Thursday, April 30, 2009

Ibn Khaldunian perspectives...


Every so often a new, pure generation bashes itself angrily against the soft, corrupt cities of the metropolitan world. From the barren steppes and the empty deserts they charge forth, purging all in their path and setting the balance once again. In a split second, our petty moral dilemmas are swept away and everything becomes crystal clear. It is almost as if in the wilder parts of the world, the more unrefined and simple a man, the clearer his choices become. The quiet and solitude lets him think, it lets him grow and mature, free from shackles. All the easier for him to sell the world and everything in it...

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From Eritrea to Curacao, the great game continues...

Seventeen people were arrested in Curacao for alleged involvement in a drug trafficking ring with connections to Hezbollah, police in the Dutch Caribbean island said today.


The suspects detained yesterday include four people from Lebanon and others from Curacao, Cuba, Venezuela and Colombia, police chief Carlos Casseres said at a news conference.

Some of the proceeds, funneled through informal Middle Eastern banks, went toward supporting groups linked to the militant Hezbollah organization in Lebanon, according to Casseres. The smuggling ring also allegedly forwarded requests from Lebanon for arms to be shipped from South America.

"We have been able to establish that this group has relations with international criminal organizations that have connections with the Hezbollah," prosecutor Ludmila Vicento said.

Island officials said the US and the Netherlands are helping them to investigate the alleged Hezbollah connection.

Two shipments of cocaine totaling 2,000 kilograms (4,400 pounds) have been seized from the ring in Curacao since the beginning of last year. The traffickers used cargo ships and speed boats to import the drugs from Colombia and Venezuela for shipment to Africa and beyond to Europe, according to Curacao authorities.

Several countries including the United States participated in the investigation leading to the arrests.

Authorities with the Drug Enforcement Administration and the US consulate in Curacao said they could not immediately comment on the case.


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Jordanian bloggers are scary. Unlike Egypt, where there is a vibrant criticism of the thuggish Mubarak regime, in Jordan it is as if they have all been brainwashed to worship their dwarf king Abdullah. Here is a post called "God Protect Jordan" by a Jordanian blogger called Ali. One of the commentators called Kinzi actually and honestly says:


I just love the Mukhabaraat. They may be a pain sometimes, but they do keep us safe.

Truly a bizarre people...
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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

America's House Negroes in the Middle East: Where are they now?

The final chapter in the little big adventure that began in the Middle East in 2003 is now over. I have lost count of the tussles, arguments and abuse I have gone through with people concerning the importance (or lack of it) of the Hariri tribunal, after the failed 2006 Israeli war and then Hezbullah's takeover of Beirut, I claimed it was a dead horse that was no longer useful to America. Here is an post I had written in October 2007 which summarised the situation. The final defeat of the United States' grand plan in the region is marked by their conceding to the release of the four suspects in the Hariri tribunal. Once the elections take place and Hezbullah smashes into power with Aoun as President, the March 14th figureheads will be nothing more than the biggest, fattest zero in Middle Eastern politics. Now, a brief look at the brightest and best apologists for the American project for the region and where they are today:


Beirut to the Beltway is now closed. Here is a short quote from the final post there and might I add, good riddance:

My new American dream replaced my Lebanese nightmare, at least during the day, when ghosts hide under pillows. At night, however, they rear their ugly heads, redrawing that path of self-torture that raised me. I will probably always dream of the shells, the darkness of the shelter, and the frustrations of living small in a place that pretends to be large. But when the light rises from behind the hill, I am new. Remember that myth about the Phoenix rising from the ashes? It is true. But in my case, life came back somewhere else.

That was my past. Thank you for reading. This blog is over. My story begins.

Tony Badran from Across the Bay fumes slowly at the turn of events in Syria and Lebanon. Silently, sadly. His other blog, the Syria Monitor, was last updated in May 2007. He was also a contributer to CLIME (The Centre for Liberty in the Middle East). Click here for a post I wrote about them in 2007 as well.

The website for CLIME -mideastliberty.org appears to have fallen into disuse as there is no sign of any updates or activity at all.

Ammar Abdulhamid, a former Syrian and the son of the famous actress Mona Wassef. I once called Mr Abdulhamid a lame, toothless tiger after coming across his blog and discovering his disastrous political positions, today he has disappeared off the map altogether. His blog has not been updated for a very long time but his Tharwa Foundation seems to be ticking along quietly in the background with a flashy new website. For now it seems that the Amarji has left the building. 

The "Reform" party of Syria has a new fancy website - must be more US funding. Farid Ghadry's presidency of the party lapsed recently. I never thought it would be possible but this remarkable party has achieved what I thought was previously impossible. They are more irrelevant today than they were a few years ago.

Farid (Frank) Ghadry has crawled back to his hole. The last I heard, his father was suing him for some botched business deal but I cannot confirm this.
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Tuesday, April 28, 2009

For Averroes, can there be any conflict between theology and philosophy if both are done correctly?


For those interested in Arabic philosophy, another essay I have recently completed. It is interesting to note that we should here view philosophy as "Science", so that the discussion is concerning the conflict, if there is any at all, between religion and science - religion being Islam in this case:


