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=TABLE OF CONTENTS=
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.


==Part I The Necessary Existent==
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.


===Chapter 1. Cultural terms===
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.


Ahura Mazda • Allāh • Aten • Baha • Brahman • 'Ēl • Father • God • God the Father • Shangdi • The One • Unconditioned Reality • Vishnu • Waheguru • Yahweh
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==
 
===1. [[The Law of Identity]]===
 
“whatever is, is; whatever is not, is not.”
 
Every entity or proposition is self-identical and distinct from its negation.
 
===2. [[The Law of Non-Contradiction]]===
 
“nothing can both be and not be in the same respect.”
 
Nothing can both be and not be in the same respect.
 
===3. [[The Principle of Sufficient Reason (minimal intelligibility form)]]===


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


====1. Epistemology====
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.


=====1.1 [[Philosophy]]=====
===4. [[Recognition of Contingency]]===


====2. Logic====
“some things exist but could, in principle, not have existed.


====3. Law of identity====
There exist beings whose non-existence involves no contradiction.


3.1 [[Law of non-contradiction]]
===5. [[Denial of Vicious Circularity and Infinite Explanatory Regress]]===


3.2 [[Law of excluded middle]]
Explanation cannot be self-grounding or infinitely deferred; every chain of dependence must terminate in something self-sufficient.


====4. Propositions====
==Conative dispositions==


====5. Principle of sufficient reason====
===1. Preference for truth over comfort===


===Chapter 3. Deductive proof===
===2. Desire for personal development===


===Chapter 4. Objections and refutations against them===
===3. Desire for the maximisation of global wellbeing===


===Chapter 5. [[Oneness]]===  
===4. Desire to actively participate in the maximisation of global wellbeing===


====5.1 Cultural terms====
===5. Tendency for self-sacrifice===


Henosis • Monism • Monotheism • Nondualism • Oneness • Samadhi • Tawhīd
==The Rational Entailments==


====5.2 Epistemic framework====
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.  


====5.3 Deductive proof====
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.


====5.4 Objections and refutations against them====
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 6. Necessary simplicity===
===1) Metaphysical rationalism===  


====6.1 Cultural terms====
===2) Primacy of existence===


Divine simplicity
Reason first encounters that something is. Existence is therefore metaphysically prior to the conceptual profiles (essences) by which we sort and compare things. Essences mark the ways existence can be instantiated; they do not outrank existence itself. This primacy blocks nihilism (that nothing ultimately is) and prevents treating essences as free-floating items that would themselves demand an unexplained ontological status.


====6.2 Epistemic framework====
“Existence” is not a genus with species under it. It is the act of being by which anything is actual rather than merely possible. Because things exist in many ways and to different degrees, the unity of existence is analogical (or graded) rather than univocal. This explains how diverse realities can still be comparable as “more or less actual” without collapsing them into sameness.


====6.3 Deductive proof====
===3) Necessary existence===


==Part II Immaterial dimension==
Ahura Mazda • Allāh • Aten • Baha • Brahman • 'Ēl • Father • God • God the Father • Shangdi • The One • Unconditioned Reality • Vishnu • Waheguru • Yahweh


===Chapter 1. Cultural terms===
God is affirmed as the Necessary Existent (wājib al-wujūd), absolutely simple, uncomposed, and ontologically prior to all multiplicity. Tawḥīd thus signifies the unity of existence itself (waḥdat al-wujūd), not merely the numerical oneness of a deity among others. Multiplicity belongs only to the realm of contingent manifestation.


Intelligible dimension • Intelligible realm • Intelligible world
For Rationalist Muslims, belief in God corresponds to the recognition of the Necessary Existent (wājib al-wujūd), whose being is simple, non-composite, and devoid of parts, potentiality, or contingency. God is not an entity among entities but the absolute ground of all existence — pure actuality (faʿl maḥḍ). The divine unity is ontological, not merely numerical: multiplicity belongs to the contingent realm of emanations, while God is utterly simple and self-identical. This view parallels the doctrines of divine simplicity in Avicenna, Aquinas, and Mulla Ṣadrā, as well as the monism of analytic idealism. God, therefore, is not a being who causes things to exist but Being Itself — the necessary substrate upon which all possible realities depend.


===Chapter 2. Existential truths (Logic)===
===4) Oneness of necessary existence===


====2.1 Rule of one====
Monotheism • Oneness • Oneness of Allah • Oneness of God • Tawhīd


====2.2 Gradation of existence====
Given (i) the Principle of Sufficient Reason (no brute facts), (ii) the contingency of many things (they could have failed to be), and (iii) the rejection of vicious circularity and infinite regress in explanation, reason requires at least one reality that exists by itself—not by participation or derivation. This reality’s non-existence is impossible; its existence is necessary. This terminates explanatory dependence without remainder.


===Chapter 3. Numbers (Number theory)===
===5) Necessary simplicity===


===Chapter 4. Dimensions (Geometry)===
Al-Basāṭah al-ilāhiyyah • Divine simplicity


===Chapter 5. Algebraic structures (Algebra)===
To terminate explanation non-arbitrarily, the Necessary Existent cannot be composed of parts, properties, or principles that would themselves require a further ground. Composition implies dependence. Therefore, the foundation is simple: its essence is not really distinct from its existence; what it is does not stand apart from that it is.


