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===14) Necessitarianism===
===14) Necessitarianism===
ʿAdl • Divine justice


===15) Eternalism / [[Eternal Creation]]===
===15) Eternalism / [[Eternal Creation]]===
Line 177: Line 179:
Empirical method • Scientific method  
Empirical method • Scientific method  


===24) Superiority of intellect===
===24) [[Mindfulness]]===


===23) Actualising personal potential===
Dhikr • God consciousness • Meditation • Salāh • Taqwā


'Ibādah • Islām • Servitude • Submission • Worship
===25) Self-cultivation===


===24) Actualisation of potential===
===26) Superiority of intellect===


Anubhava • Enlightenment • Henosis • Ilhām • Nirvana • Nubuwwah • Perfect knowledge acquisition • Prophethood • Samadhi • Revelation • Wahī
===27) Rational self-governance===


===25) Actualising regional potential===
===28) Mysticism===


Messengership Risālah
'Ibādah Islām • Servitude • Submission • Worship
===26) Actualising global potential / [[Maximisation of Personal & Global Wellbeing (Constrained)]]====


If value is not to be brute, it must answer to intelligible reasons. The minimal cross-cultural denominator is sentient wellbeing: gradients of suffering and flourishing, plus the capabilities that realise rational goods (knowledge, friendship, beauty, virtue). Metrics must be public, evidence-based, and revisable.
===29) Prayer===


Reason universalises: like cases deserve like consideration. Moral concern extends to all sentient beings, with degrees of obligation modulated by relational ties, reciprocity, and social roles. Species membership alone is not a rationally basic boundary.
Ṣalāh


Given universal concern and PSR, ethics aims at maximising net wellbeing over appropriate horizons, constrained by justice, rights, trust, and long-run stability. Deontic rules function as structural safeguards that, justified by experience and game-theoretic insight, protect aggregate flourishing from short-sighted optimising.
===30) Fasting===


===26) Gradation of Intellect===
Ṣawm


Pedagogy, Society, and Rule
===31) Charity===


As being is graded, intellectual capacities vary across attention, abstraction, integration, and moral prudence. This variance is descriptive, not pejorative, and it predicts differential receptivity to demonstration, dialectic, and rhetoric.
Almsgiving • Zakāh


Inevitability of Intellectual Hierarchy
===32) Pilgrimage===


Because capacities and responsibilities differ, functions stratify in any complex society: research, judgment, instruction, execution. Properly construed, hierarchy is ordered service to the common good, not domination.
Ḥajj


Divine Scriptures
===33) [[Resistance]]===


The “Books of God” (kutub Allāh) are interpreted as moments of revelation — epistemic apprehensions of divine truth by human consciousness. Revelation, in this view, is not linguistic dictation but intellectual illumination: the human mind’s reception of eternal truths refracted through its historical, linguistic, and psychological contingencies. Each scripture — Torah, Psalms, Gospel, and Qur’an — represents a theophany (tajallī) of the same divine logos expressed in the idiom of a particular community and epoch. Universal revelations express perennial metaphysical truths; particular ones address contextual, socio-moral arrangements. Thus, the diversity of scriptures is the necessary pluralisation of the One Truth within time and language.
Discipline • Exertion • Fighting • Jihād • Striving • Struggle


===27) Noocracy===  
===34) Heightened consciousness===


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


The ideal governor unites wisdom (ends) and techne (means), is accountable to demonstrable truth, and orders institutions to the common good. Historical forms vary (council, imamate, constitutional technocracy), but the rational principle is stable: competence guided by virtue under intelligible law.
===35) Gradation of Intellect===


Imamate signifies the perpetuation of divine guidance through intellectual continuity rather than genealogical descent. The imām is the bearer of ʿaql mustafād—the fully actualised intellect that mediates between transcendent truth and communal life. In rationalist terms, the Imamate represents the principle of intellectual succession: the necessity that wisdom, once disclosed, be continuously embodied in minds capable of sustaining and interpreting it.
Cognitive heterogeneity


===28) [[Philosopher King]]===
===36) [[Local cultivation]]===


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
Messengership Risālah
===37) Global cultivation / [[Maximisation of Personal & Global Wellbeing (Constrained)]]===


