological evolution, selfmanifestation or articulation of the first absolute Mystery. In this sense all beings are ultimately one.

The layers or strata, according to Ibn ÑArabÊ, are:

1.       The stage of the Essence (the absolute Mystery, abysmal Darkness),

2.       The stage of the Divine Attributes and Names (the stage of Divinity),

3.       The stage of the Divine Actions (the stage of Lordship), 4.         The stage of Images and Similarities,

         5.    The sensible world.

And according to Lao-Tzu, they are:

1.       Mystery of Mysteries,

2.       Non-Being (Nothing, or Nameless),

3.       One,

4.       Being (Heaven and Earth),

5.       The ten thousand things.9

Such a change of external reality corresponds to the epistemological transformation of human consciousness and cognition. Thus, the world of “an absolute Mystery” is the state where the egoconsciousness and the subject-object dichotomy in cognition have completely disappeared together with all differentiation and multiplicity, and all is unified. In classical Sufism, this is usually called “fanÉ´ (annihilation [of ego-consciousness]) or “fanÉ´alfanÉ´.”

The above-mentioned manifestation of “an absolute Mystery” down to the phenomenal world goes along with the downward change of consciousness from the state of unity, or the “consciousness of nothing” to the ordinary state of consciousness, namely, consciousness of something. This descending change of consciousness naturally presupposes and runs parallel with the ascending movement from the ordinary consciousness in the opposite direction. And all this corresponds to the change of the external reality. Izutsu shows this process in the following diagram:10

Non-articulation


Articulation(1)                                                   Articulation(2)




“Articulation(1)” means the ordinary world divided and ordered by words and concepts, or the world of logos, while “Nonarticulation” is the world of no distinction of subject and object, the world of “an absolute Mystery,” nothingness and chaos, transcending the differentiation and limitation by words and concepts. It is the world of Reality where all is one, seamless and transparent. This state turns back and goes down again to “Articulation(2)” before long and the subject-object division becomes reinstated.

Although it comes back to the ordinary world of differentiation, however, it does not return to the same state as it was before. After the strong experience of non-articulation and oneness where all is united, a radical change is produced in human consciousness. Even though one is back to the world of verbal and semantic divisions, he does not see the differentiation and conceptualisation by words and names as absolute, solid and permanent any more. He regards it rather as provisional, and there remains the vision of unity of the whole multiplied world and reality. “The result is that they (namely, all things) interpenetrate each other and fuse into one another. Every single thing, while being a limited, particular thing, can be and is anything; indeed it is all other things.”11 “All things are articulated and non-articulated at the same time.”12 This is what is called “Muhunbetsu no hunbetsu” (Conceptual thinking of non-thinking) in Zen Buddhism (See the aforementioned Sokuhi no ronri, namely, “A is A, because A is non-A”) and “baqÉ´” (remaining) in classical Sufism. This is the basic structure of Oriental philosophy as presented by Izutsu. Although the concrete terminology and details are different according to the traditions of philosophy, the main framework remains the same, as Izutsu remarkably shows in the metaphilosophical terminology of articulation.

Another characteristic of Oriental philosophy is the way or the methodology of discipline and practice prepared for reaching the goal of non-articulation, such as the “Mystical ladder” (maqÉmÉt) in Sufism and the direct training system of novices by the masters,  for normally it is not possible to reach such an “extraordinary” state naturally, but only through human effort and exercise.

Izutsu’s Legacy and Comparative Religion

It goes without saying that there are differences between comparative philosophy and comparative religion or the history of religions in goal and methodology, but there are also common elements, one of which is the researcher’s attitude in approaching the subject of study and understanding. Izutsu explains his study of Ibn ÑArabÊ and Lao-Tzu’s mystical philosophy as follows:

I emphasised the necessity of our approaching the subject with an attitude of ‘empathy,’ a particular kind of sympathetic intention, by which alone we could at all hope to reach the personal existential depth from which the thought wells forth. Exactly the same attitude is required with regard to Lao-Tzu.13

This internal approach is also extremely important for the study of comparative religion as well as for mutual understanding and dialogue among religions. In comparative religion, the objectivity of study has been emphasised in an attempt to demonstrate its difference and independence from theology from its inception in the 19th Century in Europe. Nowadays, there is even a reductionist tendency to deny the proper nature (sui generis) of religious phenomena, and thus the identity of comparative religion itself. However, even though objectivity is necessary in the study of religions, the internal empathetic approach is basically very important as well. In this regard, Izutsu’s methodology is extremely significant, and there are many things we should learn from it.

