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==Part I The Necessary Existent==
Rationalist Islam is an epistemic-led, principle-first, and rational-empirical branch of Islam that grounds views, practices, and identity in a set of independently justified and domain-specific rational principles.


===Chapter 1. Cultural terms===
Adherents adopt “Islam” and "Muslim" as identities only after critical assessment of historical evidence suggests that Muḥammad substantially aligned with these principles. Rationalist Islam is, therefore, a continuation of the historical Muhammadan movement with the aim of maximising the wellbeing of all sentient inhabitants of the world.  


Ahura Mazda • Allāh • Aten • Baha • Brahman • 'Ēl • God • Shangdi • Unconditioned Reality • Vishnu • Waheguru • Yahweh
The guiding maxim often associated with Rationalist Islam is “Religion as movement — not monument,” emphasising an ongoing, adaptive, principle-led, evidence-based, ethically purposive project rather than static veneration and dogma.


===Chapter 2. Epistemic framework===
Proponents describe Rationalist Islam as a continuation — and internal reformulation — of the broader Near Eastern and Mediterranean “wisdom tradition,” drawing a conceptual lineage from classical philosophy (Plato, Aristotle, Plotinus), biblical and late antique sapiential currents (including the Jesus movement’s emphasis on justice and inner transformation), through Muḥammad’s proclamations, early and medieval Islamic philosophy (falsafa) and mysticism (taṣawwuf/ʿirfān), and extending into modern historical-critical and scientific methods.


====1. Logic====
==Terminology==


====2. Law of identity====
As an entailment of their commitment to intellectual accommodation and rationalist epistemology, adherents identify and describe themselves contextually — modulating terminology and self-designation according to the audience, subject matter, and communicative purpose.  


2.1 [[Law of non-contradiction]]
This adaptive self-representation arises from their understanding that linguistic forms are vehicles of understanding rather than static markers of identity. Within this framework, the use of diverse religious labels functions pedagogically: to convey the essence of truth in whichever language resonates most coherently with a given community.


2.2 [[Law of excluded middle]]
As a result, Rationalist Muslims assume a wide variety of seemingly conflicting names and employ them contextually, including:


====3. Propositions====
===Muslim===


====4. Principle of sufficient reason====
===Inner Circle Muslim===


===Chapter 3. Deductive proof===
===Shi'i===


===Chapter 4. Objections and refutations against them===
===Inner Circle Shi'i===


===Chapter 5. [[Oneness]]===  
===Red Shi'i===


====5.1 Cultural terms====
===Mystic===


Henosis • Monism • Monotheism • Nondualism • Oneness Pentecostalism • Samadhi • Tawhīd
===Rationalist Mystic===


====5.2 Epistemic framework====
===Neoplatonist===


====5.3 Deductive proof====
===Gnostic===


====5.4 Objections and refutations against them====
===Esotericist===


===Chapter 6. Necessary simplicity===
===Essentialist===


====6.1 Cultural terms====
===Akbarian===


Divine simplicity
===Twelver Shi'i===


====6.2 Epistemic framework====
===Imami===


====6.3 Deductive proof====
===Ja'fari===


==Part II Intelligible dimension==
===Khomeinist===


===Sunni===


===Salafi===


===Theist===


===Chapter 2. Existential truths (Logic)===
===Monotheist===


====2.1 Rule of one====
===Divine Simplicist===


====2.2 Gradation of existence====
===Christian===


==Cognitive dispositions==


===Chapter 3. Numbers (Number theory)===
===1. [[The Law of Identity]]===


===Chapter 4. Dimensions (Geometry)===
“whatever is, is; whatever is not, is not.


===Chapter 5. Algebraic structures (Algebra)===
Every entity or proposition is self-identical and distinct from its negation.


==Part III Intelligible contingent existents==
===2. [[The Law of Non-Contradiction]]===


===Chapter 1. Ontologically first contingent existent===
“nothing can both be and not be in the same respect.


====1. Cultural terms====
Nothing can both be and not be in the same respect.


First creation • First intellect • First light • Image of God • Imago dei • Mashīyya • Nūr Muhammadiyya • Pen • Perfect creation • Qalam • Universal intellect
===3. [[The Principle of Sufficient Reason (minimal intelligibility form)]]===


====2. Epistemic framework====
“every real state of affairs has some reason or ground.


====3. Deductive proof====
Every real state of affairs is intelligible; it has some reason, ground, or explanation for why it is rather than not, even if that reason is intrinsic.


===Chapter 2. Ontologically second contingent existent===
===4. [[Recognition of Contingency]]===


===Chapter 3. Ontologically third contingent existent===
“some things exist but could, in principle, not have existed.