===38) Noocracy===


Prophethood (nubuwwa) denotes the emergence of consciousnesses capable of receiving and articulating revelatory truths. Prophets are loci of intensified noetic awareness through whom divine wisdom becomes existentially and socially operative.
Imāmah • Perfect manhood • Philosopher kingship • Technocracy


Muhammad is affirmed as the Seal of Prophethood (khātam al-nabiyyīn) with respect to the specific historical-cultural dispensation of late antiquity — i.e., the terminal synthesis of the Abrahamic prophetic cycle within the Arabian milieu. However, the rationalist view recognises the logical possibility of analogous prophetic functions in other spatio-temporal contexts; Mani, the Buddha, or Socrates, for instance, may be regarded as prior or parallel manifestations of the same revelatory continuum. Prophethood thus designates not an exclusive office but a metaphysical function within the evolution of consciousness — each prophet serving as a node through which universal wisdom (ḥikma) becomes historically embodied.
===39) [[Philosopher King]]===


====Nubuwwa (Prophethood)====
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
Prophets are higher modes of consciousness through which divine intellect becomes articulated in human history. Their distinction lies not in supernatural interruption but in perfected receptivity to truth. Prophetic communication is the linguistic and cultural crystallisation of universal wisdom within a particular civilisational horizon.


===40) Intellectual Accommodation===


Tawriyyah


===41) Intellectual Dissimulation===


====19) Intellectual Accommodation====
Taqīyyah


Teaching must fit the receiver’s form. The same truth can (and should) be delivered as proof for the few, argument for the many, and symbol for beginners. This is responsible communication, not dilution.
===42) Cognitive reframing===


====20) Intellectual Dissimulation (Strict Sense)====
===43) Motifs and Imagery===


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


“Dissimulation” here means strategic reserve: withholding advanced material where foreseeable misinterpretation would harm. It is stewardship of truth under PSR (avoid predictable epistemic damage), not licence for deceit.
===44) Mythos for Most===
 
====Cognitive reframing====
 
====21) 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.
 
====22) 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.
 
====23) 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.
 
====24) 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.
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.


====25) Motifs and Imagery====
===45) Repurposing Myths and Legends===
 
Motifs—light, ascent, circle, garden, path—translate abstract truths into memorable forms that shape imagination and action. Repetition builds identity; symbol stabilises norms.
 
====26) 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.
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.


Rationalist Muslims argue the sequence above is not a miscellany. It is a chain: from the Five Priors to necessary existence; from necessity to simplicity and unity; from unity to graded multiplicity; from there to time, mind, world, method; then to value, pedagogy, and governance. Each conclusion answers a demand issued by the commitments at the start, leaving no step as a brute assertion. In this sense, Rationalist Islam is not a set of optional beliefs but a worked-out map of what reason itself necessitates about being, knowing, living, and ordering a common life.
===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.


====Shahāda (Testimony of Faith)====
===47) Religion===
The declaration lā ilāha illā Allāh, Muḥammad rasūl Allāh signifies not mere confessional identity but ontological recognition: “No reality exists but the Real, and the human intellect (exemplified in Muḥammad) is its messenger.” The Shahāda thus encapsulates the metaphysical and epistemic unity of existence and intellect.


Pillars of Faith (Arkān al-Īmān)
===48) Religious beliefs===
Uṣūl al-Dīn


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


Furūʿ al-Dīn (Branches of Religion)
===49) Religious laws===
Sunni Arkān al-Islām (Pillars of Practice)


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


The furūʿ are ethical-ritual expressions of metaphysical truths. Each act symbolises and cultivates an inner disposition aligned with the ontological order.
===50) Need for Dogma===


====Ṣalāt (Prayer)====
“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.
The rhythmic realignment of the self with the Ground of Being; a phenomenological exercise in returning to presence (ḥuḍūr).


====Ṣawm (Fasting)====
===51) Confessional identity===
The voluntary suspension of lower appetites to reassert primacy of the intellective over the corporeal.


====Zakāt (Almsgiving)====
Shahāda • Testimony of Faith
The recognition that material differentiation is accidental; redistribution manifests the unity of the collective soul.


====Ḥajj (Pilgrimage)====
===51) Need to Encourage and Control Behaviour===
An enacted cosmology: the circumambulation of the One by the many, signifying the soul’s return to its origin.


====Jihād (Striving)====
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.
Primarily the inner struggle against ignorance and delusion; outward struggle is justifiable only as the defence of conditions for intellectual and moral flourishing.
 