When theology and philosophy appear to be in conflict, this is not due to anything inherent in either of these two fields but rather in the method with which they have been applied. This is the claim that Averroes makes in his Decisive Treatise. Theology deals with revealed truth with regards to God as the creator and His relation with His creation. On the other hand the ancient philosophers, or lovers of wisdom, sought truth and permanence in a world which is constantly changing and where nothing appears to be constant. Yet in spite of the fact that these two extremes appear to be at odds with each other, both the theologians and the philosophers share a reverence for Truth. For Averroes, "truth does not oppose truth but accords with it and bears witness to it" (The Decisive Treatise, 18). The Decisive Treatise was written in an atmosphere which was generally hostile to philosophy, a subject that was viewed with suspicion as going against theological doctrine. Today we would refer to such a conflict as one between theology and science, for in those days the various sciences were all considered to fall under the remit of philosophy. This would make Averroes' argument just as relevant today as it would have been when he had first made it, an obvious example would be the debate on creationism versus evolution in Western classrooms. But Averroes was a Muslim, and we must understand that Islam was the theological truth for his world-view. So the lack of conflict he refers to is specifically between Islam on the one side, and philosophy on the other. Averroes did not just attempt to defend philosophical claims from the attacks of the theologians, he not only declared that the study of philosophy was a religious obligation, but that those who opposed it were in fact themselves disbelievers. Furthermore, any damage which can be attributed to philosophy is entirely accidental and to claim that it contains anything which is opposed to Islam would in fact do a disservice to Islam. The only line which he does draw with regards to philosophy is that it not be taught to the majority of people because of the damage that this may cause. Human beings capacity for understanding is divided into three broad categories, a view which is in fact essential in order for Averroes' claim to be valid. These methods of understanding are the demonstrative, dialectical and rhetorical and they provide the necessary space for Averroes to manoeuvre between the demands of theology on the one hand, and philosophy on the other.

One must remember that the overall attitude to philosophy at the time that Averroes wrote his treatise was, in general, suspicious of philosophy as a discipline which risked leading people astray and to damnation. In order to introduce the subject without provoking a negative reaction, Averroes had to overcome two main hurdles. Firstly, does the Law (Islamic) permit the study of philosophy? Secondly, the permissibility of learning from non-Muslims. In order to answer this, Averroes must first make sure that the reader understands what it is that philosophy is about. He refers to philosophy as the teleological study of the world, the "study of existing beings and reflection on them as indications of the Artisan" whilst making a conditional proposition, if philosophy is x, and the Law commands that we study x, then the Law commands philosophy. It is important for Averroes that he draws the link between the commands in the Quran to reflect and pursue knowledge and between the philosophical methods best suited for such studies, in this case demonstrative reasoning. At this stage, the first link has been made, but it is still not enough to convince that demonstrative reasoning is the method the Quran is referring to. It is here that Averroes pulls out his trump card, for he immediately follows by associating demonstrative reasoning with another discipline that the theologians had no qualms about, yet it too did not exist in the days of the prophet. This discipline is Law (Fiqh) in Islam.  He immediately puts the traditional theological argument on a back foot by referring to the person who wishes to learn and reflect as the "religious thinker" and that this religious thinker must learn logic just as "the lawyer must study legal reasoning". The link he makes with law helps his argument further by helping to make the subject matter something that the reader can then relate with, lessening any suspicions one may have of the subject as a foreign invention by non-believers. Any issues one may have with this matter can be quickly overcome by referring to the vast amount of knowledge which would have to be "rediscovered", something not possible in a single lifetime and surely a ridiculous demand to make. This especially in light of the fact that the knowledge is already available and all one would have to do is to sort out the true from the untrue. 

Philosophy is harmful accidentally and not essentially and to ban it would be akin to banning water to those who are thirsty (seeking knowledge) simply because a few people had once choked whilst drinking it. The analogy is simple yet effective and introduces Averroes' key point, people are convinced by either demonstrative, dialectical or rhetorical arguments. These three categories fit in nicely with the Quranic verse "Summon to the way of your Lord by wisdom and by good preaching, and debate with them in the most effective manner" (16:125), which he cites to his advantage. To what extent the Quran is referring to demonstration, dialectic and rhetoric is up for debate, but it serves as the perfect bedrock for his argument and Averroes exploits this effectively. Demonstrative proof is the finest way to carry out the Quranic exhortation to reflect and ponder the creation of the Creator, as such, it cannot be in conflict with what Scripture states. Demonstration can, in rare circumstances, appear to be in contrast to what the Scripture is stating. When this happens, we see why it was important for Averroes that there be a particular group of people qualified in demonstrative reasoning who are in a capacity and authority to allegorically interpret the Quran. The learned scholar who judges in error still receives half the divine reward of one who judged correctly, according to a prophetic hadith that Averroes quotes from, so his religious thinker is permitted to attempt allegorical interpretation of scripture, even at the risk of error, because he would be the most qualified person to do so. Any other person who assumes this capacity is committing a grave error and risks being labelled a disbeliever and executed. But why should scripture be interpreted allegorically when it appears in contrast to demonstrative reasoning? Firstly this is because the interpretation of scripture allegorically is not a new approach, here Averroes cites the case of the Ash'arites with regards to accounts of the descent of God in the heavens and His sitting on a throne. The problem with allegorical interpretation is not so much as to the legitimacy of its use, of which there is no question, but rather with regards to the scope of its application.

Having overcome the initial reservations a reader might have had with regards to philosophy, Averroes now presents to us a three tier categorisation of people based on his new philosophical/religious basis. The demonstrative class are the philosophers, those whom the Quran has urged to seek better knowledge of God's creation, and thus God Himself. The dialectic class is what was traditionally referred to as the theologians and the common masses are the rhetorical class, who must not even know that an allegorical interpretation of the Quran is possible let alone being carried out. The old dichotomy of theology/philosophy is replaced by this new, inclusive approach. For Averroes, intellect, logic and demonstrative reasoning are God given tools for assisting in the comprehension of His very own creation, applied properly and, most importantly, by the right people, it becomes unthinkable that true scripture provided by that same God, would then relate to a different reality than that which can be expressed in our minds using the most stringent of reasoning methods available to rational beings. Philosophy and theology are "companions by nature and lovers by essence and instinct" (Decisive Treatise, 74) and the fact that they are viewed as opposed to each other is not only because of a flawed application of religious interpretation, but also to the distortion of philosophers, "For injuries from a friend are more severe than injuries from an enemy". In fact Averroes goes to great lengths in order to distance himself from the philosophical views of al Farabi and Avicenna, attempting to correct their neoplatonic framework for a true Aristotelian philosophy. At the same time, he condemns theologians such as al Ghazali in the strongest terms for the damage they have done in spreading demonstrative arguments amongst people who would be harmed rather than benefited by it. This by virtue of the fact that they are only capable of grasping the truth rhetorically. This truth is what must be spread to the people by any means possible, but in the correct manner.

