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=TABLE OF CONTENTS=
'''Hikmah Islam''', ''(Arabic: الحكماء, romanised: Al-Hukamāh, lit. 'The Wise Ones' or 'The Sages'; or أهل الحكمة, romanised: Ahl al-Hikmah, lit. 'The People of Wisdom')'' commonly known as '''Rationalist Islam,''' is the rational-empirical branch of the Islamic school of philosophers and mystics.


==Part I The Necessary Existent==
Hikmah Islam is the continuation — and internal reformulation — of the wider ancient Near Eastern and Mediterranean wisdom tradition, drawing a conceptual lineage from classical philosophy (Plato, Aristotle, Plotinus), late antique sapiential currents (including the Jesus movement’s emphasis on inner transformation and social justice), through Muḥammad’s proclamations, the teachings of his family and their inner circle companions, Islamic Golden Age philosophy ''(Arabic: فلسفة, romanised: falsafa)'' and mysticism ''(Arabic: عرفان, romanised: ʿirfān),'' and extending into modern philosophy of mind and science.


===Chapter 1. Cultural terms===
At the core of Hikmah Islam is a unified emphasis on intellect ''(Arabic: عقل, romanised: ʿaql)'', understood broadly as mind, consciousness, and the faculty of rational and perceptive apprehension. This emphasis is not confined to a single domain, but extends across the entire spectrum of human existence: from personal cultivation and ethical self-formation, through epistemology and metaphysics, to political theory and the organisation of society.


Ahura Mazda • Allāh • Aten • Baha • Brahman • 'Ēl • Father • God • God the Father • Shangdi • The One • Unconditioned Reality • Vishnu • Waheguru • Yahweh
Within this framework, the intellect functions simultaneously as receiver, interpreter, and governor. It is the faculty through which reality is apprehended, the instrument by which truth is distinguished from falsehood, and the standard against which beliefs, actions, and institutions are evaluated. As such, it occupies a structurally primary role: directing the soul at the individual level and serving as the proper basis of authority at the collective level.


===Chapter 2. Epistemic framework===
The overarching orientation may therefore be described as noocratic in character: the view that both the individual life and the just ordering of society should be guided by the highest development and correct exercise of the intellect. In this sense, the intellect is treated as the commander of the human being and, by extension, the rightful principle of leadership in social and political life with the aim of maximising global wellbeing.  


====1. Epistemology====
Grounded in the primacy of the intellect, Hikmah Islam orders all else beneath reason and thereby defines itself as a principle-led, transcendent, data-driven, argument-based, evidence-based, adaptive, and ethically purposive project in motion, rather than a static system of veneration or dogma.


=====1.1 [[Philosophy]]=====
==Terminology==


====2. Logic====
As an entailment of their commitment to rational inquiry, epistemic pluralism, and intellectual accommodation, adherents of Rationalist Islam employ self-designations contextually rather than absolutely. Terminological choice is treated not as a fixed badge of immutable identity, but as a communicative instrument governed by audience, subject matter, pedagogical objective, and strategic relevance.


====3. Law of identity====
This practice follows from a broader view of language itself. Religious, philosophical, and civilisational vocabularies are understood less as self-sufficient essences than as historically situated vehicles for communicating truth. Different traditions may preserve overlapping apprehensions of reality under different symbolic forms. Rationalist Muslims therefore regard the contextual adoption of multiple, even apparently divergent, labels as intellectually legitimate and pedagogically useful, provided that the underlying substantive orientation remains unchanged. The point is not terminological inconsistency for its own sake, but the articulation of one stable orientation through whatever vocabulary is most intelligible, resonant, or strategically appropriate in a given setting.


3.1 [[Law of non-contradiction]]
Accordingly, Rationalist Muslims may identify themselves by a range of designations, including the following:


3.2 [[Law of excluded middle]]
===Mystic===
'''Inward transformation through direct encounter with reality.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as mystics because they understand religion and philosophy to require not only doctrinal or intellectual assent, but also inward transformation, purification of perception, direct apprehension, and the cultivation of heightened consciousness.


====4. Propositions====
===Rationalist Mystic===
'''Illumination disciplined by reason.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as rationalist mystics because they reject the reduction of mysticism to mere mood, aesthetic sensibility, emotional intensity, or an ineffable feeling. Mysticism, on this account, requires philosophical grounding, conceptual discipline, and integration into a continuously refined and corrigible model of reality. Mystical apprehension and rational inquiry are therefore treated not as opposites, but as mutually reinforcing dimensions of a single search for truth. They distinguish their position from other more common forms of mysticism they regard as anti-intellectual, sentimental, vague, or detached from disciplined metaphysical inquiry.


====5. Principle of sufficient reason====
===Gnostic===
'''Divine command via nature, not text.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as gnostics because they place strong emphasis on transformative knowledge, inward unveiling, and direct apprehension of reality. The designation also serves to distinguish their orientation from forms of religion centred primarily on external conformity, formal observance, or exoteric adherence without corresponding depth of understanding.


===Chapter 3. Deductive proof===
===Esotericist===
'''Some truths must be unveiled, not merely announced.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as esotericists because they affirm the existence of inner meanings, symbolic depth, graded disclosure, and teachings not always suitable for universal or undifferentiated public presentation. Esotericism, in this context, does not imply arbitrariness or obscurantism, but rather the claim that truths differ in communicative suitability according to audience, readiness, and circumstance.


===Chapter 4. Objections and refutations against them===
===Theist===
'''Begin with reality before arguing about religion.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as theists in order to distinguish themselves from atheists while preserving conceptual focus on necessary existence and ultimate reality. The term is useful where the immediate objective is to prevent discussion from being prematurely burdened by the psychological, historical, and cultural associations attached to Islam, religion, or Muslims as social categories. In such contexts, “theist” allows the argument to proceed first at the level of metaphysical logic before wider doctrinal and civilisational implications are introduced.


===Chapter 5. [[Oneness]]===  
===Neoplatonist===
'''Emanation from the One. Return to the One.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as Neoplatonists because they affirm a range of ideas historically associated with Neoplatonic philosophy, including metaphysical hierarchy, ontological gradation, intellectual ascent, and the derivation of lower orders of reality from higher principles. The term is used not necessarily to imply exhaustive doctrinal identity with historical Neoplatonism, but to indicate substantial affinity with its metaphysical architecture.


====5.1 Cultural terms====
===Christian===
'''Revive Christ by achieving what he could not.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims may identify themselves as Christians insofar as they venerate Christ for his attempt - albeit a failed one - at becoming philosopher-king. Although the historical Jesus could not achieve primary influence but rather significant secondary influence, Rationalist Muslims consider him to be a major noocratic role model in light of his self-sacrificial, charismatic, mystical, revolutionary socio-political movement directed toward global wellbeing. The designation therefore signals not confessional conversion to normative Christianity, but recognition of Jesus as a real participant in the same broader civilisational and noocratic lineage.


