Iran (IP) - Mulla Sadra, one of the greatest Iranian philosophers of the 17th century is commemorated every year on 23th May.

Iran Press/Iran News: Sadr al-Din Muhammad b. Ibrahim b. Yahya Qawami Shirazi (ca. 1571–1636) is arguably the most significant Islamic philosopher after Avicenna.

Best known as Mulla Sadra, he was later given the title of Sadr al-Muta’allihin (Master of the theorists) for his philosophical approach that combined an interest in theology and drew upon insights from mystical intuition.

Mulla Sadra is revered greatly by scholars

 

Islamic mystic, philosopher, a theologian who led the Iranian cultural renaissance in the 17th century.

He became famous as the thinker who revolutionized the doctrine of existence in Islamic metaphysics. By critiquing an Aristotelian metaphysics which assumed that substances constituted the basic stuff of reality, he initiated a (Neoplatonic) process metaphysics of change, founded upon and moved by acts of being.

Mulla Sadra greatly influenced Islamic philosohpy 

 

Mulla Sadra legacy

A keen thinker who wrote works in philosophy, theology, mysticism, and scriptural exegesis attempted a wide-ranging synthesis of approaches to Islamic thought. He argued for the necessity of understanding reality through a mixture of logical reasoning, spiritual inspiration, and a deep meditation upon the key scriptural sources of the Twelver Shi‘i tradition in Islam.

Having a holistic approach to philosophical inquiry, his understanding of the pursuit of wisdom included scriptural hermeneutics and exegesis as well as theological reasoning.

Mulla Sadra offerd transcendent thought to Islamic philosophy

 

A key figure of a group of thinkers whom Nasr and Corbin referred to as the “School of Isfahan,” he played a major role in intellectual life during the revitalization of philosophy under the Safavid Shah ‘Abbas I (r. 996–1038 AH/1588–1629 CE) and later on in life was the most important teacher at the philosophical seminary known as Madrasa-Yi Khan in his hometown of Shiraz.

Since the early 19th century, the thought of Mulla Sadra has become the dominant philosophical paradigm in the Shi‘i seminary in the Islamic East and was also widely influential in South Asia.

His main work is The Transcendent Philosophy of the Four Journeys of the Intellect or Four Journeys.

 

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