When Averroes merges the goals of theology and philosophy, what he is doing is asking theologians to accept that the use of demonstrative reasoning is not something which is unique to non-believers, but a God-given human capacity for grasping the creation of God. Scripture is there to teach true science and right practice. True science is the knowledge of God, right practice is what brings the human being happiness and the avoidance of which brings misery. In a slight acknowledgement to the importance of the theologians, Averroes makes a digression in which he points out where in his complete system traditional theological and religious belief is important. It is the second of the practical sciences, the first being jurisprudence, concerning itself with acts of the soul and the preparation for the future life in paradise. This, according to Averroes, involves "the greater fear of God, which is the cause of happiness" (Decisive Treatise, 53). When he divides people into the categories of demonstrative, dialectical and rhetorical, it is because he recognises the different abilities that people have. Not all can grasp the difficult arguments of demonstrative reasoning and some people are content with accepting rhetorical arguments. It is not something to be reprimanded for when this is the case since it is still possible for that person to achieve an understanding of Truth, just not necessarily in as complicated a manner as the philosophers, but enough to guarantee their happiness in this world and the next. To confuse the masses with something they cannot comprehend is to take from them something and not leave them anything to replace it, the result of which would be dissent, conflict and chaos. As mentioned previously, Averroes believes that the person who would perform such a harm must be condemned, since he who leads to unbelief is himself an unbeliever. Instead, when the common man is puzzled concerning ambiguous verses in Scripture, it would suffice to give a rhetorical argument in the lines of God's mysterious knowledge and that some things are not comprehensible by mortals. At no time must the rhetorical class ever realise that an allegorical interpretation of scripture is possible.

To conclude, we have seen that Averroes has performed something quite remarkable with regards to the relationship of philosophy with theology. Rather than maintain a defensive position claiming the mere permissibility of philosophy, he has in fact stated that the Scriptures make it a religious duty for the thinker to pursue philosophy if they are able to. Crucial for Averroes is to distinguish himself as a philosopher from a purely Aristotelian background, rather than the distorted neoplatonic school to which al Farabi and Avicenna belonged to. By doing so, he gave himself a free hand to reconcile his new, clean philosophy, with religious text. His approach is not so much an attack on the theologians as a rebuttal of previous philosophers who had done damage to the way the discipline was viewed. In addition to clarifying his own understanding of what philosophy was, he also proceeded to point out the fallacy of theologians who believed that Scripture and philosophy dealt with two separate truths, showing that where there was contradiction one could find the cause in unsound philosophical arguments or theological assumptions that had no basis in Scripture itself. For Averroes, philosophy and theology are like the same light, shining in through different windows, both allowing humanity the opportunity to bask in the same sun's warmth.

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What is Avicenna's flying man argument intended to prove?


An essay I had written about Avicenna's flying man argument:


The first thing we must do before attempting to understand Avicenna's "Flying Man Argument" is to lock away what we have read from Descartes and hang up the key. At first it would be tempting to draw parallels with Descartes' famous First Meditation. In his own thought experiment, Descartes too sheds away the outer world, its sensations and perceptions, and ultimately his own body until all that remains is the "I", the thinking being which is aware of its own existence. However there are key differences between Avicenna's floating man and Descartes "thinking thing". For Descartes, the goal of his experiment was to find at least one truth of which he could be absolutely certain and from which he can then proceed to build his new science in such a way as to rebut radical skepticism. Descartes strips away, as if in concentric circles, all that on which even the smallest doubt can be placed. The world, the senses, and finally even the body itself are doubted, for Descartes could not rule out the fact that he is only dreaming of inhabiting the body that he does. What he cannot place any doubt on is the fact that he thinks, he cannot be fooled into thinking otherwise. With regards to Avicenna, the difference is subtle, but very important. His argument intends to prove something quite different and comes from a very different starting point altogether.

To begin with Avicenna also places doubts on the existence of the world. But it is not the radical skepticism of Descartes, where reality is deceiving and the subject finds themselves unable to determine whether they are waking or dreaming. The world does exist for Avicenna, but his examinations were into why it exists, a question which would have puzzled the First Teacher (Aristotle). For Avicenna, the entire world is itself contingent and is necessary not through itself, but through another, a Necessary Existent. It is this Necessary Existent which is the ground for all reality as we see it, not the Efficient Cause of Aristotle or the Neo-Platonist Final Cause. When Avicenna begins his discussion on the Soul in his Shifa', he begins by observations of the world around him, a contingent world whose necessity, and not being qua being, was in doubt. He tells us at the beginning of his investigation that we commonly observe certain bodies which perceive, feed and reproduce, these are differentiated from other bodies in the sub-lunar sphere such as rocks, fire or chairs and tables that do exist, but are different. It is what can be referred to as living bodies, which concern Avicenna. These bodies possess what he calls "a principle for the issuance of any actions that do not follow a uniform course devoid of volition". For example fire and air would always move upwards whilst water and earth downwards. This principle, he calls the soul, and it is the necessity for why living creatures move, reproduce and feed, even if it is not the actual cause.