Henosis • Monism • Monotheism • Nondualism • Oneness • Samadhi • Tawhīd
===Muslim===
'''Submission to reality because reality belongs to God.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as Muslims insofar as they understand Islam, at its most fundamental level, as submission to ultimate reality, namely God. Such submission is not restricted to inherited formulations, communal convention, or literalist dogma, but extends to reality wherever it discloses itself and by whatever reliable means it is disclosed. Different domains of inquiry accordingly require different epistemic instruments: the scientific method for the natural world, the historical-critical method for history, and logic for philosophical and metaphysical questions. Should superior epistemic methods emerge in future, those too would be adopted, since submission is owed not to any single inherited method as such, but to truth itself.


====5.2 Epistemic framework====
===Inner Circle Muslim===
'''Deeper truths tend to sound more blasphemous.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as Inner Circle Muslims because they hold that philosophers, mystics, sages, and religious founders such as Muḥammad, Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq, and others frequently presupposed or enacted hierarchical structures of knowledge and instruction. On this model, discipleship is not epistemically flat. Followers, students, initiates, believers, and supporters may instead be distributed across concentric circles of increasing intimacy, trust, responsibility, and understanding, extending outward to the ʿawāmm, or general public. Higher truths, deeper symbolic meanings, and more sensitive political or metaphysical teachings are therefore not always communicated uniformly, but may be disclosed in graded form according to readiness, capacity, and circumstance.


====5.3 Deductive proof====
===Imami===
'''The Imam is none other than the Philosopher King.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as Imamis in a sense broadly similar to their use of Shiʿi and Twelver Shiʿi, but with more explicit emphasis on the Imam as a philosophical and political category. In this usage, the Shiʿi Imam is understood functionally as the Arabic equivalent of the philosopher-king: the figure in whom intellectual excellence, moral authority, spiritual depth, and rightful leadership converge.


====5.4 Objections and refutations against them====
===Shi'i===
'''To recognise the philosopher king and support him.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as Shiʿis because they understand the essence of Shiʿism not merely in genealogical or confessional terms, but as recognition of the individual who is most fully wise, just, philosophically grounded, mystical, self-sacrificial, charismatic, and oriented toward the establishment of noocracy for the sake of global wellbeing. In this sense, Shiʿism is construed as principled alignment with the rightful bearer of intellectual, ethical, and political authority once such a figure is discerned.


===Chapter 6. Necessary simplicity===
===Inner Circle Shi'i===
'''Deeper truths tend to sound more blasphemous.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as Inner Circle Shiʿis for the combined reasons implied by both the Inner Circle Muslim and Shiʿi designations. They hold that Shiʿi Imams such as Muḥammad al-Bāqir and Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq possessed not only broad publics of sympathisers and followers, but also more intimate circles of disciples, students, and initiates to whom deeper teachings, esoteric interpretations, and forms of strategic political knowledge were entrusted. The designation therefore indicates both allegiance to the Imam and recognition of graded access to truth, mission, and responsibility.


====6.1 Cultural terms====
===Ja'fari===
'''The essence of Muhammad's teachings, but evolved.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims may identify themselves as Jaʿfari in a sense closely related to the Twelver Shiʿi, Imami, and Shiʿi designations outlined above, but with particular emphasis on Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq. He is regarded as exemplifying many of the qualities and concerns central to Rationalist Islam, including intention, jurisprudence, mysticism, secret politics, intelligence, underground teaching, and intellectual greatness. The designation also carries a historiographical advantage: even when approached through the historical-critical method, Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq’s life, teachers, interlocutors, and legacy are comparatively more recoverable than those of many other early figures. Jaʿfarism is therefore useful not only symbolically, but also methodologically, as a marker of identifiable continuity.


Divine simplicity
===Sunni===
'''The essence of Muhammad's tradition was his noocratic revolution.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims may identify themselves as Sunni insofar as they understand themselves to be committed to continuing the sunnah of Muḥammad, construed not narrowly as a catalogue of inherited outward practices, but more substantively as a mode of charismatic, poetic, philosophically grounded, mystical, intellectually graded, ecumenical, and socio-political revolution. In this usage, “Sunni” denotes continuity with the living pattern and civilisational mission of Muḥammad rather than exclusive adherence to later sectarian boundary-making.


====6.2 Epistemic framework====
===Twelver Shi'i===
'''The world indeed yearns for the perfect saviour.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as Twelver Shiʿis for several reasons. Many are descendants of, born into, or raised within Twelver Shiʿi households and therefore continue to bear the imprint of Twelver devotional, cultural, ethical, and communal life. Some also did, at least at certain points, believe in the longevity of the Twelfth Imam. More broadly, many retain solidarity with Twelver symbolic and social worlds, and in Twelver settings may preserve reverence for the idea that the philosopher-king ideal remains in occultation, hidden from the world, and that historical labour should be directed toward making his appearance, or the conditions of his appearance, a reality.


====6.3 Deductive proof====
===Akbarian===
'''The many are manifestations of a deeper unity.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as Akbarians because of their affinity with Ibn ʿArabī, al-Shaykh al-Akbar, especially in relation to waḥdat al-wujūd. The designation indicates substantive metaphysical sympathy with Akbarian modes of thought, particularly where they concern unity, manifestation, and the structure of reality.


==Part II Immaterial dimension==
===Salafi===
'''Return to the first generations to challenge later dogma.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims may identify themselves as Salafi in a partly strategic and partly polemical sense, often in order to establish rapport with Salafis while unsettling contemporary monopolies over the term. The point is to show, first, that the salaf themselves did not agree on every matter later elevated into decisive markers of orthodoxy, and second, that some among the salaf would likely have been more sympathetic to, or at least more tolerant of, certain Rationalist Muslim beliefs and practices than many present-day Salafis are. The designation is therefore used not to collapse into contemporary Salafism, but to contest its historical self-certainty from within its own symbolic vocabulary.


===Chapter 1. Cultural terms===
===Red Shi'i===
'''Black Shiʿism is dead. Red Shi'ism is alive.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as Red Shiʿis in a sense broadly aligned with ʿAlī Sharīʿatī’s distinction between “Red Shiʿism” and “Black Shiʿism.” By this they mean a militant, awakened, and historically conscious Shiʿism directed against passivity, ritualism, sedation, and apolitical religiosity. The designation is used to oppose forms of Shiʿi identity centred merely on mourning, inherited symbolism, devotional spectacle, or hagiographical glory, and to affirm instead the revival of Muḥammad’s struggle against oppressors and for active global justice.