===Chapter 4. Ontologically fourth contingent existent===
There exist beings whose non-existence involves no contradiction.


===Chapter 5. Ontologically fifth contingent existent===
===5. [[Denial of Vicious Circularity and Infinite Explanatory Regress]]===


===Chapter 6. Ontologically sixth contingent existent===
Explanation cannot be self-grounding or infinitely deferred; every chain of dependence must terminate in something self-sufficient.


===Chapter 7. Ontologically seventh contingent existent===
==Conative dispositions==


===Chapter 8. Ontologically eighth contingent existent===
===1. Preference for truth over comfort===


===Chapter 9. Ontologically ninth contingent existent===
===2. Desire for personal development===


===Chapter 10. Ontologically tenth contingent existent===
===3. Desire for the maximisation of global wellbeing===


==Part IV Sensible dimension==
===4. Desire to actively participate in the maximisation of global wellbeing===


===Chapter 1. Continuous change (Calculus)===
===5. Tendency for self-sacrifice===


===Chapter 2. Events (Probability theory)===
==The Rational Entailments==


===Chapter 3. Evolution (Evolutionary biology)===
From the cognitive and conative dispositions follows a series of entailments that together constitute the framework of Rationalist Islam. They are not adopted as beliefs, asserted as doctrines, or accepted by tradition, but are said to follow by necessity from the structure of reason itself.  


==Part V Sensible rational contingent perfect existents: Homo perfectus sapiens==
Each entailment represents what any rational intellect must affirm once it accepts the laws of thought and the intelligibility of being: that contingent existence requires grounding, that explanation must terminate in the self-sufficient, and that the pursuit of knowledge within each domain must proceed according to the logic appropriate to that domain. What follows, therefore, are not articles of faith but the logical unfoldings of reason — the positions that reason itself necessitates concerning existence, knowledge, and ethics.


===Chapter 1. Epistemic framework (Logic, philosophy, speculative anthropology & religion)===
Rationalist Islam proceeds on the principle that no claim is exempt from reason’s jurisdiction. Every position is derived — not asserted — by applying the Five Prior Rational Commitments. What follows is a continuous sequence of conclusions that any rational agent should grant once those priors are accepted.


===Chapter 2. Deductive proof===
===1) Metaphysical rationalism===  


===Chapter 3. Terms and usage===
===2) Foundationalism===


Imām • Infallible • Insān al-Kāmil • Ma'sūm • New Man • Perfect human • Perfect rational animal • Philosopher king • Transhuman • Übermensch
===3) Epistemic parsimony===


===Chapter 4. Objections and refutations against them===
===4) Ontological parsimony===
===5) Primacy of [[Consciousness]]===


===Chapter 5. Evolution===
===6) Analytic idealism===


===Chapter 6. Intellect===
===7) Oneness of consciousness===


====6.1 Epistemic framework====
Monism • Nondualism


====6.2 Deductive proof====
===8) Ontological priority===


====6.3 Terms and usage====
===9) Gradation of consciousness===


'Aql Nous
Gradation of existence Gradation of reality • Tashkīk al-wujūd


===Chapter 7. Information: Ungraded acquisition===
===10) Meta consciousness===


====7.1 Epistemic framework====
Ahura Mazda • Allāh • Aten • Baha • Brahman • 'Ēl • Father • God • God the father • Necessary existent • Necessary existentiator • Necessary reality • Pure consciousness • Shangdi • The divine • The One • Unconditioned reality • Vishnu • Waheguru • Wājib al-wujūd • Yahweh


====7.2 Deductive proof====
===11) Necessary simplicity===


====7.3 Terms and usage====
Al-Basāṭah al-ilāhiyyah • Divine simplicity • Monotheism • Oneness • Oneness of Allah • Oneness of God • Tawhīd


Anubhava • Enlightenment • Ilhām • Nirvana • Perfect knowledge acquisition • Revelation • Wahī
===12) Absolute necessary simplicity===


====7.4 Objections and refutations against them====
===13) Conscientiation ex conscientia===


===Chapter 8. Information: Ungraded dissemination===
Badā'a • Creatio ex deo • Origination


====8.1 Epistemic framework====  
===14) Necessitarianism===


====8.2 Deductive proof====
ʿAdl • Divine justice


====8.3 Terms and usage====
===15) Eternalism / [[Eternal Creation]]===


====8.4 Objections and refutations against them====
===16) Rule of one===


====8.5 Nominees====
===17) First conscientiate===


Bible [[Hadīths]] Qur'ān (Mushaf of 'Alī) Qur'ān ('Uthmānic codex)
First creation First intellect First light • Image of God • Imago dei • Mashīyya • Nūr Muhammadiyya • Ontologically first dependent existent • Pen • Perfect creation • Qalam Universal intellect