The purpose of his thought experiment is primarily as a memory aid to assist future students in remembering the conclusion of Avicenna's examination into whether there is a soul and what that is. He meant it as a final defence for his students to help them resist being taken in by clever arguments and sophistry, to find that elusive I which thinks, reasons and is the principle of all human enterprise, and that we also share a similarity in with all living creatures. Avicenna is telling us that the soul exists as an immaterial perfection of both our bodies and our forms, which he later on uses to prove the possibility for eternal life of the rational part of the soul, the intellect, fitting this in nicely within an Islamic perspective. The "argument" is as follows and we will now see why it is important for us to have forgotten about Descartes meditation and the underlying assumptions associated with it which would affect our understanding of what Avicenna is trying to say:

So we say that it has to be imagined as though one of us were created whole in an instant but his sight is veiled from directly observing the things of the external world. He is created as though floating in air or in a void but without the air supporting him in such a way that he would have to feel it, and the limbs of his body are stretched out and away from one another, so they do not come into contact or touch. Then he considers whether we can assert the existence of his self. He has no doubts about asserting his self as something that exists without also [having to] assert the existence of any of his exterior or interior parts, his heart, his brain, or anything external. He will, in fact, be asserting the existence of his self without asserting that it has length, breadth, or depth, and, if it were even possible for him in such a state to imagine a hand or some other extremity, he would not imagine it as a part of his self or as a necessary condition of his self - and you know that what can be asserted as existing is not the same as what cannot be so asserted and that what is stipulated is not the same as what is not stipulated. Thus, the self whose existence he asserted is his unique characteristic, in the sense that it is he himself, not his body and its parts, which he did not so assert. Thus, what [the reader] has been alerted to is a way to be made alert to the existence of the soul as something that is not the body - nor in fact any body - to recognise it and be aware of it, if it is in fact the case that he has been disregarding it and needed to be hit over the head with it. (Avicenna, Al-Shifa: Soul, I.1 (Hackett Reader 178-9))

Here it is important for us to look at the key phrase in the flying man argument and understand what it is that Avicenna wants us to grasp, "...and you know that what can be asserted as existing is not the same as what cannot be asserted and that what is stipulated is not the same as what is not stipulated". For Avicenna, to assert that the self exists, that it is real, is not the same as asserting that square circles exist. Just as the world itself is exists and we cannot doubt that this is true, it is to be taken as evident that the self exists. Furthermore, in thinking of body parts it would not follow that these would naturally be connected to his self, nor would they appear to be necessary for his self to exist, for that is far from obvious that they do. Whilst it can be stipulated that sight would require an eye, or hearing would require ears, it is not stipulated that the self would have a body, even though, for the most part, we do have one. This is the crux of his floating man argument, the self or soul can be imagined abstracted from a body. The body is not necessary for the souls existence, though the opposite is true if we are to have a living animal or plant. For Avicenna, the soul is like a form, but the form is used in reference to matter and it is not enough, this soul he speaks of is a perfection of the body. Like a captain to a ship or a ruler to a city, each is a perfection of something though they are not the form of it. In this way, Avicenna wants us to know that a soul is the perfection of the body. It is "...a first perfection of a natural body possessed of organs that performs the activities of life."

To say that modern science has managed to map all 25,000 genes in the human genome, to be able to give a clear overall picture of the intricacies of human life, is precisely what Avicenna is not concerned with. In the same way that he discounts Aristotles First Cause as a satisfactory explanation for the existence of the world, so too is the explanation of causation for why living creatures differ from inert bodies. As we saw earlier, when Avicenna tells us "what can be asserted is not the same as what cannot be asserted", he is telling us that what we can claim exists without causing a contradiction is not the same as what would. Furthermore, that which we claim exists must be examined to see whether it is necessary through itself or through another and here we can use our imagination to see that the point in question is not about the set of events which led to the first flickers of life in some primordial mud millions of years ago, but as to the necessity of life itself and whether it was necessary through itself or through another for existence. If the causal chain of events which led to that particular point were themselves what resulted in the existence of soul in previously inanimate objects, then life is necessary through itself and there is no need to seek a soul to explain it. But that is to say that something is because it is, which is a circular argument. The only way out of this circular argument for a critic of Avicenna would be to begin the investigation by saying the following: 

We commonly observe certain bodies perceiving by the senses and being moved by volition; in fact we observe certain bodies taking in nutrients, growing, and reproducing their like. That does not belong to them on account of their corporeality; so the remaining option is that in themselves there are principles for that other than their corporeality.

This is how Avicenna begins his investigation, and where the circular argument of those who deny the existence of a principle called "soul" eventually leads them. When Avicenna is telling us that this same principle is responsible for the issuance of any actions that "do not follow a uniform course devoid of volition", he is attacking the strict determinism which the proponents of a material and only biological view of life express. Avicenna is telling us that there is a principle which is beyond the material, beyond the formal which is inseparable from the matter, a principle that perfects life and makes it what it is - necessary. The "I" which is the subject of the flying man experiment is the first perfection of this complete unit of life. It has come to exist with the existence of the human body and the components of life necessary for it, but it then continues to develop and grow through its second perfection, "a body possessed of organs that performs the activities of life". The temporal cage within which this "I" grows to find itself becomes the very key which will allow it to reach beyond the temporal and grasp universals, the true objects of knowledge and philosophy.

The flying man argument is intended to remind us that we cannot know empirically what it is that makes living beings qua living beings alive necessarily. We possess this soul, on account of our intellect, at a level much higher than plants and animals. Avicenna gives us a crude method for experiencing what it is he is referring to through this simple thought experiment, which is not telling us much, nor is it supposed to. It is simply a pointer that would allow us, as fellow souls, to begin seeking questions higher than what can be answered through only a cursory reading of the input from our body's senses. Avicenna wants us to demand more from these bodies, to look further inwards to develop that innate "I" that we all experience and from which there is nothing to escape from. If understood in this more sobre light, where we succeed in imagining our souls existing separately from our bodies, Avicenna is successful in his goals and the flying man helps him to achieve this objective.


Bibliography

Ibn Sina, "The Soul I.1", in, McGinnis, J. & Reisman, D.C. (2007), Classical Arabic Philosophy: An Anthology of Sources, Hacket publishing Company, Indianapolis/Cambridge (Hackett Reader)
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Monday, April 20, 2009

For those who don't care, my response to one of the obscene articles on Creative Forum's website:


Elie,
You say that the Middle East is afflicted by religous dogma, extremism, bigotry and discrimination. Not once do you mention that the Middle East is primarily afflicted with the curse of occupation, colonialism and concerted Western efforts to divide, conquer and subdue. You also do not mention the biggest blight, the existence of a Zionist settler state in Palestine, as one of these ills. This is confusing and alarming at once since the tone for the rest of your essay implies that such an omission may not have been an accident. I also think that a vast majority of the people of these monotheistic faiths would be a little bit annoyed with you for claiming that their faith is “invented”, however great an idea you believe it to be.