Intelligible dimension • Intelligible realm • Intelligible world
===Khomeinist===
'''The reviver of Muhammad's sociopolitical revolution.'''
<br />
Rationalist Muslims identify themselves as Khomeinists because they regard Rūḥollāh Khomeini as the figure who inaugurated the Revival Era through revolution, resistance, and the reanimation of the Muhammadan movement under modern conditions. This designation is strengthened by the fact that many adherents are near-contemporaries of that era and therefore understand it not merely as distant history, but as a living civilisational turning point. They venerate Khomeini for his emphasis on Muslim unity, his refusal to allow minor jurisprudential, and even certain doctrinal, differences to eclipse larger geopolitical and moral struggles, and his attempt to restore religion to the plane of historical agency. They also esteem his philosophy, mysticism, poetry, politics, geopolitical vision, anti-imperialism, his opposition to ethnosupremacy including Zionism, his unwavering dedication to the oppressed including Palestinians, Black people, and victims of Western hegemony, as well as his charisma, bidomainal genius, willingness to override rigid jurisprudential dogmatism, and for his commitment to the many modern challenges of anti-imperialist resistance economy. Rationalist Muslims often repeat a maxim when discussing the idea of the Philosopher King: Plato conceived it, Jesus tried it, Muḥammad achieved it, Khomeini revived it.


===Chapter 2. Existential truths (Logic)===
== Cognitive dispositions ==


====2.1 Rule of one====
The cognitive dispositions are the minimal rational commitments presupposed by coherent thought, intelligible discourse, and principled inquiry. They are not treated here as sectarian dogmas or inherited articles of faith, but as the most basic conditions under which anything can be meaningfully asserted, denied, distinguished, explained, or investigated at all. In that sense, they function as prior commitments of reason: not conclusions reached at the end of inquiry, but the logical preconditions that make inquiry possible.


====2.2 Gradation of existence====
=== 1. Law of Identity ===
'''Whatever is, is; whatever is not, is not.'''
<br />
Every being is identical with itself, and every proposition is what it is rather than something else. A thing cannot be treated as determinate unless it possesses some identity by virtue of which it is distinguishable from what it is not. Likewise, a proposition cannot be meaningful unless it has a stable content rather than collapsing into indeterminacy. The Law of Identity is therefore the most basic condition of intelligibility: without it, thought loses its object, language loses reference, and reasoning loses all determinate content.


===Chapter 3. Numbers (Number theory)===
=== 2. Law of Non-Contradiction ===
'''Nothing can both be and not be in the same respect.'''
<br />
No entity or proposition can both possess and not possess the same attribute in the same respect at the same time. To deny this is not to embrace profundity, but to dissolve the distinction between affirmation and negation altogether. If contradiction were admissible at the level of principle, then no claim could be meaningfully excluded, no conclusion could be preferred to its negation, and reasoned judgement would become impossible. The Law of Non-Contradiction therefore safeguards coherence by preserving the difference between what is the case and what is not.


===Chapter 4. Dimensions (Geometry)===
=== 3. Principle of Sufficient Reason ===
'''Every real state of affairs has some reason or ground.'''
<br />
Whatever is real is, in principle, intelligible: it has some reason, ground, or explanation for why it is rather than is not, even if that ground is intrinsic rather than external, simple rather than composite, or presently unknown to us. This minimal form of the Principle of Sufficient Reason does not assume that every explanation is easy, exhaustive, or immediately accessible. It asserts only that reality is not brute chaos. To affirm intelligibility is to affirm that existence is not finally resistant to reason, even where human understanding remains partial, provisional, or domain-limited.


===Chapter 5. Algebraic structures (Algebra)===
=== 4. Contingency and Dependent Existence ===
'''Some things exist but could, in principle, not have existed.'''
<br />
There exist beings whose non-existence involves no contradiction, and whose actuality therefore does not arise from necessity contained wholly within themselves. Such beings are contingent: they are, but need not have been. Recognition of contingency is indispensable because it prevents the mind from mistaking mere actuality for necessity. It marks the distinction between what simply happens to exist and what must exist by virtue of its own nature. Once that distinction is recognised, the demand for explanation deepens: contingent beings cannot be their own ultimate sufficient reason.


==Part III Immaterial dependent existents==
=== 5. Non-Circular Grounding and Rejection of Infinite Regress ===


===Chapter 1. Ontologically first dependent existent===
Explanation cannot be self-grounding in a viciously circular sense, nor can it be deferred without end through an infinite chain of merely derivative dependence. A circle explains nothing if each member depends for its intelligibility on the others while none possesses self-sufficiency; likewise, an endless regress of dependent explanations never arrives at an actual ground. For explanation to succeed, a chain of dependence must terminate in that which is not merely borrowed, conditioned, or derivative, but self-sufficient. Without such termination, explanation is only postponed, not achieved.


====1. Cultural terms====
== Conative dispositions ==


First creation • First intellect • First light • Image of God • Imago dei • Mashīyya • Nūr Muhammadiyya • Pen • Perfect creation • Qalam • Universal intellect
If the cognitive dispositions are the minimal conditions of coherent thought, the conative dispositions are the minimal orientations of will required for coherent thought to become a lived and ethically serious project. Reason alone does not guarantee sincerity, courage, discipline, or action. One may recognise a truth and yet refuse it; one may understand the good and yet remain indifferent to it. The conative dispositions therefore concern the direction of desire, aspiration, and practical commitment. They are the volitional conditions under which rational insight can issue in self-cultivation, moral seriousness, and civilisational purpose.


====2. Epistemic framework====
=== 1. Epistemic Integrity ===
'''Preference for truth over comfort'''
<br />
This disposition is the willingness to subordinate psychological ease, inherited familiarity, social approval, and personal convenience to what one has best reason to judge true. It entails a principled resistance to self-deception, motivated reasoning, sentimental attachment to falsehood, and the refusal to revise one’s position when evidence or argument requires it. Without such a preference, reason becomes merely instrumental: a tool for decorating prior loyalties rather than correcting them. Preference for truth over comfort is therefore the first moral discipline of the intellect, and the condition of all genuine intellectual integrity.


====3. Deductive proof====
=== 2. Self-Cultivation ===
'''Desire for personal development'''
<br />
The rational life is not exhausted by correct propositions; it requires the disciplined refinement of the self. This disposition names the desire to cultivate one’s capacities — intellectual, moral, spiritual, emotional, and practical — so that one becomes more lucid, more self-governing, more perceptive, more disciplined, and more capable of acting well. It rejects both complacency and fatalism. Human beings are not treated as fixed psychological givens but as beings capable of formation, reorientation, and ascent. Desire for personal development is thus the inward expression of the conviction that truth should transform the knower.