===Chapter 9. Information: Graded dissemination===
===18) Intermediary conscientiates===  


====9.1 Epistemic framework====
Angels • Immaterial existents • Malāʾika


====9.2 Deductive proof====
===19) Observable universe===
Cosmos • Dunyā • Material dimension • Material realm • Material world • Multiverse • Natural World • Olam HaZeh • Physical world • Sensible dimension • Sensible realm • Sensible world • Universe


====9.3 Terms and usage====
===20) B-theory of time===


Intellectual dissimulation • Taqīyya
Tenseless theory of time


====9.4 Objections and refutations against them====
===21) Compatibilism===


====9.5 Nominees====
Divine Decree • Divine Predestination • Illusion of Libertarian Free Will • Predestination • Qadar • Soft determinism


Bible • [[Hadīths]] • Qur'ān (Mushaf of 'Alī) • Qur'ān ('Uthmānic codex)
===22) Perdurantism===


===Chapter 10. Social interaction===
===23) Physical empiricism===


===Chapter 11. Diet===
Empirical method • Scientific method


===Chapter 12. Nominees===
===24) [[Mindfulness]]===


Ādam (Adam)  
Dhikr • God consciousness • Meditation • Salāh • Taqwā
 
===25) Self-cultivation===
 
===26) Superiority of intellect===
 
===27) Rational self-governance===
 
===28) Mysticism===
 
'Ibādah • Islām • Servitude • Submission • Worship
 
===29) Prayer===
 
Ṣalāh
 
===30) Fasting===
 
Ṣawm
 
===31) Charity===
 
Almsgiving • Zakāh
 
===32) Pilgrimage===
 
Ḥajj
 
===33) [[Resistance]]===
 
Discipline • Exertion • Fighting • Jihād • Striving • Struggle
 
===34) Heightened consciousness===
 
Altered state of consciousness • Anubhava • Enlightenment • Henosis • Ilhām • Nirvana • Noetic mystical experience • Nubuwwah • Perfect knowledge acquisition • Prophethood • Samadhi • Revelation • Wahī
 
===35) Gradation of Intellect===
 
Cognitive heterogeneity
 
===36) [[Local cultivation]]===
 
Messengership • Risālah
===37) Global cultivation / [[Maximisation of Personal & Global Wellbeing (Constrained)]]===


Idrīs (Enoch or Hermes Trismegistus)
===38) Noocracy===


Nūḥ (Noah)
Imāmah • Perfect manhood • Philosopher kingship • Technocracy


Hūd
===39) [[Philosopher King]]===
Ṣāliḥ
Ibrāhīm (Abraham)  


Lūṭ (Lot)
Demigod • High-Conscious Individual • High-Integration Individual • Hujjah • Imām • Infallible • Insān al-Kāmil • Insān ‘alā Khuluqin ‘Adhīm • Integrate • Ma'sūm • Messenger • Meta-Conscious Agent • Nabī • New Man • Perfect human • Perfect rational animal • Philosopher king • Prophet • Rasūl • Transhuman • Übermensch


Ismā'īl (Ishmael)
===40) Intellectual Accommodation===


Isḥāq (Isaac)
Tawriyyah


Ya'qūb (Jacob)
===41) Intellectual Dissimulation===


Yūsuf (Joseph)
Taqīyyah


Ayyūb (Job)
===42) Cognitive reframing===


Shu'ayb
===43) Motifs and Imagery===
Mūsā (Moses)


Hārūn (Aaron)
Motifs—light, ascent, circle, garden, path—translate abstract truths into memorable forms that shape imagination and action. Repetition builds identity; symbol stabilises norms.


Dāūd (David)
===44) Mythos for Most===


Sulaymān (Solomon)
Symbol and story teach where proof cannot yet reach. Properly used, mythos is not falsehood but imaginal pedagogy—true content rendered in forms accessible to typical abstraction bandwidths. It is accommodation at scale.


Ilyās (Elijah)
===45) Repurposing Myths and Legends===


Alyasa' (Elisha)
Existing cultural materials can be redeemed: stripped of false metaphysics, rekeyed to the Necessary Existent and rational ethics, and redeployed for formation. Continuity with correction preserves social capital while elevating understanding.