Next, comparison is a common basic method in both comparative philosophy and comparative religion. For this purpose, a common language (meta-philosophy) is necessary as a standard for comparison, and Izutsu explored it for Oriental philosophy as mentioned before. The same is true with comparative religion. In this latter case, however, religions of the world are so many and so complex that, apart from the established religions, there are ambiguous phenomena which are difficult to classify into religion. Thus, a standard is needed to select a religion for comparison. This


standard is called the “hypothetical definition” of religion which is totally provisional and different from the final answer to the question, “What is religion?” posited as the ultimate goal of comparative religion. For this reason, it is called the “hypothetical definition.” Since it is temporal, it becomes more minute and closer to reality as the study of religion progresses and our understanding of it becomes deeper.

At any rate, this hypothetical definition is supposed to apply to all religions and become a common language and standard for the comparative study of religions. In this sense, the inner structure of Oriental philosophy which Izutsu presented as meta-philosophy gives a very useful suggestion to comparative religion. Furthermore, when limited to Oriental philosophy, Izutsu’s framework can become a common standard for mutual understanding and dialogue. For example, bearing the previous-mentioned diagram in mind, Muslims can approach Zen Buddhists of Japan and Taoists of China by checking the key terms and concepts of their partner’s thinking which correspond to those of Ibn ÑArabÊ’s mystical thought.

In the case of Ibn ÑArabÊ, though, the orthodoxy of his thought may be a problem for some Muslims. In fact, he was often accused of being unorthodox. This has to do with another important question for the comparative study of religions. Unless we take the position that mysticism is the highest type of religions, as suggested by Frithjof Schuon, we have to clarify the relation between mystic and nonmystic religions as two different, but equal expressions of faith. However, since Izutsu, as a comparative philosopher, does not dwell upon this matter extensively, we will not argue the problem any further here. All we can say at this juncture is that we need some sort of typology of religions, such as “mystical” and “prophetic,”14 “mystical” and “numinous,”15 “mystical or ontological” and “ethical or moral,”16 and “interiority” type and “confrontation” type.17 The important thing, however, is what Izutsu calls an “empathetic” approach and a tolerant attitude, namely, to understand the other persons from inside, or from their own standpoint on the same common ground, rather than to see others from one’s own viewpoint. Only in this way will mutual understanding and dialogue among religions and sects be possible. In Japan a high level of dialogue between Buddhists and Christians has already begun, but unfortunately such a dialogue has not been attempted with Muslims yet. The results of Izutsu’s efforts would be very useful for improving this situation.

Third, what Izutsu calls “Oriental philosophy” is actually mystical philosophy, namely, the philosophical, conceptual expression of mystical experience. If so, his academic achievements are a great contribution to the study of religious mysticism. For example, he stressed mysticism as a complex phenomenon consisting of both ascending (anabasis) and descending (katabasis) ways. This comprehensive approach is very important, considering the fact that the study of mysticism has been mainly concerned with the ascending way to the goal of mystical experience.

The next is his attempt to formulate a typology of mysticism. He discussed two types. One is the mysticism of love toward a personal God, the Absolute, represented by Junayd (d. 910) of Islam and RÉmÉnuja (d. 1137) of India. The other is the mysticism of the union with the impersonal Absolute Being and of self-deification, represented by AbË YazÊd BastÉmÊ (d. 874 or 877) of Islam and Shankara (d. ca. 750) of India. Izutsu gave another classification of mysticism. One is atheistic or non-theistic mysticism (Brahmanism, MahÉyÉna Buddhism, including Zen), and the other is theistic mysticism. The latter is further classified into polytheistic mysticism (Shamanism) and monotheistic mysticism.

This latter typology is basically the same as the former. That is to say, one takes the absolute impersonal non-articulate mystical experience transcending the subject-object bifurcation as the ultimate state, while the other asserts that the true personal relation of love is only realisable after that impersonal mystical experience. The former is represented by Ibn ÑArabÊ and the latter by Junayd in the case of Islam. The difference, however, seems to be merely that of emphasis. If we can understand the difference between the two types this way, we may probably expect a new vista of possibility for solving the problem of Ibn ÑArabÊ’s orthodoxy in that direction.  Unfortunately, Izutsu did not elaborate on this problem.

