[3.3.1] Ibn Sina’s Metaphysics

Ibn Sina (Avicenna 980-1037 AD) presents his metaphysical framework in the treatise Ilāhiyyāt of Kitāb al-Šifā’ (known in English as the Metaphysics of the Book of the Healing or the Book of the Cure), in which:

  • Existence is separated being (a thing), the latter is named quiddity (or essence). We can comprehend the quiddity of a thing without knowing anything about its existence. 
  • Things can be material singulars – sensibles, externals to the human, and concepts in the human mind. The corresponding mental and external existence is on the par for Ibn Sina.
  • thing is a composition of existence and quiddity.
  • The necessary existent is it’s own existence, and as such is necessary; all the other things are contingent.

as presented in the OntoUML diagram below:

Ibn Sina’s (Avicenna) methaphysics
ClassDescriptionRelations
Necessary
Existent
“the Necessary Existent has no essence or no quiddity that differs from existence (anniyya) and is therefore beyond essence. The first attribute of the Principle is ‘that It is and that It is existent’ (inn wa-mawǧūd): existence is not what It ‘has’: It simply is […] absolutely necessary and simply coincides with, or more exactly, is Its own existence… The Necessary Existent has no cause. It has relations in so far as it is existent. […] the ‘thing’ in question is only necessary existence, it has no quiddity (or no quiddity beyond its existence) and is not, properly speaking, a “thing” (Bertolacci 2012a): in this case, in fact, what is revealed is the existence of the Necessary Principle, which is pure existence on condition of not and can therefore be conceived beyond essence and thingness.” [3]
Necessary Existent is also referred asFirst Principle.
is its own Existence
ExistenceExistence (al-mawǧūd) can be: mental, external, and the existence of the Necessarry Existent. Existence and being (a thing) are distinct.
“Avicenna posits a distinction between the being of the thing and its existence. Clearly, then, the fundamental and primary character of being does not imply simplicity: to exist means to be a given entity in the world or—as Avicenna also uses it—a ‘thing’. The existence of something must thus be distinguished from its being what it is.” [3]
Mental
Existence
“everything that is conceived of or simply mentally represented exists and hence has at least a mental existence (which means either intellectual or imaginary or estimative). Indeed, the existent as such is immaterial and only non-existence in the absolute sense does (obviously) not exist, since it cannot be either conceived or discussed” (Lizzini, 2019)descendant of Existence; characterizes Concept
External
Existence
External existence (fī l-ʿayān) is existence in concrete material singulars.descendant of Existence; characterizes MaterialSingular
QuiddityQuiddity (māhiyya), essence or thingness is independent of existence, and necessarily accompanies the thing, be it particular or universal.