==Part III Immaterial dependent existents==
===6) Absolute necessary simplicity===


===Chapter 1. Ontologically first dependent existent===
Simplicity is comprehensive: no composition of form/matter, essence/existence, act/potency, universal/particular, subject/accident. Any real internal plurality would reinstate explanatory demands and forfeit ultimacy. Absolute simplicity ensures the foundation is explanatorily final.


====1. Cultural terms====
===7) Oneness of being===


First creation First intellect • First light • Image of God • Imago dei • Mashīyya • Nūr Muhammadiyya • Pen • Perfect creation • Qalam • Universal intellect
Monism Nondualism


====2. Epistemic framework====
From absolute simplicity follows unqualified unity. There cannot be two necessary beings: any differentiating feature would either be ungrounded (violating PSR) or would introduce composition (violating simplicity). Unity is not an optional attribute; it is entailed by necessary existence under PSR.


====3. Deductive proof====
The unity at the source does not deny plurality below. There is one existence diversely received in finite modes. Multiplicity reflects limits in receivers, not a plurality in the source. This avoids both monistic collapse (erasing real difference) and dualistic rupture (splitting being).


===Chapter 2. Ontologically second dependent existent===
===8) The rule of one===


===Chapter 3. Ontologically third dependent existent===
===9) Ontologically first dependent existent===


===Chapter 4. Ontologically fourth dependent existent===
First creation • First intellect • First light • Image of God • Imago dei • Mashīyya • Nūr Muhammadiyya • Pen • Perfect creation • Qalam • Universal intellect


===Chapter 5. Ontologically fifth dependent existent===
At the summit, being and oneness are convertible: the more actual a thing, the more internally one it is (less division, less unrealised potency). This rule explains why derived realities exhibit fragmentation and limitation while the foundation does not.


===Chapter 6. Ontologically sixth dependent existent===
===10) [[Eternal Creation]]===


===Chapter 7. Ontologically seventh dependent existent===
===11) Gradation of existence===


===Chapter 8. Ontologically eighth dependent existent===
Gradation of reality • Tashkīk al-wujūd


===Chapter 9. Ontologically ninth dependent existent===
Finite things differ by degree of actuality and perfection. “More being” means more power, intelligibility, and independence; “less being” means more limitation and dependence. A graded ontology reconciles unity at the source with diversity in the effects and provides an objective scale for value and excellence.


===Chapter 10. Ontologically tenth dependent existent===
Being presents modes and orders: necessary/contingent; possible/actual/necessary; intelligible/mental/physical; formal/energetic/informational. Recognising these dimensions prevents category mistakes (e.g., treating mental time as if it were foundational becoming) and sets the stage for precise accounts of time, mind, and matter.


==Part IV Material dimension==
===12) Immaterial dimension===  


===Chapter 1. Cultural terms===
Intelligible dimension • Intelligible realm • Intelligible world


Cosmos • Dunyā • Material realm • Material world • Multiverse • Olam HaZeh • Physical world • Sensible dimension • Sensible realm • Sensible world • Universe
===13) Immaterial existents===


===Chapter 2. Actualising potential===
Angels • Malāʾika


====Cultural terms====
They are not anthropomorphic entities but intelligible forces or modalities of divine action within the order of necessity. In metaphysical terms, they correspond to immaterial intelligences — forms or causal principles mediating between the Necessary and the contingent realms. Their obedience is the metaphysical inevitability of their nature: to exist as pure forms of divine causation is to act according to divine necessity.


'Ibādah • Islām • Servitude • Submission • Worship
Their nomenclature — Gabriel (Jibrīl), Michael (Mīkāʾīl), Israfil, and others — denotes culturally contextual personifications of these cosmic functions. “Gabriel,” for instance, signifies the intellective principle through which revelation (noetic illumination) is transmitted to the human mind; “Michael” may represent the principle of sustenance and order in the natural world, and so forth. Hence, angelology is understood symbolically yet ontologically — as the taxonomy of necessary causal intelligences.


===Chapter 3. Temporal causation===
===14) Material dimension===
Cosmos • Dunyā • Material realm • Material world • Multiverse • Natural World • Olam HaZeh • Physical world • Sensible dimension • Sensible realm • Sensible world • Universe


===Chapter 4. Continuous change (Calculus)===
The material order is a stable, mathematically tractable layer within graded being. Its regularities are intelligible and publicly checkable; they instantiate the very demand of PSR in the contingent domain. Treating it as illusory in the pejorative sense would make empirical knowledge impossible; treating it as ultimate would contradict the explanatory ascent already established.


===Chapter 5. Events (Probability theory)===
===15) B-theory of time===


===Chapter 6. Evolution (Evolutionary biology)===
The dependence structure described above favours time as an order of states rather than an ontological “flow” in the foundation. On the B-theory, events are tenselessly ordered (earlier-than/later-than). Change is real as difference across the order, not as a metaphysical becoming at the ultimate level. This preserves causality and explanation while avoiding reifying “passage” as a primitive.


==Part V Material dependent actualised rational existents: Homo perfectus sapiens==
===16) Compatibilism===


===Chapter 1. Cultural terms===
Divine Decree • Divine Predestination • Illusion of Libertarian Free Will • Predestination • Qadar • Soft determinism


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
Libertarian “could-have-done-otherwise” at the moment of action, ungrounded by reasons, is incoherent under PSR. Yet rational agency remains: we act from reasons that express our form, character, and understanding. This reasons-responsive (compatibilist) agency preserves responsibility while avoiding metaphysical indeterminacy that would reintroduce brute facts.