Yūnus (Jonah)
===46) Metanarratives===


Ḏū l-Kifli (Ezekiel, Isaiah, Obadiah or Buddha)
Human agents reason within stories. A metanarrative integrates metaphysics, ethics, and destiny into an intelligible arc that motivates virtue and sacrifice. Without a shared narrative, social coordination and long-range projects degrade.


Zakariyyā (Zechariah)
===47) Religion===


Yaḥyā (John the Baptist)
===48) Religious beliefs===


Maryam (Mary)
Arkān al-īmān • Pillars of faith • 'Uṣūl al-dīn


'Īsā (Jesus)
===49) Religious laws===


Abū Tālib
Branches of religion • Furūʿ al-dīn • Pillars of practice


Muḥammad
===50) Need for Dogma===


'Alī ibn Abī Tālib
“Dogma” means publicly fixed minima of right belief and practice that coordinate a civilisation. It protects the many from costly error while leaving upper tiers open to demonstration and qualified debate. Dogma is not a substitute for truth; it is a civic guardrail toward it.


Fātimah al-Zahrā
===51) Confessional identity===


Hasan ibn 'Alī
Shahāda • Testimony of Faith


Husayn ibn 'Alī
===51) Need to Encourage and Control Behaviour===


'Alī al-Sajjād
Where demonstration alone will not move median behaviour, law, institutions, incentives, and norms are rational instruments to align action with the good. This is an application of PSR to collective life: effects follow causes; therefore, design the causes.


Muhammad al-Bāqir
===Hagiography===


Ja'far al-Sādiq
Apotheosis • Deification • Divinisation • [[Ghulāt]] / Ghuluw • Heroisation • Legendary accretion • Mythicisation • Myth-making • Mythologisation • Mythopoeia • Sacralisation • Tawallā


Mūsa al-Kādhim
===Heresiography===


'Alī al-Ridā
Tabarrā


Muhammad al-Jawād
==Timeline==


'Alī al-Hādī
===Classical antiquity===


Hasan al-'Askarī
Socrates holds dialogues


Muhammad al-Mahdī
'''399 BCE, Athens, Greece'''
<br />
Socrates is executed by poison


==Part VI Sensible rational contingent imperfect existents: Homo sapiens==
'''c. 387 BCE, Athens, Greece'''
<br />
Plato founds the Academy


===Chapter 1. Epistemic framework (Anthropology)===
'''c. 387 - ? BCE, Athens, Greece'''
<br />
Plato conceives Theory of Ideas
<br />
Plato conceives Theory of Soul
<br />
Plato conceives Form of the Good
<br />
Plato conceives Allegory of the Cave
<br />
Plato conceives The Philosopher King
<br />
Plato conceives The Noble Lie


===Chapter 2. Inductive evidence===
'''335 BCE, Athens, Greece'''
<br />
Aristotle founds the Lyceum


===Chapter 3. Terms and usage===
'''335 BCE - ?, Athens, Greece'''
<br />
Aristotle conceives formal logic


Human • Imperfect human • Imperfect rational animal • Insān
'''c. 27 CE, Jerusalem, Roman Judea (modern Occupied Palestine)'''
<br />
[[Jesus]] begins noocratic revolution


===Chapter 4. [[Mindfulness]]===
'''c. 30 CE, Jerusalem, Roman Judea (modern Occupied Palestine)'''
<br />
Jesus is demonised by Jewish ethnocratic propaganda
<br />
Jesus is executed by Roman timocratic crucifixion


====4.1 Epistemic framework====
===Late antiquity===


====4.2 Inductive evidence====
'''c. 245–270 CE, Rome, Roman Empire (modern Italy)'''
<br />
Plotinus conceives The One
<br />
Plotinus conceives Emanation by the One
<br />
Plotinus establishes Neoplatonism
<br />
Proclus popularises Platonism


====4.3. Terms and usage====
Pseudo-Dionysius symbolises Neoplatonism


Dhikr • God consciousness • Meditation • Salāh • Taqwā
'''610 CE, Mecca, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
[[Muḥammad]] begins noocratic revolution
 
'''622 CE, Medina, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
Muḥammad establishes noocratic revolution


===Chapter 5. [[Self-affirmation]]===
'''632 CE, Medina, First Islamic state (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
Muḥammad dies in suspicious circumstances
<br />
Abu Bakr restores clanocracy
<br />
[[Ali]] begins noocratic revolution 


===Chapter 6. [[Mental health]]===
'''656 CE, Medina, Rashidun Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
'Uthmān ibn 'Affān is assassinated by sword


===Chapter 7. [[Physical health]]===
'''656 CE, Medina, Rashidun Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
ʿAlī establishes noocratic revolution 


