Necessary Existence and Monotheism
An Avicennian Account of the Islamic Conception of Divine Unity
Mohammad Saleh Zarepour author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:9th Jun '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This Element defends an Avicennian account of the Islamic conception of monotheism.
The aim of the present Element is to provide a detailed discussion of Avicenna's arguments for the existence and unity of God. Through this project, the author hopes to clarify how, for Avicenna, the Islamic concept of monotheism is intertwined with the concept of essential existence.Avicenna believes that God must be understood in the first place as the Necessary Existent (wâǧib al-wuǧûd). In his various works, he provides different versions of an ingenious argument for the existence of the Necessary Existent—the so-called Proof of the Sincere (burhân al-ṣiddîqîn)—and argues that all the properties that are usually attributed to God can be extracted merely from God's having necessary existence. Considering the centrality of tawḥîd to Islam, the first thing Avicenna tries to extract from God's necessary existence is God's oneness. The aim of the present Element is to provide a detailed discussion of Avicenna's arguments for the existence and unity of God. Through this project, the author hopes to clarify how, for Avicenna, the Islamic concept of monotheism is intertwined with the concept of essential existence.
ISBN: 9781108940054
Dimensions: 228mm x 152mm x 4mm
Weight: 118g
75 pages