At this juncture, the name of another polyglot scholar and perennialist, the aforementioned Frithjof Schuon (1907-1998) of Switzerland who belonged to the same generation as Izutsu,18 comes to mind. He was admitted into the ÑAlawÊ ØËfÊ ÙarÊqah (Order) by the founder, Shaykh AÍmad ÑAlÉwÊ (1869-1934) himself and given the Muslim name, ÑÔsÉ NËr al-DÊn Ahmad. Schuon also studied many other religions and asserted the transcendent unity of all religions in their inner deepest essence,19 calling it “philosophia perennis.20 This does not mean the unity in the actual visible phenomenal state of religions, but in the unknowable absolute Truth, transcending verbal expressions and forms, which they universally share. Schuon calls the former “exoterism,” and the latter “esoterism.”

Schuon and Izutsu both showed a major interest in mysticism, but the former expressed it as “Esoterism,” and the latter “Oriental philosophy.” What is the reason for this difference? There may have been a difference in personal existential inclination. Izutsu’s concern might have been to assert as an Oriental intellectual the uniqueness of Oriental philosophy against Western philosophy, while Schuon’s was to search for his own identity as a Western intellectual facing the problems of modernity after “the death of God.”

Conclusion

In the foregoing, we have discussed part of Izutsu’s academic achievements. His major concern was to study Oriental philosophy and clarify its comprehensive structural framework by comparative philosophy and linguistic philosophy. He read the original texts of philosophical Sufism, Mahayana Buddhism (especially Zen Buddhism), Jewish Kabbalism, Vedantine philosophy, Taoist philosophy of Lao-Tzu, Chuang-Tzu, and others.

This framework is significant for the study of mysticism as part of the human religious phenomenon. While mystical experience has so far been stressed and the discussions mostly tend to turn around it, he also emphasised the transformed state of post-experience consciousness and its influence in daily life.

Furthermore, his scheme also serves not only as a navigator for correct understanding in the labyrinth of Oriental philosophy, but also for comparative study of religions and mutual understanding among them. It is the first premise of comparative religion and mutual understanding to have a common basis, and here we have one. Whether a theist or a non-theist, unless both sides mutually admit that they stand on  common ground, any meaningful dialogue or understanding is not possible. A Zen Buddhist can explain his teachings according to Izutsu’s framework to a Sufi of the Ibn ÑArabÊ school and vice versa. Also important in this connection is Izutsu’s proposed attitude of empathy as well as his strict methodology of semantics in reading and interpreting the texts.

But the problem is how to find a common framework or metalanguage between the “Oriental” (or mystical) and non-“Oriental” (or non-mystical) schools (sects) and religions. Another question is how to incorporate the faith of the common people in the total understanding of religion, since philosophy is not religion. But these are problems rather for comparative religionists, or historians of religion.

Notes

1.      It was published in two separate parts: one is entitled “Natural Mysticismand Ancient Greece” and the other “The Philosophical Development of Greek Mysticism.” Both are collected into Selected Works, Vol. I, under the title “Mystical Philosophy.” See Toshihiko Izutsu, Selected Works of Toshihiko Izutsu, 11 vols. (Tokyo: Chuokoronsha, 1991-1993).

2.      Worth mentioning here is one of his earliest English works, Toshihiko Izutsu,Language and Magic: Studies in the Magical Function of Speech (Tokyo: Keio University, 1956).

3.      Izutsu, Selected Works, vol. ix, 68.

4.      Ibid., Supplement, 236.

5.      Ibid., vol. ix, 460.

6.      Toshihiko Izutsu, The Concept and Reality of Existence (Tokyo: The Keio Institute of Cultural and Linguistic Studies, 1971), 36.

7.      Izutsu, Selected Works, Supplement, 53.

8.      This work was later republished with revisions under a new title, Sufism and Taoism: A Comparative Study of Key Philosophical Concepts (California: University of California Press, 1983).

9.      Toshihiko Izutsu, A Comparative Study of the Key Philosophical Concepts in Sufism and Taoism: Ibn ÑArabÊ and Lao-Tzu, Chuang-Tzu, 2 vols. (Tokyo: The Keio Institute of Cultural and Linguistic Studies, 1966-67), vol. ii, 203; idem, Sufism and Taoism, 481.