===Chapter 2. Ontologically second dependent existent===
=== 3. Universal Wellbeing ===
'''Desire for the maximisation of global wellbeing'''
<br />
Reason, once freed from narrow egoism and arbitrary tribal limitation, discloses the ethical insufficiency of confining concern to the self or the immediate in-group. This disposition is the desire that the wellbeing of sentient beings be increased as far as is realistically and sustainably possible. It universalises concern without collapsing into sentimentality, because it is governed not by mere feeling but by principled regard for flourishing, harm reduction, justice, and long-term civilisational benefit. It therefore expresses the outward ethical horizon of the rational project: the good is not merely private, but inherently expansive.


===Chapter 3. Ontologically third dependent existent===
=== 4. Ethical Agency ===
'''Desire to actively participate in the maximisation of global wellbeing'''
<br />
It is not enough merely to approve of the good in abstraction. This disposition is the will to become an agent of it: to contribute, according to one’s capacity, to the actual increase of wellbeing in the world. It marks the transition from ethical spectatorship to ethical participation. Knowledge, if sincere, seeks embodiment; concern, if serious, seeks action. This does not imply reckless activism or performative moralism, but disciplined and intelligent participation in the work of cultivation, reform, protection, education, service, and resistance where appropriate. The good must not only be admired; it must be advanced.


===Chapter 4. Ontologically fourth dependent existent===
=== 5. Principled Self-Sacrifice ===


===Chapter 5. Ontologically fifth dependent existent===
Where truth, justice, and the protection or elevation of others demand a cost, the rational agent must possess some willingness to bear that cost. This disposition names the tendency to accept loss, discomfort, risk, labour, or personal disadvantage in service of a higher good. It does not glorify self-destruction, nor does it sanctify suffering for its own sake. Rather, it rejects the assumption that self-preservation, comfort, and advantage are the highest principles of action. Self-sacrifice is the test of seriousness: the point at which proclaimed values prove whether they are genuine commitments or merely aesthetic preferences.


===Chapter 6. Ontologically sixth dependent existent===
== The Rational Entailments ==


===Chapter 7. Ontologically seventh dependent existent===
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.  


===Chapter 8. Ontologically eighth dependent existent===
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 9. Ontologically ninth dependent existent===
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 10. Ontologically tenth dependent existent===
===1) Metaphysical rationalism===  


==Part IV Material dimension==
===2) Foundationalism===


===Chapter 1. Cultural terms===
===3) Epistemic parsimony===


Cosmos • Dunyā • Material realm • Material world • Multiverse • Olam HaZeh • Physical world • Sensible dimension • Sensible realm • Sensible world • Universe
===4) Ontological parsimony===
===5) Primacy of [[Consciousness]]===


===Chapter 2. Actualising potential===
===6) Analytic idealism===


====Cultural terms====
===7) Oneness of consciousness===


'Ibādah Islām • Servitude • Submission • Worship
Monism Nondualism


===Chapter 3. Temporal causation===
===8) Ontological priority===


===Chapter 4. Continuous change (Calculus)===
===9) Gradation of consciousness===


===Chapter 5. Events (Probability theory)===
Gradation of existence • Gradation of reality • Tashkīk al-wujūd


===Chapter 6. Evolution (Evolutionary biology)===
===10) Meta Consciousness===


==Part V Material dependent actualised rational existents: Homo perfectus sapiens==
Ahura Mazda • Allāh • Aten • Baha • Brahman • Dao • 'Ēl • Father • God • God the Father • Necessary Existent • Necessary Existentiator • Necessary Reality • Pure Consciousness • Shangdi • Tao • The Divine • The One • Unconditioned Reality • Vishnu • Waheguru • Wājib al-Wujūd • Yahweh


===Chapter 1. Cultural terms===
===11) Necessary simplicity===


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


===Chapter 2. Epistemic framework (Logic, philosophy, speculative anthropology & religion)===  
===12) Absolute necessary simplicity===


===Chapter 3. Deductive proof===
===13) Conscientiation ex conscientia===


===Chapter 4. Objections and refutations against them===
Badā'a • Creatio ex deo • Origination


===Chapter 5. Evolution===
===14) Necessitarianism===


===Chapter 6. Intellect===
ʿAdl • Divine justice


====6.1 Epistemic framework====  
===15) Eternalism / [[Eternal Creation]]===


====6.2 Deductive proof====
===16) Rule of one===


====6.3 Terms and usage====
===17) First conscientiate===


'Aql Nous
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 7. Information: Ungraded acquisition===
===18) Intermediary conscientiates===  


====7.1 Epistemic framework====
Angels • Immaterial existents • Malāʾika


====7.2 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


====7.3 Terms and usage====
===20) B-theory of time===


Anubhava • Enlightenment • Ilhām • Nirvana • Perfect knowledge acquisition • Revelation • Wahī
Tenseless theory of time


====7.4 Objections and refutations against them====
===21) Compatibilism===


===Chapter 8. Information: Ungraded dissemination===
Divine Decree • Divine Predestination • Illusion of Libertarian Free Will • Predestination • Qadar • Soft determinism


====8.1 Epistemic framework====  
===22) Perdurantism===


====8.2 Deductive proof====
===23) Physical empiricism===


====8.3 Terms and usage====
Empirical method • Scientific method


====8.4 Objections and refutations against them====
===24) [[Mindfulness]]===


====8.5 Nominees====
Dhikr • God consciousness • Meditation • Salāh • Taqwā


Bible • [[Hadīths]] • Qur'ān (Mushaf of 'Alī) • Qur'ān ('Uthmānic codex)
===25) Self-cultivation===
====8.6 [[Divine Prophecy]]====


===Chapter 9. [[Information: Graded dissemination]]===
===26) Superiority of intellect===


Cognitive reframing
===27) Rational self-governance===


====9.1 Epistemic framework====  
===28) Mysticism===


====9.2 Deductive proof====
'Ibādah Islām Servitude Submission Worship
 
====9.3 Terms and usage====
 
Intellectual dissimulation Taqīyya
 
====9.4 Objections and refutations against them====
 
====9.5 Nominees====
 
Bible [[Hadīths]] Qur'ān (Mushaf of 'Alī) Qur'ān ('Uthmānic codex)
 
====9.6 Seminaries====
 
=====9.6.1 [[Hawzah al-Hikmah]]=====


===Chapter 10. Social interaction===
===29) Prayer===


===Chapter 11. Diet===
Ṣalāh


===Chapter 12. Candidates===
===30) Fasting===


[[Confucius]] (551–479 BCE, China) — Philosopher, educator, ethicist.
Ṣawm
Advanced consciousness expressed as ethical cultivation and the idea that harmony in the individual extends outward into society, shaping relational and collective awareness.