===Chapter 2. Epistemic framework (Logic, philosophy, speculative anthropology & religion)===
Divine predestination (qadar) is understood through the principle of necessitarianism: all events unfold according to the immutable nexus of causation grounded in divine omniscience. God’s knowledge is not temporal foreknowledge but the eternal self-knowledge of Being — every event, possibility, and contingency already contained within the necessary structure of existence. Human freedom, within this view, is not libertarian but compatibilist: freedom is the self-expression of necessity at the human level, as articulated by Spinoza and echoed by Sadra’s doctrine of substantial motion (ḥaraka jawhariyya). To affirm qadar is to recognise that reality could not have been otherwise — its totality is the rational unfolding of divine simplicity through graded manifestation.


===Chapter 3. Deductive proof===
===17) [[Consciousness]]===


===Chapter 4. Objections and refutations against them===
Consciousness is the indubitable datum: all inquiry is conducted within it. Within a graded ontology, consciousness is not an inert by-product but an intensity of actuality through which being is self-revealing in finite centres. Denying consciousness to make room for a purely extrinsic materialism undermines the very conditions of knowing.


===Chapter 5. Evolution===
===18) Analytic Idealism===  


===Chapter 6. Intellect===
Meta-Consciousness • Dissociation, Reassociation


====6.1 Epistemic framework====
Unity and gradation motivate a model in which a meta-conscious field grounds many finite streams. Individual minds are dissociations—bounded, rule-governed perspectives within the field. Exceptional states (deep sleep, near-death, mystical union) exemplify reassociation, i.e., loosening or widening of the bounds. This is not a licence for speculation; it is a way to render mind-world relations intelligible under the prior ontology.


====6.2 Deductive proof====
===19) Perdurantism===


====6.3 Terms and usage====
If finite minds are dissociations within a wider field, there is no a priori reason to assert that the onset of one’s conscious stream coincides with biological birth. “Prelife” names the rational openness—consistent with the priors—to pre-embodied conditions of perspective without committing to any particular folklore.


'Aql • Nous
By the same token, the cessation of bodily function need not entail annihilation of perspective. “Afterlife” denotes reassociation of the informational/intentional structure that constituted a person’s perspective with a wider scope. This is a metaphysical possibility that naturally follows from the mind-model; its specific contours require evidential inquiry.


===Chapter 7. Information: Ungraded acquisition===
Given the B-series, the felt flow of time is a feature of consciousness—our way of accessing successive states—rather than a fundamental becoming. This clarifies memory, anticipation, and temporal phenomenology without elevating them to ontological primitives.


====7.1 Epistemic framework====  
===20) Physical empiricism===


====7.2 Deductive proof====
Empirical method • Scientific method


====7.3 Terms and usage====
Because contingent facts can only be discriminated by observation, test, and replication, science is reason’s mandated method for the natural world: model, predict, measure, attempt to falsify, update. This is not an optional cultural choice; it is the epistemic application of PSR and contingency to nature. Where controlled experiment is impossible (e.g., cosmology), methodological surrogates (consilience, retrodiction, robustness checks) carry the same rational aim.


Anubhava • Enlightenment • Ilhām • Nirvana • Perfect knowledge acquisition • Revelation • Wahī
===21) Recognition of potential===


====7.4 Objections and refutations against them====
===22) Primacy of intellect===


===Chapter 8. Information: Ungraded dissemination===
===23) Actualising personal potential===


====8.1 Epistemic framework====
'Ibādah • Islām • Servitude • Submission • Worship


====8.2 Deductive proof====
===24) Actualisation of potential===


====8.3 Terms and usage====
Anubhava • Enlightenment • Henosis • Ilhām • Nirvana • Nubuwwah • Perfect knowledge acquisition • Prophethood • Samadhi • Revelation • Wahī


====8.4 Objections and refutations against them====
===25) Actualising regional potential===


====8.5 Nominees====
Messengership • Risālah
===26) Actualising global potential / [[Maximisation of Personal & Global Wellbeing (Constrained)]]====


Bible • [[Hadīths]] • Qur'ān (Mushaf of 'Alī) • Qur'ān ('Uthmānic codex)
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.
====8.6 [[Divine Prophecy]]====


===Chapter 9. [[Information: Graded dissemination]]===
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.


Cognitive reframing
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.


====9.1 Epistemic framework====  
===26) Gradation of Intellect===


====9.2 Deductive proof====
Pedagogy, Society, and Rule


====9.3 Terms and usage====
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.


Intellectual dissimulation • Taqīyya
Inevitability of Intellectual Hierarchy


====9.4 Objections and refutations against them====
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.


====9.5 Nominees====
Divine Scriptures


Bible • [[Hadīths]] • Qur'ān (Mushaf of 'Alī) • Qur'ān ('Uthmānic codex)
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.


====9.6 Seminaries====
===27) Noocracy===  


=====9.6.1 [[Hawzah al-Hikmah]]=====
Imāmah • Perfect manhood • Philosopher kingship • Technocracy


===Chapter 10. Social interaction===
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.


===Chapter 11. Diet===
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.


===Chapter 12. Candidates===
===28) [[Philosopher King]]===


[[Confucius]] (551–479 BCE, China) — Philosopher, educator, ethicist.
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
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.
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.
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.  
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.
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.
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.
====Nubuwwa (Prophethood)====
Analyzed mind (psyche) as structured layers of life — vegetative, animal, rational — anticipating systematic study of consciousness.
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.