The next paragraph in your essay is even more terrifying, where you set the tone for your essay by calling for a Muslim Martin Luther and the separation of religion from the state, citing, of all possible examples, the sad catastrophe which is Mustafa Kemal’s decapitation of Turkey. Another of the commentators even had the gall to mention Tunisia as a successful example for Syrians to emulate.

Your argument for state secularization and Islamic reform is dialectic, and with the flimsiest of foundations. The basis for its narrative is one which is perhaps more suitable for a thinktank in Washington DC than on actual facts. Pivotal to your argument is that the reader accepts your claims about the so-called Ulama “class” prima facie. An argument which is then buttressed by ugly language which is evocative of Raphael Patai’s “The Arab Mind” and is in fact racist, hateful and grotesquely Orientalist.

You talk about secularisation and the desperate need for it, yet from Morrocco to Iraq there is not one single Islamic state, apart from Saudi Arabia. The example you give of Syria verges on the criminal when placed in perspective. Syria is in fact a country which has killed 30,000 of its own citizens in the name of the secularism you are calling for. You may wish to read up on this massacre, it is popularly called the Hama Massacre, if you know Arabic it is referred to locally as Ahdath Hama.

Overall, your article appears to be less about what Syria is to you and more about how little you know of Islam, the regions history and your intense dislike of this faith and its adherents. That none of the other commentators on this thread have picked up on this is an indication that either they have not read your article and are simple sycophants, or they themselves know nothing better than what you are presenting them with. Either way, this hardly looks like a promising example for Syria’s brightest and best.

Yours sincerely,
Maysaloon
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المنتدى السوري الخلاق و الحنين الى الاستعمار

من المحزن أن نرى اليوم أن بلداً جميلاً و مميز كسورية - بلداً يحافظ شعبه بفخر على هويته و تاريخه و دينه - يكون من يتكلم عنه في اللغة الانكليزية - لغة العصر الأنكلو ساكسوني الموشكة بالزوال - باستخدام اتفه و ارخص العبارات و المواضيع لتحجيمه أمام ما يسمى بالعالم المتقدم. منتدى الحوار الخلاق (في اللغة الانكليزية) يتكون من حوارات عن ما يسمى "خبراء" و مدونون سوريين. هذا المندى الذي قدمت فيه عدت مواضيع في الماضي, قد أصبح رمزاً لهكذا حال محزن. بعد قرائتي لعدة مواضيع, وجدت أن ما يشتركون فيه من صفات تتمحور حول النداء لتفرقة الدين و الدولة, و كراهية شديدة لمن يتبعون الاسلام

من أكثر المقالات فظاظة و استفزازاً كانت تلك التي كتبها ألي الحج و التي كانت مكونة من أبشع الاتهامات و الأفكار المستشرقة و أيضاً تغيير متعمد لمفاهيم الأحداث التاريخية. أما باقي المقالات, فكلها كانت تندد بما أصبحت أسميه مشروع "سيريانا" و الذي نجد ما يعادله في أيران ما قبل الثورة الاسلامية مع تركيزهم على التاريخ الفارسي, و في مصر و التركيز على التراث الفرعوني, و في لبنان, مع المشروع الفينيقي. ان أي شخص عربي أو مسلم ذو ضمير سيلاحظ و يدين بشدة, هذا المشروع لتجريد بلادنا من تاريخ, تراث أو ديانات مشتركة, مما يهدف من تفكيك و تكسير للهوية الاسلامية أو العربية و يمهد للاعتراف و القبول بذلك المشروع الآخر الذي أجبر على المنطقة, المشروع الصهيوني لتهويد فلطسين المحتلة

ذهبت مبادىء القومية العربية, و الاسلام. ذهبت مبادئ مقاومة الغرب و أسلوب حياته. كل ما كان يذمه أهلنا و آبائنا أصبح اليوم ممدوح و مرغوب فيه


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The unCreative Forum - Pining for Colonialism

It is tragic that for a country as diverse and wonderful as Syria - one whose people cling proudly to their identity, history and religion - that only the most vapid and shallow of presentations are made when presenting Syria's case to the world in English, the de-facto international language of the fading Anglo-Saxon world system.  The Creative Forum, a website where I have submitted a number of articles, has become just such an example of this sad state of affairs. Reading through the recent spate of articles, I've noticed a recurring theme amongst the various writers. A call for a separation of religion from state, and an intense dislike of those fellow countrymen, women and children who are Muslim.


The article by Elie ElHadj is the most grotesque of these in its orientalism, gross assumptions and what can only be a deliberate contortion of history, presenting us with an apology for colonialism and occupation. The rest of the posts slip comfortably into what I like to call the "Syriana" fad, which is similar to fads in other countries such as the "Persianisation" of Iran before the Islamic revolution put a stop to it, or to Sadat's "Pharoah-nisation" of Egypt, which continues to this day, or even to the "Phoenician-ism" of Lebanon. Any person with a shred of conscience must recognise these for what they are, a division of the Arab and Muslim world into little statelets devoid of a shared history, religion and culture, and a logical step to the recognition and gradual acceptance of that other myth of nationalism which the region has had imposed on it, the "Judeah-isation" of occupied Palestine.

Gone are ideas of Pan-Arabism, Pan-Islamism and resistance to the West and its way of life. It is now admirable to be everything that our forefathers despised.

I leave you with a quote from Galeano:


Harnessed as they have always been to the constellation of imperialist power, our ruling classes have no interest whatsoever in determining whether patriotism might not prove more profitable than treason, and whether begging is really the only formula for international politics. Sovereignty is mortgaged because "there's no other way." The oligarchies' cynical alibis confuse the impotence of a social class with the presumed empty destinies of their countries.