[[Socrates]] (469–399 BCE, Greece) — Philosopher, teacher.
===31) Charity===
Embodied radical self-examination, dialogical truth-seeking, and the courage to die for principle, making consciousness of virtue the measure of life.


[[Plato]] (428–348 BCE, Greece) — Philosopher, writer, founder of the Academy.
Almsgiving • Zakāh
Elevated abstraction and the reality of universals, treating consciousness as participation in the realm of forms, an early theory of mind’s reach beyond perception.


[[Zhuangzi]] (369–286 BCE, China) — Philosopher, Taoist sage.
===32) Pilgrimage===
Emphasised fluidity of perspective and dream-consciousness, dissolving rigid distinctions between self and world in a proto-nondual mode.


[[Aristotle]] (384–322 BCE, Greece) — Philosopher, scientist.
Ḥajj
Analyzed mind (psyche) as structured layers of life — vegetative, animal, rational — anticipating systematic study of consciousness.


[[Ashoka]] (304–232 BCE, India) — Emperor, Buddhist reformer.
===33) [[Resistance]]===
Dramatic transformation from conquest to conscience: renounced violence, spread ethical edicts, showing consciousness as a basis for political life.


[[Jesus]] (c. 4 BCE–30 CE, Judea) — Preacher, reformer.
Discipline • Exertion • Fighting • Holy war • Jihād • Sacred battle • Striving • Struggle
Preached radical inversion of social norms (“the last shall be first”), extending consciousness into unconditional love and inner purity, even at cost of crucifixion.


[[Plotinus]] (204–270 CE, Egypt/Rome) — Philosopher, founder of Neoplatonism.
===34) Heightened consciousness===
Articulated the ascent of consciousness from sense to intellect to mystical union with “the One,” framing awareness as ontological participation.


[[Augustine of Hippo]] (354–430 CE, North Africa) — Bishop, theologian.
Altered state of consciousness • Anubhava • Enlightenment • Henosis • Ilhām • Nirvana • Noetic mystical experience • Nubuwwah • Perfect knowledge acquisition • Prophethood • Samadhi • Revelation • Wahī
Pioneered introspective analysis of memory, time, and will, treating consciousness of self as the site of encountering truth.


[[Muḥammad]] (570–632 CE, Arabia) — Philosopher, mystic, merchant, orator, poet, revolutionary, statesman, military commander.
===35) Gradation of Intellect===
Combined contemplative withdrawal (Ḥirā) with revolutionary vision: transformed fragments of oral, poetic, and legal consciousness into a unifying moral-legal system.


[[Ali]] (601–661 CE, Arabia) — Caliph, jurist, philosopher-poet.
Cognitive heterogeneity
Renowned for sermons that combined courage, self-awareness, and metaphysical reflection; model of integrating ethical action and contemplative thought.


[[Fatima]] (c. 605–632 CE, Arabia) — Daughter of Muhammad, moral exemplar.
===36) [[Local cultivation]]===
Remembered for eloquent sermons, advocacy for justice after her father’s death, and embodiment of moral integrity under political pressure. Represents advanced consciousness as ethical witness and personal sacrifice.


Hasan ibn Ali (624–670 CE, Arabia) — 2nd Imam, grandson of Muhammad.
Messengership • Risālah
Praised for conciliatory leadership; relinquished political authority to avoid bloodshed, embodying consciousness of peace and ethical restraint in volatile times.
===37) Global cultivation / [[Maximisation of Personal & Global Wellbeing (Constrained)]]===


Husayn ibn Ali (626–680 CE, Arabia) — 3rd Imam, grandson of Muhammad.
===38) Noocracy===
Martyr of Karbala, archetype of sacrificial consciousness: prioritised truth and justice over survival, becoming a symbol of resistance against tyranny across cultures.


Ali al-Sajjad (c. 659–713 CE, Arabia) — 4th Imam.
Epistocracy • Imāmah • Mulk al-Hakīm • Perfect Manhood • Philosopher Kingship • Velāyateh Amr • Velāyateh Faqīh • Wilāyah al-Amr • Wilāyah al-Faqīh
Survivor of Karbala, embodied contemplative consciousness through supplications (al-Ṣaḥīfa al-Sajjādiyya), integrating suffering with spiritual depth.


Muhammad al-Baqir (677–732 CE, Arabia) — 5th Imam.
===39) [[Philosopher King]]===
Scholar and teacher, expanded intellectual foundations of Islamic thought. Consciousness expressed through systematic transmission of knowledge amid political marginalisation.


Ja'far al-Sadiq (702–765 CE, Arabia) — 6th Imam.
Demigod • High-Conscious Individual • High-Integration Individual • Hujjah • Imām • Infallible • Insān al-Kāmil • Insān ‘alā Khuluqin ‘Adhīm • Integrate • Mālik al-Hakīm • Ma'sūm • Messenger • Meta-Conscious Agent • Nabī • New Man • Perfect Human • Perfect Man • Perfect Rational Animal • Philosopher King • Prophet • Rasūl • Transhuman • Übermensch • Valīyeh Amr • Valīyeh Faqīh • Walīy al-Amr • Walīy al-Faqīh
Renowned teacher of science, theology, and law; many Sunni and Shiʿi scholars trace knowledge to him. Consciousness here as integrative intellect bridging faith and reason.


Musa al-Kazim (744–799 CE, Arabia) — 7th Imam.
===40) Intellectual Accommodation===
Known for patience and endurance during repeated imprisonments. Advanced consciousness expressed as steadfastness and inner resilience under oppression.


Ali al-Rida (766–817 CE, Arabia/Persia) — 8th Imam.
Tawriyyah
Engaged in public theological debates at Abbasid court; remembered for tolerance and intellectual breadth. Consciousness expressed as rational dialogue and openness.


Muhammad al-Jawad (811–835 CE, Arabia) — 9th Imam.
===41) Intellectual Dissimulation===
Became Imam in childhood, yet led with intellectual precocity. Symbol of youthful consciousness applied to leadership and scholarship.


Ali al-Hadi (828–868 CE, Arabia) — 10th Imam.
Taqīyyah
Lived under Abbasid surveillance, emphasised inner piety and guidance despite constraints. Consciousness here as quiet resilience and integrity under pressure.