[[Ashoka]] (304–232 BCE, India) — Emperor, Buddhist reformer.
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.
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.
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.
====19) Intellectual Accommodation====
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.
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.
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.
====20) Intellectual Dissimulation (Strict Sense)====
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.
Taqīyya - thawriyya
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.
“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.
Praised for conciliatory leadership; relinquished political authority to avoid bloodshed, embodying consciousness of peace and ethical restraint in volatile times.


Husayn ibn Ali (626–680 CE, Arabia) — 3rd Imam, grandson of Muhammad.
====Cognitive reframing====
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.
====21) Need to Encourage and Control Behaviour====
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.
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.
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.
====22) Need for Dogma====
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.
“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.
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.
====23) Metanarratives====
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.
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.
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.
====24) Mythos for Most====
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.
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.
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.
====25) 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.
====26) Repurposing Myths and Legends====
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.
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.
Through ecstatic poetry and metaphor, expressed consciousness as love-driven dissolution of ego into unity.


[[Meister Eckhart]] (1260–1328, Germany) — Theologian, mystic.
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.
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.
Developed gradational ontology (tashkīk al-wujūd), equating degrees of being with levels of consciousness, anticipating panpsychist lines.


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


[[John Locke]] (1632–1704, England) — Philosopher, theorist.
Pillars of Faith (Arkān al-Īmān)
Defined personal identity as continuity of consciousness, influencing modern selfhood and rights theory.
Uṣūl al-Dīn


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


[[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]] (1712–1778, Switzerland/France) — Philosopher.
Furūʿ al-Dīn (Branches of Religion)
Probed conscience, authenticity, and freedom, reshaping consciousness of self in society.
Sunni Arkān al-Islām (Pillars of Practice)


[[Immanuel Kant]] (1724–1804, Prussia) — Philosopher.
Explained consciousness as structured by categories of understanding; “transcendental unity of apperception” as ground of experience.


[[Thomas Paine]] (1737–1809, England/USA) — Writer, revolutionary.
The furūʿ are ethical-ritual expressions of metaphysical truths. Each act symbolises and cultivates an inner disposition aligned with the ontological order.
Voiced universal rights and democratic conscience, extending awareness of political selfhood.


[[Toussaint Louverture]] (1743–1803, Haiti) — Revolutionary leader.
====Ṣalāt (Prayer)====
Transformed consciousness of enslaved peoples into political agency, leading Haiti’s independence.
The rhythmic realignment of the self with the Ground of Being; a phenomenological exercise in returning to presence (ḥuḍūr).


[[William Blake]] (1757–1827, England) — Poet, artist.
====Ṣawm (Fasting)====
Visionary imagination turned consciousness into prophetic art, critiquing industrial rationalism.
The voluntary suspension of lower appetites to reassert primacy of the intellective over the corporeal.


[[G.W.F. Hegel]] (1770–1831, Germany) — Philosopher.
====Zakāt (Almsgiving)====
Mapped consciousness through dialectical stages, culminating in self-realisation as Spirit.
The recognition that material differentiation is accidental; redistribution manifests the unity of the collective soul.


[[Charles Darwin]] (1809–1882, England) — Naturalist.
====Ḥajj (Pilgrimage)====
Altered consciousness of life by introducing evolution, dissolving static hierarchies of species.
An enacted cosmology: the circumambulation of the One by the many, signifying the soul’s return to its origin.


[[Karl Marx]] (1818–1883, Germany) — Philosopher, revolutionary theorist.
====Jihād (Striving)====
Exposed class consciousness as historical driver, insisting on praxis linking thought to transformation.
Primarily the inner struggle against ignorance and delusion; outward struggle is justifiable only as the defence of conditions for intellectual and moral flourishing.


[[Friedrich Nietzsche]] (1844–1900, Germany) — Philosopher.
====Khums (One-Fifth Levy)====
Pushed consciousness beyond truth-illusions toward life-affirmation, the “Übermensch” as higher integration.
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.


[[Nikola Tesla]] (1856–1943, Serbia/US) — Inventor, engineer.
====Amr bi’l-Maʿrūf & Nahy ʿan al-Munkar====
Harnessed visionary imagination, turning inner visualisation into scientific-technological breakthroughs.
The rational imperative to promote virtue and restrain vice; not coercion, but moral pedagogy rooted in intellectual hierarchy.


[[Marie Curie]] (1867–1934, Poland/France) — Physicist, chemist.
====Tawallā & Tabarrā====
Expanded human consciousness of matter by revealing radioactivity, with extraordinary intellectual discipline.
Symbolic of epistemic allegiance and disassociation: attachment to truth and detachment from falsehood, understood ontologically rather than tribally.


[[Mahatma Gandhi]] (1869–1948, India) — Lawyer, revolutionary.
Thus, the furūʿ become modes of ethical cultivation, each a symbolic pedagogy for the soul’s ascent through the gradations of being.
Embodied sacrificial consciousness through satyagraha (truth-force), nonviolent resistance, and willingness to suffer for justice.


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


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


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


[[Albert Einstein]] (1879–1955, Germany/US) — Physicist.
====Ṣalāt (Prayer)====
Reconceptualised time, space, and relativity, demonstrating imaginative consciousness as scientific method.
Interpreted as the rhythmic unification of consciousness with the Real; its temporal structure symbolises the cyclical return of multiplicity to unity.