(Excerpt from Eduardo Galeano's "Open Veins of Latin America: Five centuries of the Pillage of a Continent".)
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Sunday, April 19, 2009

To Barack Obama - from a Syrian Arab

Mr Haykal (wants to be the Syrian George Soros) wrote a letter as a Syrian citizen to Barack Obama, it was recently posted in Forward Magazine. I disagree with the deferential tone and kowtowing the letter contains and in the strongest possible way. Therefore I would like to balance this with a parallel clip that can act as a soundtrack for Mr Obama whilst reading Mr Haykals letter. Not surprisingly it makes reading it much more pleasant and will most definitely give Mr Obama a much better view of what Syrians think of him and his vassal Arab princes and tinpot dictators...Come to think of it, the symbol of the US Democrats is a donkey, so this should warm the cockles of Mr Presidents heart...

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A cruel opinion, I know...


Nothing gets the West so riled up than when beautiful people get locked up by hardline, ugly and unfashionable religious types. On another note, I was walking around in a shopping centre today and wandered into an HMV store. To my surprise, one of the books on sale there was Che Guevara's book Guerrilla Warfare. I mean do the people selling it even realise that this book, which any capitalist society should actually ban, aims to destroy everything they stand for? On another counter, I also saw the comic version of Waltz with Bashir and next to it Persepolis. I still don't care what anybody says, I don't understand why I have to watch this Bashir film..I might watch it one day, but I honestly don't care to hear what an Israeli has to say about the 1982 invasion of Lebanon. I also haven't seen Persepolis, but I saw enough of it to make me know that the "good guys" in it were the hard faced women in chadors who were rebuking people for listening to rock and roll, and not the naive caricature victims presented by the stupid girl who was narrating the story. So two opinions on films that I haven't seen, how is that for impartiality? 


Anyhow, reading the story of the former "Miss Dakota" reminded me of this episode today. If Miss Saberi actually serves out her sentence, she will be 39 when she leaves prison and a lot worse for wear. In fact we should rephrase what we said earlier, what riles the West more than beautiful people being locked up by stern puritanical  types is unfulfilled Oriental beauty that could otherwise have been on display or fondled...by a Western man (or woman) of course .
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Thursday, April 16, 2009

Then where did the big bang come from?

An excellent short clip by the late Carl Sagan. When I watched it, I saw al Ghazali's arguments in the Incoherence of the Philosophers played out till the present with the questions posed by Mr Sagan still pertinent today as they were for the Arab philosophers. I'll try to break down these questions and examine them if I get a chance later. But I'll leave you to ponder these questions. If you do wish to have a read of the Incoherence of the Philosophers, you can have a read through it on http://www.ghazali.org/site/oeuvre-p.htm

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Rest in peace Abu Jihad

On this day Khalil al Wazir fell under a hail of bullets as an Israeli death squad attacked his home in Tunis. The Zionist state mistakenly believed that by killing him they would kill the Palestinian Intifada but, more than twenty years later, the Palestinian people are still resisting.
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Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Ahmadinejad before he became president

This guy drives the same old car he did before his election, his wife packs him his lunch when he goes to work.

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Mubarak as an extra in an old Egyptian film

Hosni Mubarak is, well, Hosni Mubarak. I don't know how much money he has amassed, but let us assume it is considerable.

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More on Piracy

This is turning into a piracy themed week. A post I wrote in November about piracy. Historically, the Barbary states, which are today Algeria, Tunisia and also Morroco, lived from raiding the shipping of Western Europe. This raiding was eventually used as a pretext for the full scale invasion and colonisation of North Africa. The fact that a multinational fleet is gathering off the coast of Somalia today only serves to remind me that it is still possible today for us to see a new colonial project for Somalia.  Having said that, I wonder how much more poverty and injustice the Algerians and Morroccans can withstand before somebody reminds them that the worlds richest shipping lanes are just a short boat ride from their own coastlines?

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Mohammed Abdullah Hassan

Somalia is in the news a lot today and, drifting through Wikipedia, I wanted to read more about this country. We have a new addition to the brave heroes who rejected the occupation and colonisation of Muslim countries: Mohammad Abdullah Hassan. Here is an extract from the entry on the man so that he would not be forgotten:


Religious Mission

In 1895, Hassan returned to Berbera which was then considered by the British merely as 'Aden's butcher's shop', since they were interested only in getting regular supplies of meat from Somalia through this port for their British India outpost of Aden.
Taking advantage of British complacency and arrogance, Emperor Menelek II of Ethiopia asked Ras Makonnen, the Governor of his newly conquered Hararghe Province, to send armed bands to plunder and occupy Ogaden politically. The British withdrew from this area of their territory in Somalia.
In Berbera, Hassan could not succeed in spreading the teaching of the Saalihiya order due to the hostility of the local Qadiriyyah inhabitants who did not like him criticising their eating khat and gorging on the fat of sheep's tail and for following their traditional Qadiriyyah order. In 1897, he left Berbera to be with his Dulbahante kinsmen. On the way, at a place called Daymoole, he met some Somalis who were being looked after by a Catholic Mission. When he asked them about their tribe and parents, the Somali orphans replied that they belonged to the "clan of the (Catholic) Fathers." This reply shook his conscience, for he felt that the "Christian Overlordship in his country was tantamount to the destruction of his people's faith."
In 1899, an unfortunate event took place. Some soldiers of the British armed forces met Hassan and sold him an official gun. When questioned about the loss of the gun, they told their superiors that Hassan had stolen the gun from them. On 29 March 1899, the British Vice Consul wrote a very insulting and stern letter to him asking him to return the gun immediately, which someone in Hassan's camp had reported stolen. This enraged Hassan and he sent a very brief and curt reply refuting the allegation.
While Hassan had really been against the Ethiopian imperialist plunderers of Somalia, this small incident made him clash with the British. The British and Ethiopian Emperor Menelek II joined together to crush the Dervish movement of Hassan and some antagonistic Somalis also cooperated with Menelek II against him.