Hasan al-Askari (844–874 CE, Arabia) — 11th Imam.
===42) Cognitive reframing===
Restricted life in military garrison (Samarrāʾ), yet produced a legacy of ethical teachings. Consciousness expressed as leadership through personal example amid political isolation.


[[Avicenna]] (Ibn Sina) (980–1037, Persia) — Physician, philosopher.
===43) Motifs and Imagery===
His “floating man” thought experiment explored immediate self-awareness independent of the body, a foundational insight into consciousness studies.


[[Ibn Arabi]] (1165–1240, Andalusia) — Mystic, poet, philosopher.
Motifs—light, ascent, circle, garden, path—translate abstract truths into memorable forms that shape imagination and action. Repetition builds identity; symbol stabilises norms.
Elaborated the doctrine of the “Perfect Human” as the microcosm of all reality, theorising consciousness as the reflective mirror of the divine.


[[Dōgen]] (1200–1253, Japan) — Zen master, monastic reformer.
===44) Mythos for Most===
Articulated “being-time” (uji), collapsing distinctions of time and consciousness, teaching meditation as direct embodiment of awareness.


[[Rumi]] (Jalal al-Din Rumi) (1207–1273, Persia) — Poet, mystic.
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.
Through ecstatic poetry and metaphor, expressed consciousness as love-driven dissolution of ego into unity.


[[Meister Eckhart]] (1260–1328, Germany) — Theologian, mystic.
===45) Repurposing Myths and Legends===
Taught detachment and the “birth of God in the soul,” centering consciousness as a formless ground of being.


[[Mulla Sadra]] (1571–1640, Persia) — Philosopher, metaphysician.
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.
Developed gradational ontology (tashkīk al-wujūd), equating degrees of being with levels of consciousness, anticipating panpsychist lines.


[[Galileo Galilei]] (1564–1642, Italy) — Astronomer, physicist.
===46) Metanarratives===
Shifted consciousness of the cosmos from geocentric certainty to empirical infinity, pioneering observational awareness of nature.


[[John Locke]] (1632–1704, England) — Philosopher, theorist.
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.
Defined personal identity as continuity of consciousness, influencing modern selfhood and rights theory.


[[Isaac Newton]] (1643–1727, England) — Mathematician, physicist.
===47) Religion===
Unified celestial and terrestrial mechanics, expanding human consciousness to a law-governed cosmos.


[[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]] (1712–1778, Switzerland/France) — Philosopher.
===48) Religious beliefs===
Probed conscience, authenticity, and freedom, reshaping consciousness of self in society.


[[Immanuel Kant]] (1724–1804, Prussia) — Philosopher.
Arkān al-īmān • Pillars of faith • 'Uṣūl al-dīn
Explained consciousness as structured by categories of understanding; “transcendental unity of apperception” as ground of experience.


[[Thomas Paine]] (1737–1809, England/USA) — Writer, revolutionary.
===49) Religious laws===
Voiced universal rights and democratic conscience, extending awareness of political selfhood.


[[Toussaint Louverture]] (1743–1803, Haiti) — Revolutionary leader.
Branches of religion • Furūʿ al-dīn • Pillars of practice
Transformed consciousness of enslaved peoples into political agency, leading Haiti’s independence.


[[William Blake]] (1757–1827, England) — Poet, artist.
===50) Need for Dogma===
Visionary imagination turned consciousness into prophetic art, critiquing industrial rationalism.


[[G.W.F. Hegel]] (1770–1831, Germany) — Philosopher.
“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.
Mapped consciousness through dialectical stages, culminating in self-realisation as Spirit.


[[Charles Darwin]] (1809–1882, England) — Naturalist.
===51) Confessional identity===
Altered consciousness of life by introducing evolution, dissolving static hierarchies of species.


[[Karl Marx]] (1818–1883, Germany) — Philosopher, revolutionary theorist.
Shahāda • Testimony of Faith
Exposed class consciousness as historical driver, insisting on praxis linking thought to transformation.


[[Friedrich Nietzsche]] (1844–1900, Germany) — Philosopher.
===51) Need to Encourage and Control Behaviour===
Pushed consciousness beyond truth-illusions toward life-affirmation, the “Übermensch” as higher integration.


[[Nikola Tesla]] (1856–1943, Serbia/US) — Inventor, engineer.
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.
Harnessed visionary imagination, turning inner visualisation into scientific-technological breakthroughs.


[[Marie Curie]] (1867–1934, Poland/France) — Physicist, chemist.
===Hagiography===
Expanded human consciousness of matter by revealing radioactivity, with extraordinary intellectual discipline.


[[Mahatma Gandhi]] (1869–1948, India) — Lawyer, revolutionary.
Apotheosis • Deification • Divinisation • [[Ghulāt]] / Ghuluw • Heroisation • Legendary accretion • Mythicisation • Myth-making • Mythologisation • Mythopoeia • Sacralisation • Tawallā
Embodied sacrificial consciousness through satyagraha (truth-force), nonviolent resistance, and willingness to suffer for justice.


[[Rosa Luxemburg]] (1871–1919, Poland/Germany) — Revolutionary socialist.
===Heresiography===
Integrated intellectual clarity with sacrificial activism, writing profound critiques while dying for her cause.


[[Rainer Maria Rilke]] (1875–1926, Austria) — Poet, writer.
Tabarrā
Explored existential states and consciousness of finitude through lyrical intensity.


[[Carl Jung]] (1875–1961, Switzerland) — Psychiatrist.
==Timeline==
Developed the unconscious/archetypal model, framing consciousness as individuation toward wholeness.


[[Albert Einstein]] (1879–1955, Germany/US) — Physicist.
===Formative Era (387 BCE - 27 CE)===
Reconceptualised time, space, and relativity, demonstrating imaginative consciousness as scientific method.
Classical Antiquity • Antiquity


[[Simone Weil]] (1909–1943, France) — Philosopher, mystic.
'''387 BCE (c.), Athens, Greece'''
Married mystical attentiveness with radical political conscience, lived sacrificial solidarity with workers and victims.
<br />
Plato begins noocratic revolution
* Plato founds the Academy to cultivate a new generation of virtuous, logical leaders trained in ethics and abstract thought to improve society and political life.  