[[Simone Weil]] (1909–1943, France) — Philosopher, mystic.
====Zakāt (Almsgiving)====
Married mystical attentiveness with radical political conscience, lived sacrificial solidarity with workers and victims.
Represents the ontological interdependence of all beings; to give is to acknowledge that possession is a contingent differentiation within a unified field of existence.


[[Ruhollah Khomeini]] (1902–1989, Iran) — Cleric, revolutionary leader.
====Ṣawm (Fasting during Ramaḍān)====
Unified metaphysics, mysticism, and political revolution, embodying sacrificial exile before seizing transformative power.
An exercise in epistemic purification: by abstaining from sensory indulgence, the intellect re-centres itself on the essential.


[[David Bohm]] (1917–1992, USA/UK) — Physicist, philosopher.
====Ḥajj (Pilgrimage to Mecca)====
Proposed implicate order, dialogue as expansion of shared consciousness, bridging science and holistic awareness.
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.


[[Nelson Mandela]] (1918–2013, South Africa) — Revolutionary, president.
Sacrificially endured 27 years in prison, then embodied reconciliatory consciousness over vengeance.


[[James Baldwin]] (1924–1987, USA) — Writer, activist.
classical logical norms: non-contradiction, identity, and valid inference.
Articulated consciousness of race, identity, and love with radical clarity and eloquence.


[[Malcolm X]] (1925–1965, USA) — Minister, activist.
Explanatory adequacy: principle of sufficient reason, parsimony, coherence with well-established findings.
Transformed his own consciousness through struggle, symbolising liberation through fearless self-reinvention.


[[Martin Luther King Jr.]] (1929–1968, USA) — Minister, civil rights leader.
Public reason: justifications accessible to any competent inquirer; aversion to special pleading.
Preached unitive, sacrificial love and justice, embodying higher ethical consciousness at great personal risk.


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


[[Vaclav Havel]] (1936–2011, Czechia) — Playwright, dissident, president.
Nature and technology: experimental method, peer critique, replication.
Coined “living in truth” as a form of political-moral consciousness in oppressive regimes.


[[Hassan Nasrallah]] (1960–2024, Lebanon) — Cleric, political-military leader.
History: source criticism, chronology, philology, intertextuality, external controls (epigraphy, archaeology), and context.
Charismatic orator, blends political struggle with sacrificial posture under constant threat.


===Chapter 13. Reception===


====13.1 Hagiography====
====13.1 Hagiography====
=====13.1.1 Other terms=====


Apotheosis • Deification • Divinisation • Ghuluw • Heroisation • Legendary accretion • Mythicisation • Myth-making • Mythologisation • Mythopoeia • Sacralisation  
Apotheosis • Deification • Divinisation • Ghuluw • Heroisation • Legendary accretion • Mythicisation • Myth-making • Mythologisation • Mythopoeia • Sacralisation  
Line 379: Line 395:
=====13.1.2 [[Ghulāt]]=====
=====13.1.2 [[Ghulāt]]=====


===Chapter 14. Legends===


ʾĀdām (Ādam, Adam)
====ʿAdl (Divine Justice)====
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.


Idrīs (Enoch or Hermes Trismegistus)


Nūḥ (Noah)
====Maʿād (Return / Eschaton)====
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.


[[Hūd]]
====5. Belief in the Day of Judgment====
Ṣāliḥ
Ibrāhīm (Abraham)


Lūṭ (Lot)  
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.


Ismā'īl (Ishmael)
[[Hadīths]]


Isḥāq (Isaac)


Ya'qūb (Jacob)


Yūsuf (Joseph)
==Essentialist Affirmation of Doctrinal Schemas==


Ayyūb (Job)
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.


Shu'ayb
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.
Mūsā (Moses)


Hārūn (Aaron)
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.
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).


Dāūd (David)
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.


Sulaymān (Solomon)


Ilyās (Elijah)


Alyasa' (Elisha)


Yūnus (Jonah)
Through essentialist hermeneutics and analogical affirmation, Rationalist Islam re-grounds these frameworks as expressions of universal metaphysical and ethical principles.
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.


Ḏū l-Kifli (Ezekiel, Isaiah, Obadiah or Buddha)
Doctrinal Correspondence and Analogical Affirmation


Zakariyyā (Zechariah)
system corresponds conceptually to others while affirming them analogically (i.e., at the level of essence, not literal formulation).


Yaḥyā (John the Baptist)
Hermeneutic Concordance • Doctrinal Integration through Essential Concordance • Analogical Affirmation of Classical Frameworks • Philosophical Re-grounding of Classical Doctrines • Essentialist Affirmation of Doctrinal Schemas


Muhammad al-Mahdī
[[Hawzah al-Hikmah]]


==Part VI Material dependent unactualised rational existents: Homo sapiens==
===Candidates===


===Chapter 1. Epistemic framework (Anthropology)===
[[Jesus]] (c. 4 BCE–30 CE, Judea) — Preacher, reformer.
Preached radical inversion of social norms (“the last shall be first”), extending consciousness into unconditional love and inner purity, even at cost of crucifixion.


===Chapter 2. Inductive evidence===
[[Muḥammad]] (570–632 CE, Arabia) — Philosopher, mystic, merchant, orator, poet, revolutionary, statesman, military commander.
Combined contemplative withdrawal (Ḥirā) with revolutionary vision: transformed fragments of oral, poetic, and legal consciousness into a unifying moral-legal system.