“the quiddity or essence of a thing is not in its turn a thing” with its own mental existence so that, once added to (real) existence, it could become a real thing… What Avicenna states by distinguishing quiddity and existence is that quiddity does not coincide with its existence: neither with its mental existence, which is related but does not correspond to universality, nor with its concrete existence (fī l-ʿayān), which implies individuality… The indifference of quiddity to any kind of existence and determination truly establishes the correspondence between reality and knowledge: it is exactly because quiddity is in itself neither real nor mental that it can be present both in reality and in the mind, accompanied by the determinations of either individuality or universality: in concrete reality there is x in its particular existence, while in the mind there is x with its possible multiple predication. In this respect, the consideration of quiddity in itself—which corresponds to the thing in itself as expressed by its definition—transcends both levels of existence (external and mental) and in one passage is equated to the “divine existence” (wuǧūd ilāhī) of something that depends on God’s providence.” [3] E.g. horseness” (which is common in the concept of the horse, and in Tucker, the horse).
is shared part of the Thing, Concept and MaterialSingular
Thing“In every thing the distinction between what the thing is and the fact that it is is inevitable. Existence can consequently be said to be external to essence, so that an existing thing, whose essence or quiddity is possible, can be said to be composed of essence and existence. […]
In order to ask what a thing is, one cannot avoid referring to being, which is exactly what allows us to conceive all things, whether they are sensible, imaginary or intelligible, as existent. [3]
Has Existence
ConceptConcept is the understood quiddity of things.Exclusive part of Mind
UniversalUniversal is the concept in the mind related to a material singular: “the one concept is related by the mind to many, and in this way it is universal”. [3]
“And the soul itself also conceptualizes another universal which unites this form with another one in this soul or in another soul; but all of them, insofar as they are in the soul, have a single definition.” [5]
E.g: horse”
MentalExistence and Quiddity are parts of it
FictionalBeing“the natures or quiddities of even such fictional beings as phoenixes and unicorns do indeed exist, although they have only a mental, and not a concrete, mode of existence” [4]Is subkind of Concept
MaterialSingularMaterial singulars are are concrete, external things.
E.g. horses like: Lilly, Tucker, Spirit
Is descendant of Thing
HumanA human personSubkind of MaterialSingular
MindA human mindexclusive part of Human; subkind of MaterialSingular
ModalityModality “explains the relation that what exists has to its own existence: an existent [thing] can be either necessary in itself (ḍarūrī; wāǧib: it is then also necessarily one) or possible (mumkin, contingency) in itself” [3] – this is the case of every existent with the exception of the Necessary Existent.
NecessityNecessitycharacterizes NecessaryExistent; descendant of Modality
ContingencyContingency or Possibility characterizes the Thing: it is possible for the quiddity of the thing to gain existence and also not.characterizes Thing; descendant of Modality

Sources

  • All citations from: Lizzini, Olga, “Ibn Sina’s Metaphysics”The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2019 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.)
  • Raja Bahlul, “Avicenna and the Problem of Universals”, Philosophy & Theology 21  

First published: 01/08/2019
Updated: 01/01/2021 added Human, Mind, Concept, FictionalBeing

[3.2.6] Al-Farabi on the Perfect City

Al-Farabi (Alpharabius, 872-950 AD)) was the first Islamic thinker with substantial contribution to political philosophy (‘philosophy of society’, falsfa madaniyya as he refers to it). In his main work about the subject On the Perfect State (Mabādiʾa ārāʾ ahl al-madīnat al-fāḍilah) he outlines his main ideas:

  • Perfect societies are human communities with the minimal size of a city, with the aim to help their members to reach their ultimate end: true felicity (see also [3.2.5]).
  • The social classes and the ruler of the perfect city work together like the organs of a living body.
  • Perfect (virtuous) cities have a religion, which sets the preconditions for the true felicity of their inhabitants: common actions, knowledge, and opinions.
  • The religion of the perfect city is created through revelation by its founder, the first ruler, who is a prophet.

This structure is presented in the following OntoUML diagram:

al-Farabi on the perfect city
ClassDescriptionRelations
Society“A society […] is an association of human beings collaborating “[i]n order to preserve [themselves] and to attain [their] highest perfections” (Perfect State V, 15, 1: 229).”is characterized by Collaboration
CollaborationA society is characterized by collaboration.
ImperfectSociety“Smaller associations, such as villages, quarters, streets, and houses are per se imperfect [societies]; larger ones, like nations and the “union of all the societies in the inhabitable world” (ibid.), by contrast, are perfect.”is subkind of Society
PerfectSociety“larger ones, like nations and the ‘union of all the societies in the inhabitable world’, by contrast, are perfect [societies]”.is subkind of Society; has PurposeOfPerfect
Society
PurposeOfPerfectSocietyThe purpose (telos) of the perfect society “consists, according to al-Farabi, in guiding their members towards their end: true felicity. As a consequence, a city […] in which people aim through association at co-operating for the things by which felicity in its real and true sense can be attained, is the excellent city [madina fadila], and the society in which there is a co-operation to acquire felicity is the excellent society [ijtima‘ fadil]. (Perfect State V, 15, 3: 231)”. See also [3.2.5].
PerfectCity“a city […] in which people aim through association at co-operating for the things by which felicity in its real and true sense can be attained, is the excellent [perfect] city [madina fadila], and the society in which there is a co-operation to acquire felicity is the excellent society [ijtima‘ fadil].”is subkind of PerfectSociety; has Relgion; its exclusive parts are Classes
ClassPeople are organized in classes, with different specific activities and knowledge/opinions. Classes are in a hierarchical.is a collective of Persons; forms a hierarchical self-reference
PersonA person is a human being.
Ruler“The excellent city resembles the perfect and healthy body, all of whose limbs co-operate …. Now the limbs and organs of the body are different and their natural endowments and faculties are unequal in excellence, there being among them one ruling organ, namely the heart, and organs which are close in rank to that ruling organ …. The same holds good in the case of the city. Its parts are different by nature, and their natural dispositions are unequal in excellence: there is in it a man who is the ruler, and there are others whose ranks are close to the ruler, each of them with a disposition and a habit through which he performs an action …. (Perfect State V, 15, 4: 231–3)”is subkind of Person; rules the PerfectCity
Lawgiver, Philosopher, ImamLawgiver, philosopher, imam are roles of the ruler.are roles of Ruler
FirstRulerThe first ruler is the leader who founded the perfect city, and who created its religion.is subkind of Ruler
ProphetTo be a prophet is the essential role of the first ruler. The prophet – trough divine revelation – is able to create religion.is role of FirstRuler; creates Religion
ReligionReligion is opinions and actions, determined and restricted with stipulations and prescribed for a community by their first ruler, who seeks to obtain through their practicing it a specific purpose with respect to them or by means of them. […] Al-Farabi has a fairly peculiar notion of religion. First, it embraces “opinions” and “actions” and, hence, those two elements […] play a significant role in connection with the attainment of individual felicity. Accordingly, human beings need to know certain things (in one of the two mentioned ways) and perform certain actions in order to become truly happy. Second, religion is described as the result of a first ruler’s activities. More precisely, this ruler is depicted as the one who first established the opinions and actions to be held and performed by the community she rules. Furthermore, in so doing she pursued a specific purpose. In other words, these opinions and actions are supposed to be defended and carried out, not for their own sake, but—provided “the first ruler is excellent”—for the sake of ultimate happiness. Religion, therefore, is not a goal in and of itself; it is an instrument, more specifically, it is an instrument of rulership.”contains as parts Action and Knowledge/Opinion
Action“There are some indications regarding the common activities […]. It appears that, once again in unison with Aristotle, these embrace all sorts of exercises suited to purify one’s soul while it is still unified with ‘its’ body, as al-Farabi’s references to the soul’s disposition as well as his recurrent comparisons with arts and crafts suggest. Thus, he intimates, in connection with the last quoted passage:
‘When each of [the people of the excellent city] acts in this way [i.e., according to the citizens’ common duties], these actions of his make him acquire a good and excellent disposition of the soul, and the more steadily he applies himself to them, the stronger and better becomes that disposition of this and increases in strength and excellence—just as steadily applying himself to performing the actions of writing well make a man acquire proficiency in the art of writing’ …. (Perfect State V, 16, 2: 261)”
is part of Religion; can relate to Class (in this case is specific to a Class, otherwise is common)
Knowledge/OpinionAl-Farabi thinks that the people in the virtuous city should have virtuous knowledge or at least virtuous opinions: “The things in common which all the people of the excellent city ought to know are: (1) In the first place to know the First Cause and all its qualities; (2) then the immaterial existents [including the above mentioned active intellect] …; (3) the celestial substances …; (4) [without number in Walzer’s translation] then the natural bodies which are beneath them, and how they come to be and pass away …; (5) then the generation of man; (6) then the first ruler …; (7) then the rulers who have to take his place …; (8) then the excellent city and its people and the felicity which their souls ultimately reach …” (Perfect State V, 17, 1: 277–9)is part of Religion; can relate to Class (in this case is specific to a Class, otherwise is common)

Sources

First published: 20/02/2020