10.  Toshihiko Izutsu, Selected Works, vol. vi, 120; idem, Toward a Philosophy of Zen Buddhism (Boulder: PrajñÉ Press, 1982), 145.

11.  Izutsu, Toward a Philosophy of Zen Buddhism, 128.

12.  Ibid., 127.

13.  Izutsu, A Comparative Study of the Key Philosophical Concepts in Sufism and Taoism, vol. ii, 9. This part is deleted in the new edition, Sufism and Taoism, but I do not think this deletion reflects a change in his view.

14.  Friedrich Heiler, Prayer: A Study in the History and Psychology of Religion (Oxford: Oneworld Publications, 1932), ch. vi.

15.  Ninian Smart, World Religions: A Dialogue (Pelican Books, 1966), 27.

16.  P. Tillich, Christianity and the Encounter of World Religions (New York: Columbia University Press, 1963), 54; idem, Dynamics of Faith (New York: Harper & Row, 1958), 56.

17.  L. Peter Berger, ed., The Other Side of God: A Polarity in World Religions (Garden City: Anchor Press/Doubleday, 1981).

18.  Jean-Baptiste Aymard, P. Laude, Frithjof Schuon: Life and Teachings (New York: State University of New York Press, 2004).

19.  Frithjof Schuon, The Transcendent Unity of Religions (Wheaton: Theosophical Publishing House, 1993).

20.  Frithjof Schuon, Islam and the Perennial Philosophy (World of Islam Festival Publishing, 1976), 195. He also calls it “sophia perennis.” Interestingly enough, Izutsu also used this term once as far as I know. See, Izutsu, A Comparative Study of the Key Philosophical Concepts in Sufism and Taoism, vol. ii, 191; idem, Sufism and Taoism: A Comparative Study of Key Philosophical Concepts, 4.

21.   

Sufism and Taoism: A Comparative Study of Key Philosophical Concepts by Toshihiko Izutsu | Goodreads

Sufism and Taoism: A Comparative Study of Key Philosophical Concepts by Toshihiko Izutsu | Goodreads





Sufism and Taoism: A Comparative Study of Key Philosophical Concepts

 4.43  ·   Rating details ·  118 ratings  ·  18 reviews
In this deeply learned work, Toshihiko Izutsu compares the metaphysical and mystical thought-systems of Sufism and Taoism and discovers that, although historically unrelated, the two share features and patterns which prove fruitful for a transhistorical dialogue. His original and suggestive approach opens new doors in the study of comparative philosophy and mysticism.

Izutsu begins with Ibn 'Arabi, analyzing and isolating the major ontological concepts of this most challenging of Islamic thinkers. Then, in the second part of the book, Izutsu turns his attention to an analysis of parallel concepts of two great Taoist thinkers, Lao-tzu and Chuang-tzu. Only after laying bare the fundamental structure of each world view does Izutsu embark, in the final section of the book, upon a comparative analysis. Only thus, he argues, can he be sure to avoid easy and superficial comparisons. Izutsu maintains that both the Sufi and Taoist world views are based on two pivots—the Absolute Man and the Perfect Man—with a whole system of oncological thought being developed between these two pivots. Izutsu discusses similarities in these ontological systems and advances the hypothesis that certain patterns of mystical and metaphysical thought may be shared even by systems with no apparent historical connection.

This second edition of Sufism and Taoism is the first published in the United States. The original edition, published in English and in Japan, was prized by the few English-speaking scholars who knew of it as a model in the field of comparative philosophy. Making available in English much new material on both sides of its comparison, Sufism and Taoism richly fulfills Izutsu's motivating desire "to open a new vista in the domain of comparative philosophy."
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Hardcover493 pages
Published August 6th 1984 by University of California Press (first published 1984)
Original Title
Sufism and Taoism: A Comparative Study of Key Philosophical Concepts