===Chapter 3. Terms and usage===
[[Ali]] (601–661 CE, Arabia) — Caliph, jurist, philosopher-poet.
Renowned for sermons that combined courage, self-awareness, and metaphysical reflection; model of integrating ethical action and contemplative thought.


Human • Imperfect human • Imperfect rational animal • Insān
Hasan ibn Ali (624–670 CE, Arabia) — 2nd Imam, grandson of Muhammad.
Praised for conciliatory leadership; relinquished political authority to avoid bloodshed, embodying consciousness of peace and ethical restraint in volatile times.


===Chapter 4. [[Mindfulness]]===
[[Ruhollah Khomeini]] (1902–1989, Iran) — Cleric, revolutionary leader.
Unified metaphysics, mysticism, and political revolution, embodying sacrificial exile before seizing transformative power.


====4.1 Epistemic framework====
[[Ali Khamenei]] (1939–present, Iran) — Cleric, revolutionary, head of state.
Blends political leadership with a philosophical-mystical lineage, navigating survival under immense constraint.


====4.2 Inductive evidence====
[[Hassan Nasrallah]] (1960–2024, Lebanon) — Cleric, political-military leader.
Charismatic orator, blends political struggle with sacrificial posture under constant threat.


====4.3. Terms and usage====


Dhikr • God consciousness • Meditation • Salāh • Taqwā


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


===Chapter 6. [[Mental health]]===
===Legends===


====6.1 [[Denialism]]====
ʾĀdām (Ādam, Adam)


====6.2 [[Cognitive dissonance]]====
Idrīs (Enoch or Hermes Trismegistus)


====6.3 [[Defence mechanism]]====
Nūḥ (Noah)


===Chapter 7. [[Physical health]]===
[[Hūd]]
Ṣāliḥ
Ibrāhīm (Abraham)


===Chapter 8. [[Hygiene]]===
Lūṭ (Lot)


====8.1 [[Female hygiene]]====
Ismā'īl (Ishmael)


====8.2 [[Male hygiene]]====
Isḥāq (Isaac)


===Chapter 9. [[Fasting]]===
Ya'qūb (Jacob)


===Chapter 10. [[Nutrition]]===
Yūsuf (Joseph)


===Chapter 11. [[Personal finance]]===
Ayyūb (Job)


===Chapter 12. [[Philanthropy]]===
Shu'ayb
Mūsā (Moses)


===Chapter 13. [[Homo sapiens reproduction|Reproduction]]===
Hārūn (Aaron)


===Chapter 14. [[Death]]===
Dāūd (David)


===Chapter 15. [[Burial]]===
Sulaymān (Solomon)


===Chapter 16. [[Inheritance]]===
Ilyās (Elijah)


===Chapter 17. [[Advocacy]]===
Alyasa' (Elisha)


==Part VII Material dependent unactualised rational existents: Homo erectus==
Yūnus (Jonah)


==Part VIII Material dependent unactualised rational existents: Homo habilis==
Ḏū l-Kifli (Ezekiel, Isaiah, Obadiah or Buddha)


==Part IX Material dependent unactualised rational existents: Australopithecus==
Zakariyyā (Zechariah)


==Part X Material dependent non-rational existents==
Yaḥyā (John the Baptist)


===Chapter 1. Animal (Zoology)===
Muhammad al-Mahdī


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


===Chapter 3. Organism (Biology)===


===Chapter 4. Organ (Biology)===
[[Mindfulness]]


===Chapter 5. Tissue (Biology)===
Dhikr • God consciousness • Meditation • Salāh • Taqwā


===Chapter 6. Cell (Biology)===


===Chapter 7. Organelle (Biology)===


===Chapter 8. Mineral (Mineralogy)===
[[Denialism]]


===Chapter 9. Molecule (Chemistry)===
[[Cognitive dissonance]]


====9.1 Homonuclear molecule====
[[Defence mechanism]]
====9.2 Heteronuclear molecule====


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


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


===Chapter 12. Subatomic particle (Quantum mechanics)===
[[Homo sapiens reproduction|Reproduction]]


===Chapter 13. Quantum field (Theoretical physics)===
[[Advocacy]]

Latest revision as of 11:51, 28 March 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) Primacy of existence

Reason first encounters that something is. Existence is therefore metaphysically prior to the conceptual profiles (essences) by which we sort and compare things. Essences mark the ways existence can be instantiated; they do not outrank existence itself. This primacy blocks nihilism (that nothing ultimately is) and prevents treating essences as free-floating items that would themselves demand an unexplained ontological status.

“Existence” is not a genus with species under it. It is the act of being by which anything is actual rather than merely possible. Because things exist in many ways and to different degrees, the unity of existence is analogical (or graded) rather than univocal. This explains how diverse realities can still be comparable as “more or less actual” without collapsing them into sameness.

3) Necessary existence

Ahura Mazda • Allāh • Aten • Baha • Brahman • 'Ēl • Father • God • God the Father • Shangdi • The One • Unconditioned Reality • Vishnu • Waheguru • Yahweh

God is affirmed as the Necessary Existent (wājib al-wujūd), absolutely simple, uncomposed, and ontologically prior to all multiplicity. Tawḥīd thus signifies the unity of existence itself (waḥdat al-wujūd), not merely the numerical oneness of a deity among others. Multiplicity belongs only to the realm of contingent manifestation.

