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===1) Metaphysical rationalism=== | ===1) Metaphysical rationalism=== | ||
===Foundationalism=== | ===2) Foundationalism=== | ||
===Epistemic parsimony=== | ===3) Epistemic parsimony=== | ||
===Ontological parsimony=== | ===4) Ontological parsimony=== | ||
===Primacy of [[Consciousness]]=== | ===5) Primacy of [[Consciousness]]=== | ||
===Analytic idealism=== | ===6) Analytic idealism=== | ||
===Oneness of consciousness=== | ===7) Oneness of consciousness=== | ||
Monism • Nondualism | Monism • Nondualism | ||
===Ontological priority=== | ===8) Ontological priority=== | ||
===Gradation of consciousness=== | ===9) Gradation of consciousness=== | ||
Gradation of existence • Gradation of reality • Tashkīk al-wujūd | Gradation of existence • Gradation of reality • Tashkīk al-wujūd | ||
===Meta consciousness=== | ===10) Meta consciousness=== | ||
Ahura Mazda • Allāh • Aten • Baha • Brahman • 'Ēl • Father • God • God the father • Necessary existent • Necessary existentiator • Necessary reality • Pure consciousness • Shangdi • The divine • The One • Unconditioned reality • Vishnu • Waheguru • Wājib al-wujūd • Yahweh | Ahura Mazda • Allāh • Aten • Baha • Brahman • 'Ēl • Father • God • God the father • Necessary existent • Necessary existentiator • Necessary reality • Pure consciousness • Shangdi • The divine • The One • Unconditioned reality • Vishnu • Waheguru • Wājib al-wujūd • Yahweh | ||
===Necessary simplicity=== | ===11) Necessary simplicity=== | ||
Al-Basāṭah al-ilāhiyyah • Divine simplicity • Monotheism • Oneness • Oneness of Allah • Oneness of God • Tawhīd | Al-Basāṭah al-ilāhiyyah • Divine simplicity • Monotheism • Oneness • Oneness of Allah • Oneness of God • Tawhīd | ||
===Absolute necessary simplicity=== | ===12) Absolute necessary simplicity=== | ||
===Conscientiation ex conscientia=== | ===13) Conscientiation ex conscientia=== | ||
Badā'a • Creatio ex deo • Origination | Badā'a • Creatio ex deo • Origination | ||
===Necessitarianism=== | ===14) Necessitarianism=== | ||
ʿAdl • Divine justice | |||
=== | ===15) Eternalism / [[Eternal Creation]]=== | ||
===First conscientiate=== | ===16) Rule of one=== | ||
===17) First conscientiate=== | |||
First creation • First intellect • First light • Image of God • Imago dei • Mashīyya • Nūr Muhammadiyya • Ontologically first dependent existent • Pen • Perfect creation • Qalam • Universal intellect | First creation • First intellect • First light • Image of God • Imago dei • Mashīyya • Nūr Muhammadiyya • Ontologically first dependent existent • Pen • Perfect creation • Qalam • Universal intellect | ||
===Intermediary conscientiates=== | ===18) Intermediary conscientiates=== | ||
Angels • Immaterial existents • Malāʾika | Angels • Immaterial existents • Malāʾika | ||
===Observable universe=== | ===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 | Cosmos • Dunyā • Material dimension • Material realm • Material world • Multiverse • Natural World • Olam HaZeh • Physical world • Sensible dimension • Sensible realm • Sensible world • Universe | ||
===B-theory of time=== | ===20) B-theory of time=== | ||
Tenseless theory of time | Tenseless theory of time | ||
===Compatibilism=== | ===21) Compatibilism=== | ||
Divine Decree • Divine Predestination • Illusion of Libertarian Free Will • Predestination • Qadar • Soft determinism | Divine Decree • Divine Predestination • Illusion of Libertarian Free Will • Predestination • Qadar • Soft determinism | ||
===Perdurantism=== | ===22) Perdurantism=== | ||
===Physical empiricism=== | ===23) Physical empiricism=== | ||
Empirical method • Scientific method | Empirical method • Scientific method | ||
===24) Self-cultivation=== | |||