===Chapter 8. [[Hygiene]]===
'''661 CE, Kufa, Rashidun Caliphate (modern Iraq)'''
<br />
ʿAlī is assassinated by kratocratic sword
<br />
Hasan ibn ʿAlī protects noocratic revolution
<br />
Hasan ibn ʿAlī is assassinated by poison
<br />
Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī begins noocratic revolution


====8.1 [[Female hygiene]]====
'''680 CE, Karbala, Umayyad Caliphate (modern Iraq)'''
<br />
Husayn ibn ʿAlī is assassinated by clanocratic sword


====8.2 [[Male hygiene]]====
'''732 CE, Medina, Umayyad Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq begins noocratic revolution


===Chapter 9. [[Fasting]]===
'''765 CE, Medina, Abbasid Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq is assassinated by clanocratic poison


===Chapter 10. [[Nutrition]]===
===Islamic Golden Age===


===Chapter 11. [[Personal finance]]===
'''c. 820 - 870 CE, Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate (modern Iraq)'''
<br />
al-Kindī


===Chapter 12. [[Philanthropy]]===
'''c. 940 – 1060 CE, Basra, Iraq'''
<br />
Brethren of Purity hold secret meetings


===Chapter 13. [[Homo sapiens reproduction|Reproduction]]===
'''c. 950 CE, Damascus, Ikhshidid Syria (modern Syria)'''
<br />
al-Fārābī islamicises Neoplatonism


===Chapter 14. [[Death]]===
'''980 – 1037 CE, from Bukhara, Samanid Transoxiana (modern Uzbekistan) to Hamadan, Medieval Persia (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
<br />
Ibn Sīnā conceives Proof of the Truthful


===Chapter 15. [[Burial]]===
'''c. 1186 CE, Aleppo, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)'''
<br />
Shihab al-Din Yahya ibn Habash Suhrawardi conceives Illuminationism


===Chapter 16. [[Inheritance]]===
'''c. 1191 CE, Aleppo, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)'''
<br />
Shihab al-Din Yahya ibn Habash Suhrawardi is executed by familiocratic violence


==Part VII Sensible rational contingent imperfect existents: Homo erectus==
'''c. 1200–1240 CE, Mecca, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia) and Damascus, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)'''
<br />
Ibn ʿArabī conceives Unity of Existence


==Part VIII Sensible rational contingent imperfect existents: Homo habilis==
'''c. 1220 - 1270 CE, Maragha, Medieval Persia'''
<br />
Naṣīr al-Dīn al-Ṭūsī synthesises mysticism and science


==Part IX Sensible rational contingent imperfect existents: Australopithecus==
===Gunpowder Age===


==Part X Sensible non-rational contingent existents==
Mīr Dāmād conceives atemporal origination


===Chapter 1. Animal (Zoology)===
Mulla Sadrā conceives Transcendent Theosophy


===Chapter 2. Plant (Botany)===
===Oil Age===


===Chapter 3. Organism (Biology)===
Muhammad Husayn Ṭabāṭabāʾī establishes intra-Qur’ānic exegesis


===Chapter 4. Organ (Biology)===
Morteza Motahhari co-founds the Combatant Clergy Association


===Chapter 5. Tissue (Biology)===
Morteza Motahhari is assassinated by Iranian seculocratic gunfire


===Chapter 6. Cell (Biology)===
Ali Shariati writes Red Shi'sm vs. Black Shi'ism


===Chapter 7. Organelle (Biology)===
Ali Shariati dies in suspicious circumstances


===Chapter 8. Mineral (Mineralogy)===
===Information Age===


===Chapter 9. Molecule (Chemistry)===
'''c. 1940, Qom, Pahlavi Iran (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
<br />
[[Ruhollah Khomeini]] begins noocratic revolution


====9.1 Homonuclear molecule====
'''1979, Tehran, Post-Pahlavi Iran (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
====9.2 Heteronuclear molecule====
<br />
Ruhollah Khomeini establishes noocratic revolution


===Chapter 10. Atom (Atomic physics)===
'''c. 1979, Beqaa, Lebanon'''
<br />
[[Hassan Nasrallah]] begins noocratic revolution


===Chapter 11. Atomic nucleus (Nuclear physics)===
'''1989, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran'''
<br />
Ruhollah Khomeini dies
<br />
[[Ali Khamenei]] protects noocratic revolution


===Chapter 12. Subatomic particle (Quantum mechanics)===
'''2024, Dahieh, Lebanon'''
<br />
Hassan Nasrallah is assassinated by Jewish ethnocratic airstrike


===Chapter 13. Quantum field (Theoretical physics)===
'''2026, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran'''
<br />
Ali Khamenei is assassinated by American plutocratic & Jewish ethnocratic airstrikes

Latest revision as of 22:52, 4 April 2026

Rationalist Islam is an epistemic-led, principle-first, and rational-empirical branch of Islam that grounds views, practices, and identity in a set of independently justified and domain-specific rational principles.