For Rationalist Muslims, belief in God corresponds to the recognition of the Necessary Existent (wājib al-wujūd), whose being is simple, non-composite, and devoid of parts, potentiality, or contingency. God is not an entity among entities but the absolute ground of all existence — pure actuality (faʿl maḥḍ). The divine unity is ontological, not merely numerical: multiplicity belongs to the contingent realm of emanations, while God is utterly simple and self-identical. This view parallels the doctrines of divine simplicity in Avicenna, Aquinas, and Mulla Ṣadrā, as well as the monism of analytic idealism. God, therefore, is not a being who causes things to exist but Being Itself — the necessary substrate upon which all possible realities depend.

4) Oneness of necessary existence

Monotheism • Oneness • Oneness of Allah • Oneness of God • Tawhīd

Given (i) the Principle of Sufficient Reason (no brute facts), (ii) the contingency of many things (they could have failed to be), and (iii) the rejection of vicious circularity and infinite regress in explanation, reason requires at least one reality that exists by itself—not by participation or derivation. This reality’s non-existence is impossible; its existence is necessary. This terminates explanatory dependence without remainder.

5) Necessary simplicity

Al-Basāṭah al-ilāhiyyah • Divine simplicity

To terminate explanation non-arbitrarily, the Necessary Existent cannot be composed of parts, properties, or principles that would themselves require a further ground. Composition implies dependence. Therefore, the foundation is simple: its essence is not really distinct from its existence; what it is does not stand apart from that it is.

6) Absolute necessary simplicity

Simplicity is comprehensive: no composition of form/matter, essence/existence, act/potency, universal/particular, subject/accident. Any real internal plurality would reinstate explanatory demands and forfeit ultimacy. Absolute simplicity ensures the foundation is explanatorily final.

7) Oneness of being

Monism • Nondualism

From absolute simplicity follows unqualified unity. There cannot be two necessary beings: any differentiating feature would either be ungrounded (violating PSR) or would introduce composition (violating simplicity). Unity is not an optional attribute; it is entailed by necessary existence under PSR.

The unity at the source does not deny plurality below. There is one existence diversely received in finite modes. Multiplicity reflects limits in receivers, not a plurality in the source. This avoids both monistic collapse (erasing real difference) and dualistic rupture (splitting being).

8) The rule of one

9) Ontologically first dependent existent

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

At the summit, being and oneness are convertible: the more actual a thing, the more internally one it is (less division, less unrealised potency). This rule explains why derived realities exhibit fragmentation and limitation while the foundation does not.

11) Gradation of existence

Gradation of reality • Tashkīk al-wujūd

Finite things differ by degree of actuality and perfection. “More being” means more power, intelligibility, and independence; “less being” means more limitation and dependence. A graded ontology reconciles unity at the source with diversity in the effects and provides an objective scale for value and excellence.

Being presents modes and orders: necessary/contingent; possible/actual/necessary; intelligible/mental/physical; formal/energetic/informational. Recognising these dimensions prevents category mistakes (e.g., treating mental time as if it were foundational becoming) and sets the stage for precise accounts of time, mind, and matter.

12) Immaterial dimension

Intelligible dimension • Intelligible realm • Intelligible world

13) Immaterial existents

Angels • Malāʾika

They are not anthropomorphic entities but intelligible forces or modalities of divine action within the order of necessity. In metaphysical terms, they correspond to immaterial intelligences — forms or causal principles mediating between the Necessary and the contingent realms. Their obedience is the metaphysical inevitability of their nature: to exist as pure forms of divine causation is to act according to divine necessity.

Their nomenclature — Gabriel (Jibrīl), Michael (Mīkāʾīl), Israfil, and others — denotes culturally contextual personifications of these cosmic functions. “Gabriel,” for instance, signifies the intellective principle through which revelation (noetic illumination) is transmitted to the human mind; “Michael” may represent the principle of sustenance and order in the natural world, and so forth. Hence, angelology is understood symbolically yet ontologically — as the taxonomy of necessary causal intelligences.

14) Material dimension

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

The material order is a stable, mathematically tractable layer within graded being. Its regularities are intelligible and publicly checkable; they instantiate the very demand of PSR in the contingent domain. Treating it as illusory in the pejorative sense would make empirical knowledge impossible; treating it as ultimate would contradict the explanatory ascent already established.

15) B-theory of time

The dependence structure described above favours time as an order of states rather than an ontological “flow” in the foundation. On the B-theory, events are tenselessly ordered (earlier-than/later-than). Change is real as difference across the order, not as a metaphysical becoming at the ultimate level. This preserves causality and explanation while avoiding reifying “passage” as a primitive.

16) Compatibilism

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

Libertarian “could-have-done-otherwise” at the moment of action, ungrounded by reasons, is incoherent under PSR. Yet rational agency remains: we act from reasons that express our form, character, and understanding. This reasons-responsive (compatibilist) agency preserves responsibility while avoiding metaphysical indeterminacy that would reintroduce brute facts.

Divine predestination (qadar) is understood through the principle of necessitarianism: all events unfold according to the immutable nexus of causation grounded in divine omniscience. God’s knowledge is not temporal foreknowledge but the eternal self-knowledge of Being — every event, possibility, and contingency already contained within the necessary structure of existence. Human freedom, within this view, is not libertarian but compatibilist: freedom is the self-expression of necessity at the human level, as articulated by Spinoza and echoed by Sadra’s doctrine of substantial motion (ḥaraka jawhariyya). To affirm qadar is to recognise that reality could not have been otherwise — its totality is the rational unfolding of divine simplicity through graded manifestation.