=== | ===25) Superiority of intellect=== | ||
=== | ===26) Rational self-governance=== | ||
=== | ===27) Mysticism=== | ||
'Ibādah • Islām • Servitude • Submission • Worship | 'Ibādah • Islām • Servitude • Submission • Worship | ||
=== | ===28) Prayer=== | ||
Ṣalāh | |||
=== | ===29) Fasting=== | ||
Ṣawm | |||
===30) Charity=== | |||
Almsgiving • Zakāh | |||
===31) Pilgrimage=== | |||
Ḥajj | |||
===32) Resistance=== | |||
Discipline • Exertion • Fighting • Jihād • Striving • Struggle | |||
===33) Heightened consciousness=== | |||
Altered state of consciousness • Anubhava • Enlightenment • Henosis • Ilhām • Nirvana • Noetic mystical experience • Nubuwwah • Perfect knowledge acquisition • Prophethood • Samadhi • Revelation • Wahī | |||
===34) Gradation of Intellect=== | |||
Cognitive heterogeneity | |||
=== | ===35) Local cultivation=== | ||
Messengership • Risālah | |||
===36) Global cultivation / [[Maximisation of Personal & Global Wellbeing (Constrained)]]=== | |||
===37) Noocracy=== | |||
Imāmah • Perfect manhood • Philosopher kingship • Technocracy | |||
=== | ===38) [[Philosopher King]]=== | ||
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 | 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 | ||
===39) Intellectual Accommodation=== | |||
Tawriyyah | |||
===40) Intellectual Dissimulation=== | |||
Taqīyyah | |||
===41) Cognitive reframing=== | |||
===42) 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. | |||
=== | ===43) Mythos for Most=== | ||
Symbol and story teach where proof cannot yet reach. Properly used, mythos is not falsehood but imaginal pedagogy—true content rendered in forms accessible to typical abstraction bandwidths. It is accommodation at scale. | Symbol and story teach where proof cannot yet reach. Properly used, mythos is not falsehood but imaginal pedagogy—true content rendered in forms accessible to typical abstraction bandwidths. It is accommodation at scale. | ||
=== | ===44) Repurposing Myths and Legends=== | ||
Existing cultural materials can be redeemed: stripped of false metaphysics, rekeyed to the Necessary Existent and rational ethics, and redeployed for formation. Continuity with correction preserves social capital while elevating understanding. | Existing cultural materials can be redeemed: stripped of false metaphysics, rekeyed to the Necessary Existent and rational ethics, and redeployed for formation. Continuity with correction preserves social capital while elevating understanding. | ||
===45) 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. | |||
=== | ===46) Religion=== | ||
===47) Religious beliefs=== | |||
Arkān al-īmān • Pillars of faith • 'Uṣūl al-dīn | |||
===48) Religious laws=== | |||
Branches of religion • Furūʿ al-dīn • Pillars of practice | |||
===49) 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. | |||
=== | ===50) Confessional identity=== | ||
Shahāda • Testimony of Faith | |||
=== | ===51) Need to Encourage and Control Behaviour=== | ||
Where demonstration alone will not move median behaviour, law, institutions, incentives, and norms are rational instruments to align action with the good. This is an application of PSR to collective life: effects follow causes; therefore, design the causes. | |||
===Hagiography=== | |||
Apotheosis • Deification • Divinisation • [[Ghulāt]] / Ghuluw • Heroisation • Legendary accretion • Mythicisation • Myth-making • Mythologisation • Mythopoeia • Sacralisation • Tawallā | |||
==== | ===Heresiography=== | ||
Tabarrā | |||
[[Hadīths]] | [[Hadīths]] | ||
[[Hawzah al-Hikmah]] | [[Hawzah al-Hikmah]] | ||
Latest revision as of 01:50, 31 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) Foundationalism
3) Epistemic parsimony
4) Ontological parsimony
5) Primacy of Consciousness
6) Analytic idealism