====Khums (One-Fifth Levy)====
The rational expression of distributive justice: a mechanism for the cyclical purification of surplus wealth, preventing the concentration of material power that distorts moral and intellectual equilibrium. In its essence, khums signifies the return of excess to the collective whole from which all sustenance arises.
 
====Amr bi’l-Maʿrūf & Nahy ʿan al-Munkar====
The rational imperative to promote virtue and restrain vice; not coercion, but moral pedagogy rooted in intellectual hierarchy.
 
====Tawallā & Tabarrā====
Symbolic of epistemic allegiance and disassociation: attachment to truth and detachment from falsehood, understood ontologically rather than tribally.
 
Thus, the furūʿ become modes of ethical cultivation, each a symbolic pedagogy for the soul’s ascent through the gradations of being.
 
 
 
 
====Ṣalāt (Prayer)====
Interpreted as the rhythmic unification of consciousness with the Real; its temporal structure symbolises the cyclical return of multiplicity to unity.
 
====Zakāt (Almsgiving)====
Represents the ontological interdependence of all beings; to give is to acknowledge that possession is a contingent differentiation within a unified field of existence.
 
====Ṣawm (Fasting during Ramaḍān)====
An exercise in epistemic purification: by abstaining from sensory indulgence, the intellect re-centres itself on the essential.
 
====Ḥajj (Pilgrimage to Mecca)====
The paradigmatic enactment of the soul’s journey from dispersion to unity: Mecca as the ontological axis (quṭb), the Kaʿba as symbol of divine simplicity, and circumambulation as the orbit of contingent being around the Necessary Existent.
 
 
classical logical norms: non-contradiction, identity, and valid inference.
 
Explanatory adequacy: principle of sufficient reason, parsimony, coherence with well-established findings.
 
Public reason: justifications accessible to any competent inquirer; aversion to special pleading.


Domain-specific empiricism
===Hagiography===


Nature and technology: experimental method, peer critique, replication.
Apotheosis • Deification • Divinisation • [[Ghulāt]] / Ghuluw • Heroisation • Legendary accretion • Mythicisation • Myth-making • Mythologisation • Mythopoeia • Sacralisation • Tawallā


History: source criticism, chronology, philology, intertextuality, external controls (epigraphy, archaeology), and context.
===Heresiography===


Tabarrā


====13.1 Hagiography====
==Timeline==


Apotheosis • Deification • Divinisation • Ghuluw • Heroisation • Legendary accretion • Mythicisation • Myth-making • Mythologisation • Mythopoeia • Sacralisation
===Classical antiquity===


=====13.1.2 [[Ghulāt]]=====
Socrates holds dialogues


'''399 BCE, Athens, Greece'''
<br />
Socrates is executed by poison


====ʿAdl (Divine Justice)====
'''c. 387 BCE, Athens, Greece'''
Justice, in rationalist metaphysics, is the invariance of the divine order—every existent occupies precisely its necessary degree within the ontological hierarchy. Apparent injustice arises only from partial perspectives. Theodicy is therefore resolved through the principle of necessitarian harmony: all that exists unfolds necessarily from the divine simplicity in the best and only possible way.
<br />
Plato founds the Academy


'''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


====Maʿād (Return / Eschaton)====
'''335 BCE, Athens, Greece'''
Eschatology is interpreted ontologically: the Return is the re-integration of individuated consciousness into higher degrees of unity. The “resurrection” is the unveiling of one’s existential reality; paradise and hell denote modes of consciousness corresponding to nearness or alienation from the Source.
<br />
Aristotle founds the Lyceum


====5. Belief in the Day of Judgment====
'''335 BCE - ?, Athens, Greece'''
<br />
Aristotle conceives formal logic


The Day of Judgment (yawm al-qiyāmah) is interpreted phenomenologically as the moment of ontological reassociation: when individuated consciousnesses, having undergone temporal disassociation from their source, re-integrate into higher, more unified levels of awareness. This eschatological event is continuous and gradational rather than merely episodic or spatial. The traditional dichotomy of paradise and hell symbolises the polar extremes of conscious experience — beatific proximity to the Source versus alienated distance from it. Between these poles lies a continuum of existential states proportional to one’s degree of ontological realisation. Thus, “resurrection” (baʿth) signifies the re-awakening of consciousness to its prior unity, and “judgment” the unveiling (kashf) of the ontological truth already inscribed within each being’s nature.
'''c. 27 CE, Jerusalem, Roman Judea (modern Occupied Palestine)'''
<br />
[[Jesus]] begins noocratic revolution