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Rego Hemia
Aug 11, 2009rated it really liked it
This book is metaphysical ontology porn. I am loving it. The sections on the Absolute under Sufism are relentlessly challenging and difficult, and I'm just now starting the Taoism section, which is proving to be equally so.
I can't wait to finish so that I can begin letting the information percolate down through the strata of my mind.
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Yasin Ramazan
Jan 04, 2015rated it it was amazing
I only read the first part, which is already designed to be a separate book by the author. The first part, which is an investigation about Ibn Arabi's key concepts in the Bezels of Wisdom (Fusus al-Hikam), is really resourceful and academically satisfying. It is one book that expresses Ibn Arabi's supercomplicated philosophy in the clearest possible way. I particularly like the re-arrangement of the concept according to the modern forms of thinking. (less)
Dina Kaidir
Oct 18, 2010rated it really liked it
This book is such a wonderful reference book, especially for all of my classes this semester. Izutsu's expression is crisp and crystal clear. I love it! (even if it is a text book) :)

Definitely one that I will be returning to throughout the semester.
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Tarek Naga
Jul 12, 2013rated it it was amazing
A masterpiece of research and innerstanding of two of the world greatest metaphysical traditions ...
Yazdanpanah Askari
Sep 08, 2021rated it did not like it  ·  review of another edition
تِ ( فضیلت ) نیروی حیات
ص 357 و ص 372
نیز نک به دِه
https://fa.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D8%AF%...
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Alfredo J.
Jun 09, 2019rated it it was amazing
کتابی بسیار غنی. توضیح و تفسیر عرفان ابن عربی و تائوئیسم (دائو). کتابی که آدم رو عمیقاً به فکر فرو میبره.
Abbas Mehrabian
This books is on Islamic philosophy of Ibn Arabi and its connection with Daoism. A bit too technical for me.
Mohammad
Dec 05, 2017rated it really liked it
what a book.

apart from colorful flow of creativity in ibn arabi's philosophy, and mystical foreign tongue in that of lao tzu, you get a nice thematic explanation of core ideas of sufism and taoism.

this could be called major themes of bezels of wisdom and tao te ching.
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Bimo Pratama
Jan 29, 2019rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Ibnu Arabi, the son of Plato. It is absolutely necessary to know that Toshihiko ijutsu was quite successful in summarizing ibn Arabi's thoughts from fusus al hikam and futuhat al makiyyanya, which are very complex. I think that before reading other ibn Arabi books, this book is suitable as an introduction.
Taimur
Aug 22, 2013rated it it was amazing
you do not find this book. this book finds you.
a mind fuck that will last a lifetime or more
Imdad Robbani
Jan 22, 2011rated it it was amazing
What I love from this book is its methodological clarity and in that it makes you annihilated in reading it.
Varan
Jun 28, 2009rated it it was amazing
it is the best book I have read about Ibn-e- Arabi.
Sherwin
Aug 12, 2007added it
Recommends it for: mysticism researchers
Shelves: biologyphilosophy
Lao Tse vs. Ibne Arabi! A really deep survey on comparative philosophy of Islamic Sufism/ chinese traditional Taoism.
Josh
Jul 31, 2021is currently reading it  ·  review of another edition
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Nobody
Apr 04, 2021rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
An astonishing book for sure, I recommend this book to everyone who like me don't know a lot of technical words concerning philosophy. it explains everything beautifully. (less)
Patrick
Mar 28, 2012rated it liked it
Years ago, in my youth, I stole this book from a library, thinking that it might give me some great insight into the Way. Fortunately, like many other books I will one day burn, it was a stepping stone, and is a great investigation of a variety of principles concerning the Way in both Daoist and Sufist thought. 
Though I strayed over some areas, as I am now concerned primarily with finding inaccuracies within mystic traditions that promote the idea of separation or annihilation as positive, optimal or unattainable states (though I agree that such states are in a sense unattainable), in terms of analyzing and explaining the works of these three existentialist thinkers Izutsu does a good, albeit dry job. 
He really lacks a spark of life and this academic work reflects his sense of purpose, rather than a sense of awe and grandeur. So, if you are interested in starting to grasp the fundamentals of some of the aspects of eastern thought, this is a good place to start. He dissection is good, though very focused and repetitive, and as always it is not good to accept what is fed to you. I'd use this book to get a good sense of things and then go back to the primary texts themselves to interpret as you will. More or less this is a book for hardcore studiers and is full of things like being, non-being, no-non-being, absolute Absolute, and so on. Don't get bogged down. Be light like a feather on the back of the great bird DaPeng. (less)