7) Oneness of consciousness
Monism • Nondualism
8) Ontological priority
9) Gradation of consciousness
Gradation of existence • Gradation of reality • Tashkīk al-wujūd
10) Meta consciousness
Ahura Mazda • Allāh • Aten • Baha • Brahman • 'Ēl • Father • God • God the father • Necessary existent • Necessary existentiator • Necessary reality • Pure consciousness • Shangdi • The divine • The One • Unconditioned reality • Vishnu • Waheguru • Wājib al-wujūd • Yahweh
11) Necessary simplicity
Al-Basāṭah al-ilāhiyyah • Divine simplicity • Monotheism • Oneness • Oneness of Allah • Oneness of God • Tawhīd
12) Absolute necessary simplicity
13) Conscientiation ex conscientia
Badā'a • Creatio ex deo • Origination
14) Necessitarianism
ʿAdl • Divine justice
15) Eternalism / Eternal Creation
16) Rule of one
17) First conscientiate
First creation • First intellect • First light • Image of God • Imago dei • Mashīyya • Nūr Muhammadiyya • Ontologically first dependent existent • Pen • Perfect creation • Qalam • Universal intellect
18) Intermediary conscientiates
Angels • Immaterial existents • Malāʾika
19) Observable universe
Cosmos • Dunyā • Material dimension • Material realm • Material world • Multiverse • Natural World • Olam HaZeh • Physical world • Sensible dimension • Sensible realm • Sensible world • Universe
20) B-theory of time
Tenseless theory of time
21) Compatibilism
Divine Decree • Divine Predestination • Illusion of Libertarian Free Will • Predestination • Qadar • Soft determinism
22) Perdurantism
23) Physical empiricism
Empirical method • Scientific method
24) Self-cultivation
25) Superiority of intellect
26) Rational self-governance
27) Mysticism
'Ibādah • Islām • Servitude • Submission • Worship
28) Prayer
Ṣalāh
29) Fasting
Ṣawm
30) Charity
Almsgiving • Zakāh
31) Pilgrimage
Ḥajj
32) Resistance
Discipline • Exertion • Fighting • Jihād • Striving • Struggle
33) Heightened consciousness
Altered state of consciousness • Anubhava • Enlightenment • Henosis • Ilhām • Nirvana • Noetic mystical experience • Nubuwwah • Perfect knowledge acquisition • Prophethood • Samadhi • Revelation • Wahī
34) Gradation of Intellect
Cognitive heterogeneity
35) Local cultivation
Messengership • Risālah
36) Global cultivation / Maximisation of Personal & Global Wellbeing (Constrained)
37) Noocracy
Imāmah • Perfect manhood • Philosopher kingship • Technocracy
38) Philosopher King
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
39) Intellectual Accommodation
Tawriyyah
40) Intellectual Dissimulation
Taqīyyah
41) Cognitive reframing
42) 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.
43) 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.
44) 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.
45) 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.
46) Religion
47) Religious beliefs
Arkān al-īmān • Pillars of faith • 'Uṣūl al-dīn
48) Religious laws
Branches of religion • Furūʿ al-dīn • Pillars of practice
49) 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.
50) Confessional identity
Shahāda • Testimony of Faith
51) Need to Encourage and Control Behaviour
Where demonstration alone will not move median behaviour, law, institutions, incentives, and norms are rational instruments to align action with the good. This is an application of PSR to collective life: effects follow causes; therefore, design the causes.
Hagiography
Apotheosis • Deification • Divinisation • Ghulāt / Ghuluw • Heroisation • Legendary accretion • Mythicisation • Myth-making • Mythologisation • Mythopoeia • Sacralisation • Tawallā
Heresiography
Tabarrā
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)
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
Dhikr • God consciousness • Meditation • Salāh • Taqwā