Armed Struggle

In several of his poems and speeches, Hassan emphasized that the British infidels "have destroyed our religion and made our children their children" and that the Christian Ethiopians in league with the British were bent upon plundering the political and religious freedom of the Somali nation. He soon emerged as "a champion of his country's political and religious freedom, defending it against all Christian invaders." He issued a religious ordinance that any Somali national who did not accept the goal of unity of Somalia and would not fight under his leadership would be considered as kafir or gaal. He acquired weapons from Turkey, Sudan, and other Islamic and/or Arabian countries. He appointed his ministers and advisers in charges of different areas or sectors of Somalia. He gave a clarion call for Somali unity and independence.
Hassan organized his follower-warriors. His 'Dervish' movement had essentially a military character and the Dervish state was fashioned on the model of a Saalihiya brotherhood. It had rigid hierarchy and rigid centralization.
Though Hassan threatened to drive the Christians into the sea, he committed the first attack by launching his first major military offensive with his 1500 Dervish equipped with 20 modem rifles on the British soldiers stationed in the region.
Hassan sent one of his men to Yemen in disguise for reconnaissance activities to report the new aeroplanes preparedness for attack. He sent his emissaries all over the country appealing for Somali people to join his movement and many responded to him enthusiastically.
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From dinosaurs to Palestine...

Wikipedia can be strangely addictive, and it is interesting to see where your searches will eventually take you. I was reading up on dinosaurs, strangely enough, and became curious then to read about the history of the Earth. From there, it was a short jump to reading about the history of human evolution and it was near the end of that article that I came across references to the arrival of Man in space. I clicked on the link to read about the International Space Station and began following up on that. It was there that I saw a link for the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster. Whilst reading about it, I remembered that the Israeli states' first astronaut was on board, Colonel Ilan Ramon. I read up on Ilan Ramon and it turns out he had quite a history with the Israeli airforce. He has medals for what the Israelis call "The Yom Kippur" war, as well as Operation Peace for Galilee. He was also the youngest pilot in a group who took part in an Israeli raid on the Iraqi Osirak nuclear reactor which killed ten Iraqi soldiers and a French researcher. Ironically, the Space Shuttle Columbia exploded over an area in Texas called Palestine. Thus ended the life of Israel's first astronaut...what a strange world we live in.

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It is so sad to see Egypt the way it is today. The country which shook the world with the Suez nationalisation, that gave birth to Gamal Abd al Nasser - today the errand boy for the West and Israel. So what if Hezbullah are arranging supplies and weapons to reach the beseiged Gazans? 

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I hate quoting from Johann Hari, but he's written a good article on the subject. (Thanks Sasa!):


Did we expect starving Somalians to stand passively on their beaches, paddling in our nuclear waste, and watch us snatch their fish to eat in restaurants in London and Paris and Rome?
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Sunday, April 12, 2009


It takes real guts and courage for those plucky Somali pirates to do what they do. I don't care what anybody says, the man who cannot afford a living for a day or cannot feed his family is insane if he doesn't grab the nearest weapon and does something about it. Granted that many of them might be scumbags but at least they are no longer killing each other. Plus anything which drives the Americans and Europeans crazy cannot be a bad thing.
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Saturday, April 11, 2009

The video game generation has spoken:  It is also, its makers claim, the first war game to be developed at the request of those who took part, many of whom are keen video game players themselves.

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Friday, April 10, 2009

A former guard in Guantanamo gives his first interview since becoming a Muslim to the French Le Monde (Arabic).

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Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Who or what is Adonis?

There is something depressing about the so-called Arab intellectuals that we see turn up like bad pennies every so often. None is more depressing than Adonis, Syria's answer to Sari Nusseibeh and the symbol of everything quintessentially wrong with the Arab middle classes and their infatuation with "intellectualism". Like Nusseibeh, he did a PhD in Philosophy as well as doing a stint of research in France through a scholarship and he is fluent in the writings and mode of thinking of Western European intellectuals and philosophers, that is, in continental philosophy. As a result, the language he uses when he writes is flowery, vague and dramatic, which makes it easy to see why ignorant people would think of his thought as "deep". He is also, in fact, completely incoherent, as whatever he is talking about is only internally consistent when divorced from anything else at all, which is pretty much the case with his intellectual idols and peers, he is a symptom of the postmodern condition, and I say postmodern as a term which indicates the era after that period of Western historical development called "modernity", not as a universal term which a few hyperactive university students in the Middle East think applies to the entire world. Postmodernity is the bewildered cry of a people who have discovered that they have been following a false prophet after giving up everything they had for his nirvana. 


Overall I have come to despise continental philosophy in its vapish incoherence, Western philosophy has lost the plot and has driven itself up an intellectual cul-de-sac where it slowly devours itself. Having cut off its own roots, it can no longer flower. Adonis and others of his class are angry about something but they don't know what it is. They use the only tools that they have been given, broken tools for a broken machine. Behind these clueless pied pipers are the trendy and rich children of the wealthy Arab establishment, what is left of it at least, devouring every mysterious word of wisdom that the angry musings of those lost intellectuals excrete.
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Missiles, Missiles everywhere...

Missiles are constantly on the news these days and for good reason. The United States and its allies are particularly worried about threats from what they call "rogue" states and the recent missile test (sorry satellite launch test) by North Korea has ruffled more than a few feathers. I don't think this was because the North Koreans would launch a nuclear attack, they are more interested in bargaining, but because North Korean technology has a way of filtering through to countries like Pakistan, Iran, Syria and other undesirable countries. Unlike the money printing and drug dealing, this is the one thing which annoys the United States the most about the Democratic Republic's attempt to gain hard currency.


Missiles in particular are the headache of advanced armies. They are cheaper than other conventional weapons, difficult to protect against and difficult to find and destroy. The biggest proof in its effectiveness is the continued use of the Katyusha as a strategic weapon by Hezbullah against the Israelis. First used by the Soviet Union against the German army, the Lebanese have found it to be as effective a weapon against the Zionist state as the Russians found it with the Nazi state.