[[Hadīths]]
'''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


===Late antiquity===


'''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


==Essentialist Affirmation of Doctrinal Schemas==
Pseudo-Dionysius symbolises Neoplatonism


While Rationalist Islam constructs its metaphysical and ethical framework independently on rational and evidentiary grounds, it recognises within the major Islamic doctrinal formulations—Sunni arkān al-īmān and arkān al-islām, Shi‘i uṣūl al-dīn and furūʿ al-dīn—essential correspondences to its own rationally derived principles.
'''610 CE, Mecca, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
[[Muḥammad]] begins noocratic revolution


Owing to its doctrines of intellectual accommodation, semantic polyvalence, and essentialist hermeneutics, Rationalist Islam affirms these traditional formulations analogically: not by uncritical adoption of their forms, but by recognising within them the same underlying truths apprehended in different linguistic, cultural, and historical idioms.
'''622 CE, Medina, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
Muḥammad establishes noocratic revolution


Rationalist Islam constructs its metaphysical and ethical system independently through reason, ontology, and empirical coherence, yet it acknowledges deep structural resonances with the traditional doctrinal frameworks of Islam.
'''632 CE, Medina, First Islamic state (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
These correspondences are not nominal but analogical—arising from the recognition that truths apprehended through revelation and those derived by reason share a common referent in reality (al-ḥaqīqah al-wāḥidah).
<br />
Muḥammad dies in suspicious circumstances
<br />
Abu Bakr restores clanocracy
<br />
[[Ali]] begins noocratic revolution 


Accordingly, Rationalist Islam affirms the uṣūl al-dīn (principles of religion) and furūʿ al-dīn (branches of religion) articulated within Twelver Shi‘ism, and the arkān al-islām (pillars of practice) formulated within Sunnism, interpreting each in light of its own rational metaphysics, ethics, and epistemology.
'''656 CE, Medina, Rashidun Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
'Uthmān ibn 'Affān is assassinated by sword


'''656 CE, Medina, Rashidun Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
ʿAlī establishes noocratic revolution 


'''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


'''680 CE, Karbala, Umayyad Caliphate (modern Iraq)'''
<br />
Husayn ibn ʿAlī is assassinated by clanocratic sword


Through essentialist hermeneutics and analogical affirmation, Rationalist Islam re-grounds these frameworks as expressions of universal metaphysical and ethical principles.
'''732 CE, Medina, Umayyad Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
Each doctrine and practice, when read beyond its literal form, articulates a facet of the same reality: the necessity, unity, and gradation of existence and the ascent of consciousness toward its source.
<br />
Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq begins noocratic revolution


Doctrinal Correspondence and Analogical Affirmation
'''765 CE, Medina, Abbasid Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq is assassinated by clanocratic poison


system corresponds conceptually to others while affirming them analogically (i.e., at the level of essence, not literal formulation).
===Islamic Golden Age===


Hermeneutic Concordance • Doctrinal Integration through Essential Concordance • Analogical Affirmation of Classical Frameworks • Philosophical Re-grounding of Classical Doctrines • Essentialist Affirmation of Doctrinal Schemas
'''c. 820 - 870 CE, Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate (modern Iraq)'''
<br />
al-Kindī


[[Hawzah al-Hikmah]]
'''c. 940 – 1060 CE, Basra, Iraq'''
<br />
Brethren of Purity hold secret meetings


===Candidates===
'''c. 950 CE, Damascus, Ikhshidid Syria (modern Syria)'''
<br />
al-Fārābī islamicises Neoplatonism


[[Jesus]] (c. 4 BCE–30 CE, Judea) — Preacher, reformer.
'''980 – 1037 CE, from Bukhara, Samanid Transoxiana (modern Uzbekistan) to Hamadan, Medieval Persia (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
Preached radical inversion of social norms (“the last shall be first”), extending consciousness into unconditional love and inner purity, even at cost of crucifixion.
<br />
Ibn Sīnā conceives Proof of the Truthful