[[Ruhollah Khomeini]] (1902–1989, Iran) — Cleric, revolutionary leader.
'''387 - ? BCE (c.), Athens, Greece'''
Unified metaphysics, mysticism, and political revolution, embodying sacrificial exile before seizing transformative power.
* 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


[[David Bohm]] (1917–1992, USA/UK) — Physicist, philosopher.
'''335 BCE, Athens, Greece'''
Proposed implicate order, dialogue as expansion of shared consciousness, bridging science and holistic awareness.
<br />
Aristotle founds the Lyceum


[[Nelson Mandela]] (1918–2013, South Africa) — Revolutionary, president.
'''335 BCE - ?, Athens, Greece'''
Sacrificially endured 27 years in prison, then embodied reconciliatory consciousness over vengeance.
<br />
Aristotle conceives formal logic


[[James Baldwin]] (1924–1987, USA) — Writer, activist.
===Embodiment Era (27 CE - 245 CE)===
Articulated consciousness of race, identity, and love with radical clarity and eloquence.


[[Malcolm X]] (1925–1965, USA) — Minister, activist.
'''27 CE (c.), Galilee, Roman Judea (modern Occupied Palestine)'''
Transformed his own consciousness through struggle, symbolising liberation through fearless self-reinvention.
<br />
[[Jesus]] begins local cultivation for noocratic revolution
* Jesus begins his public ministry using parables and aphorisms to teach about ethics. He advocates the reversal of social hierarchies and preaches the transformation of world order, which he calls the coming "Kingdom of God." He gathers followers, including an inner circle of disciples and social outcasts.


[[Martin Luther King Jr.]] (1929–1968, USA) — Minister, civil rights leader.
'''29 CE (c.), Jerusalem, Roman Judea (modern Occupied Palestine)'''
Preached unitive, sacrificial love and justice, embodying higher ethical consciousness at great personal risk.
<br />
Jesus begins regional cultivation for noocratic revolution
* Jesus travels to Jerusalem for Passover, debates Jewish authorities on the subject of God, causes a disruption - often referred to as the cleansing of the Temple - and directly challenges local Jewish religious leadership.


[[Ali Khamenei]] (1939–present, Iran) — Cleric, revolutionary, head of state.
'''30 CE (c.), Jerusalem, Roman Judea (modern Occupied Palestine)'''
Blends political leadership with a philosophical-mystical lineage, navigating survival under immense constraint.
<br />
* Jesus is demonised by Jewish ethnocratic propaganda
* Jesus is executed by Roman timocratic crucifixion


[[Vaclav Havel]] (1936–2011, Czechia) — Playwright, dissident, president.
'''161 CE, Rome, Roman Empire (modern Wider Mediterranean World)
Coined “living in truth” as a form of political-moral consciousness in oppressive regimes.
<br />
Marcus Aurelius establishes noocratic revolution


[[Hassan Nasrallah]] (1960–2024, Lebanon) — Cleric, political-military leader.
===Emanation Era (245 CE - 610 CE)===
Charismatic orator, blends political struggle with sacrificial posture under constant threat.
Antiquity • Late antiquity


===Chapter 13. Reception===
'''245–270 CE (c.), Rome, Roman Empire (modern Italy)'''
<br />
Plotinus conceives The One
<br />
Plotinus conceives Emanation by the One
<br />
Plotinus establishes Neoplatonism
<br />


====13.1 Hagiography====
'''412–485 CE, Athens, Eastern Roman Empire'''
<br />
Proclus popularises Platonism


=====13.1.1 Other terms=====
'''485–528 CE, Syria, Eastern Roman Empire'''
<br />
Pseudo-Dionysius symbolises Neoplatonism


Apotheosis • Deification • Divinisation • Ghuluw • Heroisation • Legendary accretion • Mythicisation • Myth-making • Mythologisation • Mythopoeia • Sacralisation
===Dawn Era (610 CE - 661 CE)===
'''610 CE, Mecca, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
[[Muḥammad]] begins noocratic revolution


=====13.1.2 [[Ghulāt]]=====
'''622 CE, Medina, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
Muḥammad establishes noocratic revolution


===Chapter 14. Legends===
'''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
<br />
Fāṭima al-Zahrā dies following suspected clanocratic arson attack 


ʾĀdām (Ādam, Adam)
'''656 CE, Medina, Rashidun Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
'Uthmān ibn 'Affān is assassinated by sword


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


Nūḥ (Noah)
'''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


[[Hūd]]
'''680 CE, Karbala, Umayyad Caliphate (modern Iraq)'''
<br />
Ṣāliḥ
Husayn ibn ʿAlī is assassinated by clanocratic sword
Ibrāhīm (Abraham)


Lūṭ (Lot)  
'''732 CE, Medina, Umayyad Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq begins noocratic revolution


Ismā'īl (Ishmael)
'''765 CE, Medina, Abbasid Caliphate (modern Saudi Arabia)'''
<br />
Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq is assassinated by clanocratic poison


Isḥāq (Isaac)  
===Islamic Golden Age (820 CE - 1270 CE)===
Early Middle Ages • High Middle Ages • Occultation Era


Ya'qūb (Jacob)
'''820 - 870 CE (c.), Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate (modern Iraq)'''
<br />
al-Kindī


Yūsuf (Joseph)
'''940 – 1060 CE (c.), Basra, Iraq'''
<br />
Brethren of Purity hold secret meetings


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


Shu'ayb
'''980 – 1037 CE, from Bukhara, Samanid Transoxiana (modern Uzbekistan) to Hamadan, Medieval Persia (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
<br />
Mūsā (Moses)
Ibn Sīnā conceives Proof of the Truthful


Hārūn (Aaron)
'''1186 CE (c.), Aleppo, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)'''
<br />
Shihab al-Din Yahya ibn Habash Suhrawardi conceives Illuminationism


Dāūd (David)
'''1191 CE (c.), Aleppo, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)'''
<br />
Shihab al-Din Yahya ibn Habash Suhrawardi is executed by familiocratic violence


Sulaymān (Solomon)
'''1200–1240 CE (c.), Mecca, Hejaz (modern Saudi Arabia) and Damascus, Ayyubid Syria (modern Syria)'''
<br />
Ibn ʿArabī conceives Unity of Existence


Ilyās (Elijah)
'''1220 - 1270 CE (c.), Maragha, Medieval Persia'''
 
<br />
Alyasa' (Elisha)
Naṣīr al-Dīn al-Ṭūsī synthesises mysticism and science
 
Yūnus (Jonah)
 
Ḏū l-Kifli (Ezekiel, Isaiah, Obadiah or Buddha)
 
Zakariyyā (Zechariah)
 
Yaḥyā (John the Baptist)
 