Adherents adopt “Islam” and "Muslim" as identities only after critical assessment of historical evidence suggests that Muḥammad substantially aligned with these principles. Rationalist Islam is, therefore, a continuation of the historical Muhammadan movement with the aim of maximising the wellbeing of all sentient inhabitants of the world.

The guiding maxim often associated with Rationalist Islam is “Religion as movement — not monument,” emphasising an ongoing, adaptive, principle-led, evidence-based, ethically purposive project rather than static veneration and dogma.

Proponents describe Rationalist Islam as a continuation — and internal reformulation — of the broader Near Eastern and Mediterranean “wisdom tradition,” drawing a conceptual lineage from classical philosophy (Plato, Aristotle, Plotinus), biblical and late antique sapiential currents (including the Jesus movement’s emphasis on justice and inner transformation), through Muḥammad’s proclamations, early and medieval Islamic philosophy (falsafa) and mysticism (taṣawwuf/ʿirfān), and extending into modern historical-critical and scientific methods.

Terminology

As an entailment of their commitment to intellectual accommodation and rationalist epistemology, adherents identify and describe themselves contextually — modulating terminology and self-designation according to the audience, subject matter, and communicative purpose.

This adaptive self-representation arises from their understanding that linguistic forms are vehicles of understanding rather than static markers of identity. Within this framework, the use of diverse religious labels functions pedagogically: to convey the essence of truth in whichever language resonates most coherently with a given community.

As a result, Rationalist Muslims assume a wide variety of seemingly conflicting names and employ them contextually, including:

Muslim

Inner Circle Muslim

Shi'i

Inner Circle Shi'i

Red Shi'i

Mystic

Rationalist Mystic

Neoplatonist

Gnostic

Esotericist

Essentialist

Akbarian

Twelver Shi'i

Imami

Ja'fari

Khomeinist

Sunni

Salafi

Theist

Monotheist

Divine Simplicist

Christian

Cognitive dispositions

“whatever is, is; whatever is not, is not.”

Every entity or proposition is self-identical and distinct from its negation.

“nothing can both be and not be in the same respect.”

Nothing can both be and not be in the same respect.

“every real state of affairs has some reason or ground.”

Every real state of affairs is intelligible; it has some reason, ground, or explanation for why it is rather than not, even if that reason is intrinsic.

“some things exist but could, in principle, not have existed.”

There exist beings whose non-existence involves no contradiction.

Explanation cannot be self-grounding or infinitely deferred; every chain of dependence must terminate in something self-sufficient.

Conative dispositions

1. Preference for truth over comfort

2. Desire for personal development

3. Desire for the maximisation of global wellbeing

4. Desire to actively participate in the maximisation of global wellbeing

5. Tendency for self-sacrifice

The Rational Entailments

From the cognitive and conative dispositions follows a series of entailments that together constitute the framework of Rationalist Islam. They are not adopted as beliefs, asserted as doctrines, or accepted by tradition, but are said to follow by necessity from the structure of reason itself.

Each entailment represents what any rational intellect must affirm once it accepts the laws of thought and the intelligibility of being: that contingent existence requires grounding, that explanation must terminate in the self-sufficient, and that the pursuit of knowledge within each domain must proceed according to the logic appropriate to that domain. What follows, therefore, are not articles of faith but the logical unfoldings of reason — the positions that reason itself necessitates concerning existence, knowledge, and ethics.

Rationalist Islam proceeds on the principle that no claim is exempt from reason’s jurisdiction. Every position is derived — not asserted — by applying the Five Prior Rational Commitments. What follows is a continuous sequence of conclusions that any rational agent should grant once those priors are accepted.