[[Muḥammad]] (570–632 CE, Arabia) — Philosopher, mystic, merchant, orator, poet, revolutionary, statesman, military commander.
'''c. 1186 CE, Aleppo, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)'''
Combined contemplative withdrawal (Ḥirā) with revolutionary vision: transformed fragments of oral, poetic, and legal consciousness into a unifying moral-legal system.
<br />
Shihab al-Din Yahya ibn Habash Suhrawardi conceives Illuminationism


[[Ali]] (601–661 CE, Arabia) — Caliph, jurist, philosopher-poet.
'''c. 1191 CE, Aleppo, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)'''
Renowned for sermons that combined courage, self-awareness, and metaphysical reflection; model of integrating ethical action and contemplative thought.
<br />
Shihab al-Din Yahya ibn Habash Suhrawardi is executed by familiocratic violence


Hasan ibn Ali (624–670 CE, Arabia) — 2nd Imam, grandson of Muhammad.
'''c. 1200–1240 CE, Mecca, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia) and Damascus, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)'''
Praised for conciliatory leadership; relinquished political authority to avoid bloodshed, embodying consciousness of peace and ethical restraint in volatile times.
<br />
Ibn ʿArabī conceives Unity of Existence


[[Ruhollah Khomeini]] (1902–1989, Iran) — Cleric, revolutionary leader.
'''c. 1220 - 1270 CE, Maragha, Medieval Persia'''
Unified metaphysics, mysticism, and political revolution, embodying sacrificial exile before seizing transformative power.
<br />
Naṣīr al-Dīn al-Ṭūsī synthesises mysticism and science


[[Ali Khamenei]] (1939–present, Iran) — Cleric, revolutionary, head of state.
===Gunpowder Age===
Blends political leadership with a philosophical-mystical lineage, navigating survival under immense constraint.


[[Hassan Nasrallah]] (1960–2024, Lebanon) — Cleric, political-military leader.
Mīr Dāmād conceives atemporal origination
Charismatic orator, blends political struggle with sacrificial posture under constant threat.


Mulla Sadrā conceives Transcendent Theosophy


===Oil Age===


Muhammad Husayn Ṭabāṭabāʾī establishes intra-Qur’ānic exegesis


===Legends===
Morteza Motahhari co-founds the Combatant Clergy Association


ʾĀdām (Ādam, Adam)
Morteza Motahhari is assassinated by Iranian seculocratic gunfire
 
Idrīs (Enoch or Hermes Trismegistus)
 
Nūḥ (Noah)
 
[[Hūd]]
Ṣāliḥ
Ibrāhīm (Abraham)
 
Lūṭ (Lot)
 
Ismā'īl (Ishmael)
 
Isḥāq (Isaac)
 
Ya'qūb (Jacob)
 
Yūsuf (Joseph)
 
Ayyūb (Job)
 
Shu'ayb
Mūsā (Moses)
 
Hārūn (Aaron)
 
Dāūd (David)
 
Sulaymān (Solomon)
 
Ilyās (Elijah)
 
Alyasa' (Elisha)
 
Yūnus (Jonah)
 
Ḏū l-Kifli (Ezekiel, Isaiah, Obadiah or Buddha)
 
Zakariyyā (Zechariah)
 
Yaḥyā (John the Baptist)
 
Muhammad al-Mahdī
 
 
 
[[Mindfulness]]
 
Dhikr • God consciousness • Meditation • Salāh • Taqwā


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


Ali Shariati dies in suspicious circumstances


[[Denialism]]
===Information Age===


[[Cognitive dissonance]]
'''c. 1940, Qom, Pahlavi Iran (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
<br />
[[Ruhollah Khomeini]] begins noocratic revolution


[[Defence mechanism]]
'''1979, Tehran, Post-Pahlavi Iran (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
<br />
Ruhollah Khomeini establishes noocratic revolution


'''c. 1979, Beqaa, Lebanon'''
<br />
[[Hassan Nasrallah]] begins noocratic revolution


'''1989, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran'''
<br />
Ruhollah Khomeini dies
<br />
[[Ali Khamenei]] protects noocratic revolution


[[Homo sapiens reproduction|Reproduction]]
'''2024, Dahieh, Lebanon'''
<br />
Hassan Nasrallah is assassinated by Jewish ethnocratic airstrike


[[Advocacy]]
'''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