{"title":"امام غزالی اور سلسلہ علت و معلول کی حقیقت","authors":"Muhammad Zahid Siddique","doi":"10.52541/fn.v59i1.2003","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The issue of causality remained one of the heatedly debated issues in the early centuries of Islam. The fundamental question faced by Muslim theologians was whether cause and effect havea self-sustained relationship or each event in the universe is continuously governed by the Will of God? If the former is the case, then how are miracles possible? If latter, why do we observe regularity in events? The impossibility of miracles could not be accommodated by Muslim theologians because miraclesareregarded as one of the primary means of establishing the truth of prophethood. This article explains the critique levelled by Abū Ḥāmid al-Ghazālī in his famous book Tahāfut al Falāsifah on the position of Muslim philosophers about causality. Al-Ghazālī’s primary concern was to show that the cause-and-effect relationship is neither necessary nor sufficient; what we call “cause-and-effect relationship” is an opinion based on the observation of one event happening after the other. In his opinion, we never observe “cause,” rather we only observe two events. In recent past, some Muslim thinkers have accused al-Ghazālī of diverting Muslims away from scientific endeavour by criticising the principle of causality. Others confused al-Ghazālī’s critique of causality with David Hume’sposition. The article attemptsto bring forth the flaws behind these views.","PeriodicalId":159571,"journal":{"name":"FIKR-O NAZAR فکر ونظر","volume":"10 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-09-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"FIKR-O NAZAR فکر ونظر","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.52541/fn.v59i1.2003","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The issue of causality remained one of the heatedly debated issues in the early centuries of Islam. The fundamental question faced by Muslim theologians was whether cause and effect havea self-sustained relationship or each event in the universe is continuously governed by the Will of God? If the former is the case, then how are miracles possible? If latter, why do we observe regularity in events? The impossibility of miracles could not be accommodated by Muslim theologians because miraclesareregarded as one of the primary means of establishing the truth of prophethood. This article explains the critique levelled by Abū Ḥāmid al-Ghazālī in his famous book Tahāfut al Falāsifah on the position of Muslim philosophers about causality. Al-Ghazālī’s primary concern was to show that the cause-and-effect relationship is neither necessary nor sufficient; what we call “cause-and-effect relationship” is an opinion based on the observation of one event happening after the other. In his opinion, we never observe “cause,” rather we only observe two events. In recent past, some Muslim thinkers have accused al-Ghazālī of diverting Muslims away from scientific endeavour by criticising the principle of causality. Others confused al-Ghazālī’s critique of causality with David Hume’sposition. The article attemptsto bring forth the flaws behind these views.
在伊斯兰教早期的几个世纪里,因果关系问题一直是激烈争论的问题之一。穆斯林神学家面临的根本问题是,因果关系是自我维持的,还是宇宙中的每一个事件都是由上帝的意志持续支配的?如果是前者,那么奇迹怎么可能发生呢?如果是后者,为什么我们观察到事件的规律性?穆斯林神学家无法接受奇迹的不可能性,因为奇迹被视为确立先知身份真实性的主要手段之一。这篇文章解释了abyiḤāmid al-Ghazālī在他的著名著作Tahāfut al Falāsifah中对穆斯林哲学家关于因果关系的立场所提出的批评。Al-Ghazālī的主要关注点是证明因果关系既非必要也非充分;我们所说的“因果关系”是基于对一个事件发生后另一个事件的观察得出的观点。在他看来,我们从不观察“原因”,而只观察两个事件。在最近的过去,一些穆斯林思想家指责al-Ghazālī通过批评因果关系原则转移了穆斯林对科学研究的兴趣。其他人将al-Ghazālī对因果关系的批判与大卫·休谟的立场混为一谈。本文试图揭示这些观点背后的缺陷。