1) Metaphysical rationalism

2) Foundationalism

3) Epistemic parsimony

4) Ontological parsimony

5) Primacy of Consciousness

6) Analytic idealism

7) Oneness of consciousness

Monism • Nondualism

8) Ontological priority

9) Gradation of consciousness

Gradation of existence • Gradation of reality • Tashkīk al-wujūd

10) Meta consciousness

Ahura Mazda • Allāh • Aten • Baha • Brahman • 'Ēl • Father • God • God the father • Necessary existent • Necessary existentiator • Necessary reality • Pure consciousness • Shangdi • The divine • The One • Unconditioned reality • Vishnu • Waheguru • Wājib al-wujūd • Yahweh

11) Necessary simplicity

Al-Basāṭah al-ilāhiyyah • Divine simplicity • Monotheism • Oneness • Oneness of Allah • Oneness of God • Tawhīd

12) Absolute necessary simplicity

13) Conscientiation ex conscientia

Badā'a • Creatio ex deo • Origination

14) Necessitarianism

ʿAdl • Divine justice

15) Eternalism / Eternal Creation

16) Rule of one

17) First conscientiate

First creation • First intellect • First light • Image of God • Imago dei • Mashīyya • Nūr Muhammadiyya • Ontologically first dependent existent • Pen • Perfect creation • Qalam • Universal intellect

18) Intermediary conscientiates

Angels • Immaterial existents • Malāʾika

19) Observable universe

Cosmos • Dunyā • Material dimension • Material realm • Material world • Multiverse • Natural World • Olam HaZeh • Physical world • Sensible dimension • Sensible realm • Sensible world • Universe

20) B-theory of time

Tenseless theory of time

21) Compatibilism

Divine Decree • Divine Predestination • Illusion of Libertarian Free Will • Predestination • Qadar • Soft determinism

22) Perdurantism

23) Physical empiricism

Empirical method • Scientific method

Dhikr • God consciousness • Meditation • Salāh • Taqwā

25) Self-cultivation

26) Superiority of intellect

27) Rational self-governance

28) Mysticism

'Ibādah • Islām • Servitude • Submission • Worship

29) Prayer

Ṣalāh

30) Fasting

Ṣawm

31) Charity

Almsgiving • Zakāh

32) Pilgrimage

Ḥajj

Discipline • Exertion • Fighting • Jihād • Striving • Struggle

34) Heightened consciousness

Altered state of consciousness • Anubhava • Enlightenment • Henosis • Ilhām • Nirvana • Noetic mystical experience • Nubuwwah • Perfect knowledge acquisition • Prophethood • Samadhi • Revelation • Wahī

35) Gradation of Intellect

Cognitive heterogeneity

Messengership • Risālah

38) Noocracy

Imāmah • Perfect manhood • Philosopher kingship • Technocracy

Demigod • High-Conscious Individual • High-Integration Individual • Hujjah • Imām • Infallible • Insān al-Kāmil • Insān ‘alā Khuluqin ‘Adhīm • Integrate • Ma'sūm • Messenger • Meta-Conscious Agent • Nabī • New Man • Perfect human • Perfect rational animal • Philosopher king • Prophet • Rasūl • Transhuman • Übermensch

40) Intellectual Accommodation

Tawriyyah

41) Intellectual Dissimulation

Taqīyyah

42) Cognitive reframing

43) Motifs and Imagery

Motifs—light, ascent, circle, garden, path—translate abstract truths into memorable forms that shape imagination and action. Repetition builds identity; symbol stabilises norms.

44) Mythos for Most

Symbol and story teach where proof cannot yet reach. Properly used, mythos is not falsehood but imaginal pedagogy—true content rendered in forms accessible to typical abstraction bandwidths. It is accommodation at scale.

45) Repurposing Myths and Legends

Existing cultural materials can be redeemed: stripped of false metaphysics, rekeyed to the Necessary Existent and rational ethics, and redeployed for formation. Continuity with correction preserves social capital while elevating understanding.

46) Metanarratives

Human agents reason within stories. A metanarrative integrates metaphysics, ethics, and destiny into an intelligible arc that motivates virtue and sacrifice. Without a shared narrative, social coordination and long-range projects degrade.

47) Religion

48) Religious beliefs

Arkān al-īmān • Pillars of faith • 'Uṣūl al-dīn

49) Religious laws

Branches of religion • Furūʿ al-dīn • Pillars of practice

50) Need for Dogma

“Dogma” means publicly fixed minima of right belief and practice that coordinate a civilisation. It protects the many from costly error while leaving upper tiers open to demonstration and qualified debate. Dogma is not a substitute for truth; it is a civic guardrail toward it.

51) Confessional identity

Shahāda • Testimony of Faith

51) Need to Encourage and Control Behaviour

Where demonstration alone will not move median behaviour, law, institutions, incentives, and norms are rational instruments to align action with the good. This is an application of PSR to collective life: effects follow causes; therefore, design the causes.