Consciousness is the indubitable datum: all inquiry is conducted within it. Within a graded ontology, consciousness is not an inert by-product but an intensity of actuality through which being is self-revealing in finite centres. Denying consciousness to make room for a purely extrinsic materialism undermines the very conditions of knowing.

18) Analytic Idealism

Meta-Consciousness • Dissociation, Reassociation

Unity and gradation motivate a model in which a meta-conscious field grounds many finite streams. Individual minds are dissociations—bounded, rule-governed perspectives within the field. Exceptional states (deep sleep, near-death, mystical union) exemplify reassociation, i.e., loosening or widening of the bounds. This is not a licence for speculation; it is a way to render mind-world relations intelligible under the prior ontology.

19) Perdurantism

If finite minds are dissociations within a wider field, there is no a priori reason to assert that the onset of one’s conscious stream coincides with biological birth. “Prelife” names the rational openness—consistent with the priors—to pre-embodied conditions of perspective without committing to any particular folklore.

By the same token, the cessation of bodily function need not entail annihilation of perspective. “Afterlife” denotes reassociation of the informational/intentional structure that constituted a person’s perspective with a wider scope. This is a metaphysical possibility that naturally follows from the mind-model; its specific contours require evidential inquiry.

Given the B-series, the felt flow of time is a feature of consciousness—our way of accessing successive states—rather than a fundamental becoming. This clarifies memory, anticipation, and temporal phenomenology without elevating them to ontological primitives.

20) Physical empiricism

Empirical method • Scientific method

Because contingent facts can only be discriminated by observation, test, and replication, science is reason’s mandated method for the natural world: model, predict, measure, attempt to falsify, update. This is not an optional cultural choice; it is the epistemic application of PSR and contingency to nature. Where controlled experiment is impossible (e.g., cosmology), methodological surrogates (consilience, retrodiction, robustness checks) carry the same rational aim.

21) Recognition of potential

22) Primacy of intellect

23) Actualising personal potential

'Ibādah • Islām • Servitude • Submission • Worship

24) Actualisation of potential

Anubhava • Enlightenment • Henosis • Ilhām • Nirvana • Nubuwwah • Perfect knowledge acquisition • Prophethood • Samadhi • Revelation • Wahī

25) Actualising regional potential

Messengership • Risālah

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.

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.

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.

26) Gradation of Intellect

Pedagogy, Society, and Rule

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.

Inevitability of Intellectual Hierarchy

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.

Divine Scriptures

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.

27) Noocracy

Imāmah • Perfect manhood • Philosopher kingship • Technocracy

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.

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.

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


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.

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.

Nubuwwa (Prophethood)

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.



19) Intellectual Accommodation

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.

20) Intellectual Dissimulation (Strict Sense)

Taqīyya - thawriyya

“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.

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.

25) 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.

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.

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.


Shahāda (Testimony of Faith)

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) Uṣūl al-Dīn


Furūʿ al-Dīn (Branches of Religion) Sunni Arkān al-Islām (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.

Ṣalāt (Prayer)

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

Ṣawm (Fasting)

The voluntary suspension of lower appetites to reassert primacy of the intellective over the corporeal.

Zakāt (Almsgiving)

The recognition that material differentiation is accidental; redistribution manifests the unity of the collective soul.

Ḥajj (Pilgrimage)

An enacted cosmology: the circumambulation of the One by the many, signifying the soul’s return to its origin.

Jihād (Striving)

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

Nature and technology: experimental method, peer critique, replication.

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


13.1 Hagiography

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

13.1.2 Ghulāt

ʿAdl (Divine Justice)

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.


Maʿād (Return / Eschaton)

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.

5. Belief in the Day of Judgment

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.

Hadīths


Essentialist Affirmation of Doctrinal Schemas

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.

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.

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. 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).

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.



Through essentialist hermeneutics and analogical affirmation, Rationalist Islam re-grounds these frameworks as expressions of universal metaphysical and ethical principles. 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.

Doctrinal Correspondence and Analogical Affirmation

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

Hermeneutic Concordance • Doctrinal Integration through Essential Concordance • Analogical Affirmation of Classical Frameworks • Philosophical Re-grounding of Classical Doctrines • Essentialist Affirmation of Doctrinal Schemas

Hawzah al-Hikmah

Candidates

Jesus (c. 4 BCE–30 CE, Judea) — Preacher, reformer. Preached radical inversion of social norms (“the last shall be first”), extending consciousness into unconditional love and inner purity, even at cost of crucifixion.

Muḥammad (570–632 CE, Arabia) — Philosopher, mystic, merchant, orator, poet, revolutionary, statesman, military commander. 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. Renowned for sermons that combined courage, self-awareness, and metaphysical reflection; model of integrating ethical action and contemplative thought.

Hasan ibn Ali (624–670 CE, Arabia) — 2nd Imam, grandson of Muhammad. Praised for conciliatory leadership; relinquished political authority to avoid bloodshed, embodying consciousness of peace and ethical restraint in volatile times.

Ruhollah Khomeini (1902–1989, Iran) — Cleric, revolutionary leader. Unified metaphysics, mysticism, and political revolution, embodying sacrificial exile before seizing transformative power.

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

Hassan Nasrallah (1960–2024, Lebanon) — Cleric, political-military leader. Charismatic orator, blends political struggle with sacrificial posture under constant threat.



Legends

ʾĀdām (Ādam, Adam)

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


Denialism

Cognitive dissonance

Defence mechanism


Reproduction

Advocacy