Muhammad al-Mahdī
 
==Part VI Material dependent unactualised rational existents: Homo sapiens==
 
===Chapter 1. Epistemic framework (Anthropology)===
 
===Chapter 2. Inductive evidence===
 
===Chapter 3. Terms and usage===
 
Human • Imperfect human • Imperfect rational animal • Insān
 
===Chapter 4. [[Mindfulness]]===
 
====4.1 Epistemic framework====
 
====4.2 Inductive evidence====
 
====4.3. Terms and usage====
 
Dhikr • God consciousness • Meditation • Salāh • Taqwā


===Chapter 5. [[Self-affirmation]]===
===Gunpowder Age===


===Chapter 6. [[Mental health]]===
Mīr Dāmād conceives atemporal origination


====6.1 [[Denialism]]====
Mulla Sadrā conceives Transcendent Theosophy


====6.2 [[Cognitive dissonance]]====
===Oil Age===


====6.3 [[Defence mechanism]]====
'''1890 CE (c.), London, Britain'''
<br />
British Foreign Office plots to exploit Persian oil


===Chapter 7. [[Physical health]]===
'''1901 CE, Tehran, Qajari Persia (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
<br />
Mozaffar ad-Din Shah Qajar sells off oil exploitation rights of 75% of Persia to Britain in exchange for personal profit


===Chapter 8. [[Hygiene]]===
===Awakening Era (1940 CE - 1979 CE)===


====8.1 [[Female hygiene]]====
Late Modern Period to Early Contemporary Period • Pre to Early Information Age


====8.2 [[Male hygiene]]====
'''1940 CE (c.), Qom, Pahlavi Iran (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
<br />
[[Ruhollah Khomeini]] begins noocratic revolution


===Chapter 9. [[Fasting]]===
'''1948 CE, British-occupied Palestine, (modern Zionist-occupied Palestine)'''
<br />
Britain transfers occupation of Palestine to European Jewish Zionists


===Chapter 10. [[Nutrition]]===
'''1954 CE, Qom, Pahlavi Iran (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
<br />
Muhammad Husayn Ṭabāṭabāʾī establishes intra-Qur’ānic exegesis


===Chapter 11. [[Personal finance]]===
'''1971 CE (c.), Tehran, Pahlavi Iran (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
<br />
Ali Shariati delivers 'Red Shi'ism vs. Black Shi'ism' lectures


===Chapter 12. [[Philanthropy]]===
'''1977 CE, Southampton, Britain'''
<br />
Ali Shariati dies in suspicious circumstances


===Chapter 13. [[Homo sapiens reproduction|Reproduction]]===
'''1977 CE, Tehran, Pahlavi Iran (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
<br />
Morteza Motahhari co-founds Combatant Clergy Association


===Chapter 14. [[Death]]===
===Revival Era (1979 CE - Today)===
Late Modern Era • Middle Information Age
'''1979 CE, Tehran, Post-Pahlavi Iran (modern Islamic Republic of Iran)'''
<br />
Ruhollah Khomeini establishes noocratic revolution


===Chapter 15. [[Burial]]===
'''1979 CE, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran'''
<br />
Morteza Motahhari is assassinated by Iranian seculocratic gunfire


===Chapter 16. [[Inheritance]]===
'''1979 CE, Qom, Islamic Republic of Iran'''
<br />
Ruhollah Khomeini tells representatives of the tribes of Khuzestan and a delegation from Turkmen Sahra, "We Muslims are busy bickering over whether to fold or unfold our arms during prayer, while the enemy is devising ways of cutting them off."


===Chapter 17. [[Religion]]===
'''1979 CE (c.), Beqaa, Lebanon'''
<br />
[[Hassan Nasrallah]] begins noocratic revolution


===Chapter 18. [[Advocacy]]===
'''1982 CE, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran'''
<br />
Ali Khamenei tells 60 Minutes Australia that the worst enemy is America


==Part VII Material dependent unactualised rational existents: Homo erectus==
'''1989 CE, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran'''
<br />
Ruhollah Khomeini dies
<br />
[[Ali Khamenei]] protects noocratic revolution


==Part VIII Material dependent unactualised rational existents: Homo habilis==
'''2001 CE, New York, America'''
<br />
America executes false flag at iconic American landmarks.
* Coordinated attacks, using four commercial airplanes, crash into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon causing nearly 3,000 deaths. America claims Al-Qaeda is the independent perpetrator.


==Part IX Material dependent unactualised rational existents: Australopithecus==
'''2001 CE, Virginia, America'''
<br />
Senior military officer tells Wesley Clark that America has plotted to attack Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Islamic Republic of Iran


==Part X Material dependent non-rational existents==
'''2001 CE, Afghanistan'''
<br />
America uses European proxies to begin its war on Afghanistan


===Chapter 1. Animal (Zoology)===
'''2003 CE, Iraq'''
<br />
America uses European proxies to begin its war on Iraq


===Chapter 2. Plant (Botany)===
'''2006 CE, Washington D.C., America'''
<br />
America uses Jewish Zionist proxy Israel to attack Lebanon


===Chapter 3. Organism (Biology)===
'''2007 CE, Somalia'''
<br />
America begins its bombing war offensive on Somalia


===Chapter 4. Organ (Biology)===
'''2011 CE, Libya'''
<br />
America begins its war on Libya


===Chapter 5. Tissue (Biology)===
'''2011 CE, Sudan'''
<br />
America completes its split of Sudan


===Chapter 6. Cell (Biology)===
'''2015 CE, London, Great Britain'''
<br />
Britain's Channel 4 broadcasts ex-CIA spy officer's American propaganda unchallenged, including, "The thing was ideal when IS was advancing on Baghdad because Sunnis were killing Shias. That's exactly what we need... our best hope right now is to get the Sunnis and Shias fighting each other and let them bleed each other white." 


===Chapter 7. Organelle (Biology)===
'''2024 CE, Dahieh, Lebanon'''
<br />
Jewish ethnocratic airstrikes kill Lebanon's noocratic leader
* Hassan Nasrallah


===Chapter 8. Mineral (Mineralogy)===
'''2026 CE, Islamic Republic of Iran'''
<br />
America and Jewish Zionist proxy Israel begin armed riots in Islamic Republic of Iran
<br />
America and Jewish Zionist proxy Israel begin war on Islamic Republic of Iran


===Chapter 9. Molecule (Chemistry)===
'''2026 CE, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran'''
<br />
American plutocratic & Jewish ethnocratic airstrikes kill the Islamic Republic of Iran's noocratic leader
* Ali Khamenei


====9.1 Homonuclear molecule====
'''2026 CE, Chicago, America'''
====9.2 Heteronuclear molecule====
<br />
Leading American political scientist John Mearsheimer says American sanctions from 1971 to 2021 alone murdered 38 million people


===Chapter 10. Atom (Atomic physics)===


===Chapter 11. Atomic nucleus (Nuclear physics)===


===Chapter 12. Subatomic particle (Quantum mechanics)===


===Chapter 13. Quantum field (Theoretical physics)===
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