Hagiography

Apotheosis • Deification • Divinisation • Ghulāt / Ghuluw • Heroisation • Legendary accretion • Mythicisation • Myth-making • Mythologisation • Mythopoeia • Sacralisation • Tawallā

Heresiography

Tabarrā

Timeline

Classical antiquity

Socrates holds dialogues

399 BCE, Athens, Greece
Socrates is executed by poison

c. 387 BCE, Athens, Greece
Plato founds the Academy

c. 387 - ? BCE, Athens, Greece
Plato conceives Theory of Ideas
Plato conceives Theory of Soul
Plato conceives Form of the Good
Plato conceives Allegory of the Cave
Plato conceives The Philosopher King
Plato conceives The Noble Lie

335 BCE, Athens, Greece
Aristotle founds the Lyceum

335 BCE - ?, Athens, Greece
Aristotle conceives formal logic

c. 27 CE, Jerusalem, Roman Judea (modern Occupied Palestine)
Jesus begins noocratic revolution

c. 30 CE, Jerusalem, Roman Judea (modern Occupied Palestine)
Jesus is demonised by Jewish ethnocratic propaganda
Jesus is executed by Roman timocratic crucifixion

Late antiquity

c. 245–270 CE, Rome, Roman Empire (modern Italy)
Plotinus conceives The One
Plotinus conceives Emanation by the One
Plotinus establishes Neoplatonism
Proclus popularises Platonism

Pseudo-Dionysius symbolises Neoplatonism

610 CE, Mecca, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia)
Muḥammad begins noocratic revolution

622 CE, Medina, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia)
Muḥammad establishes noocratic revolution

632 CE, Medina, First Islamic state (modern Saudi Arabia)
Muḥammad dies in suspicious circumstances
Abu Bakr restores clanocracy
Ali begins noocratic revolution

656 CE, Medina, Rashidun Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)
'Uthmān ibn 'Affān is assassinated by sword

656 CE, Medina, Rashidun Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)
ʿAlī establishes noocratic revolution

661 CE, Kufa, Rashidun Caliphate (modern Iraq)
ʿAlī is assassinated by kratocratic sword
Hasan ibn ʿAlī protects noocratic revolution
Hasan ibn ʿAlī is assassinated by poison
Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī begins noocratic revolution

680 CE, Karbala, Umayyad Caliphate (modern Iraq)
Husayn ibn ʿAlī is assassinated by clanocratic sword

732 CE, Medina, Umayyad Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)
Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq begins noocratic revolution

765 CE, Medina, Abbasid Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)
Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq is assassinated by clanocratic poison

Islamic Golden Age

c. 820 - 870 CE, Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate (modern Iraq)
al-Kindī

c. 940 – 1060 CE, Basra, Iraq
Brethren of Purity hold secret meetings

c. 950 CE, Damascus, Ikhshidid Syria (modern Syria)
al-Fārābī islamicises Neoplatonism

980 – 1037 CE, from Bukhara, Samanid Transoxiana (modern Uzbekistan) to Hamadan, Medieval Persia (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)
Ibn Sīnā conceives Proof of the Truthful

c. 1186 CE, Aleppo, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)
Shihab al-Din Yahya ibn Habash Suhrawardi conceives Illuminationism

c. 1191 CE, Aleppo, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)
Shihab al-Din Yahya ibn Habash Suhrawardi is executed by familiocratic violence

c. 1200–1240 CE, Mecca, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia) and Damascus, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)
Ibn ʿArabī conceives Unity of Existence

c. 1220 - 1270 CE, Maragha, Medieval Persia
Naṣīr al-Dīn al-Ṭūsī synthesises mysticism and science

Gunpowder Age

Mīr Dāmād conceives atemporal origination

Mulla Sadrā conceives Transcendent Theosophy

Oil Age

Muhammad Husayn Ṭabāṭabāʾī establishes intra-Qur’ānic exegesis

Morteza Motahhari co-founds the Combatant Clergy Association

Morteza Motahhari is assassinated by Iranian seculocratic gunfire

Ali Shariati writes Red Shi'sm vs. Black Shi'ism

Ali Shariati dies in suspicious circumstances

Information Age

c. 1940, Qom, Pahlavi Iran (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)
Ruhollah Khomeini begins noocratic revolution

1979, Tehran, Post-Pahlavi Iran (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)
Ruhollah Khomeini establishes noocratic revolution

c. 1979, Beqaa, Lebanon
Hassan Nasrallah begins noocratic revolution

1989, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Ruhollah Khomeini dies
Ali Khamenei protects noocratic revolution

2024, Dahieh, Lebanon
Hassan Nasrallah is assassinated by Jewish ethnocratic airstrike

2026, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Ali Khamenei is assassinated by American plutocratic & Jewish ethnocratic airstrikes