The Islamic Republic is probably the biggest worry for the Israeli's and Americans and the Iranians have been particularly adept at developing and improving on missile technology. I firmly believe that it is only a matter of time before they develop the capacity of nuclear weapons, you don't build an expensive long range rocket just to load it with TNT, so I sympathise with the Israeli and American paranoia. What I don't believe is that the weapon will be offensive. I think that it will be a strategic tool for the defense of the republic and a balance against the Israeli nuclear arsenal, which is desparately needed as the West becomes increasingly bellicose and colonial in its dealings with the Middle East. The very presence of Iranian nuclear weapons would probably be a casus beli but unlike Pakistan, currently the only nuclear powered Muslim country, Iran will be much more difficult to dismantle.

The recent Israeli anti-missile tests are pretty useless, probably just a PR exercise for the Israelis themselves, but it tells us how important missile technology has been for countries and groups wishing to resist advanced Western armies and how seriously the new/old colonial powers are taking them.
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Tuesday, April 07, 2009

(15/25) مسرحية العيال كبرت

Great scene from one of my favourite plays...as you can guess, anything to distract me from studying...

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Saturday, April 04, 2009

Yesterday a bizarre sequence of events led me to a place I would never have found by myself and I did not imagine I would be when I woke up that morning. I spent the evening praying and reading in a room at a run down community centre. When I prayed, I bowed down with an unlikely and strange collection of Jamaican, Syrian, Iraqi, Pakistani and Somali Muslims. It is unreal listening to someone talk about Allah and paradise in a thick Caribbean accent whilst asking us to please help in the building of a new book shop for the centre. Later that evening I sat down and listened to a diminutive Sheikh, Abu Salim, from Damascus' Midan district, give us lessons in the Qur'an and in how to read it. A small and thin old man with a kind face and intelligent, inquisitive eyes, I took an instant liking to him. I had met him earlier at another mosque and it was he who pointed me to this place. 


After he listened to us practice reciting, he told us why we should read the Qur'an constantly, even if only a little. It is because Allah likes the little which is also constant, rather than a lot which is less frequent. The example which he gave, and I liked, was that if you leave a tap dripping, it will eventually leave white marks on the ground below it. But if you took all that water which dripped until the marks became visible and put it in a bucket then chucked it all in one go - no mark will remain. Our connection with the divine is like that, that is if we just keep it at a steady drip. When I left the centre it was dark outside and I felt rejuvenated and calm. That night I slept thinking about those amazing stalactites and stalagmites which I had seen on television as a child, about their beauty and how long it had taken for them to form. I imagined a small one growing near them, one that was all mine.
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Thursday, April 02, 2009

A closer look at Ibn Sina's Flying Man Argument

The first thing we must do before attempting to understand Avicenna's "Flying Man Argument" is to lock away what we have read from Descartes and hang up the key. At first it would be tempting to draw parallels with Descartes' famous First Meditation. In his own thought experiment, Descartes too sheds away the outer world, its sensations and perceptions, and ultimately his own body until all that remains is the "I", the thinking being which is aware of its own existence. However there are key differences between Avicenna's floating man and Descartes "thinking thing". For Descartes, the goal of his experiment was to find at least one truth of which he could be absolutely certain and from which he can then proceed to build his new science in such a way as to rebut radical skepticism. Descartes strips away, as if in concentric circles, all that on which even the smallest doubt can be placed. The world, the senses, and finally even the body itself are doubted, for Descartes could not rule out the fact that he is only dreaming of inhabiting the body that he does. What he cannot place any doubt on is the fact that he thinks, he cannot be fooled into thinking otherwise. With regards to Avicenna, the difference is subtle, but very important. His argument intends to prove something quite different and comes from a very different starting point altogether.

To begin with Avicenna also places doubts on the existence of the world. But it is not the radical skepticism of Descartes, where reality is deceiving and the subject finds themselves unable to determine whether they are waking or dreaming. The world does exist for Avicenna, but his examinations were into why it exists, a question which would have puzzled the First Teacher (Aristotle). For Avicenna, the entire world is itself contingent and is necessary not through itself, but through another, a Necessary Existent. It is this Necessary Existent which is the ground for all reality as we see it, not the Efficient Cause of Aristotle or the Neo-Platonist Final Cause. When Avicenna begins his discussion on the Soul in his Shifa', he begins by observations of the world around him, a contingent world whose necessity, and not being qua being, was in doubt. He tells us at the beginning of his investigation that we commonly observe certain bodies which perceive, feed and reproduce, these are differentiated from other bodies in the sub-lunar sphere such as rocks, fire or chairs and tables that do exist, but are different. It is what can be referred to as living bodies, which concern Avicenna. These bodies possess what he calls "a principle for the issuance of any actions that do not follow a uniform course devoid of volition". For example fire and air would always move upwards whilst water and earth downwards. This principle, he calls the soul, and it is the necessity for why living creatures move, reproduce and feed, even if it is not the actual cause.

The purpose of his thought experiment is primarily as a memory aid to assist future students in remembering the conclusion of Avicenna's examination into whether there is a soul and what that is. He meant it as a final defence for his students to help them resist being taken in by clever arguments and sophistry, to find that elusive I which thinks, reasons and is the principle of all human enterprise, and that we also share a similarity in with all living creatures. Avicenna is telling us that the soul exists as an immaterial perfection of both our bodies and our forms, which he later on uses to prove the possibility for eternal life of the rational part of the soul, the intellect, fitting this in nicely within an Islamic perspective. The "argument" is as follows and we will now see why it is important for us to have forgotten about Descartes meditation and the underlying assumptions associated with it which would affect our understanding of what Avicenna is trying to say:

So we say that it has to be imagined as though one of us were created whole in an instant but his sight is veiled from directly observing the things of the external world. He is created as though floating in air or in a void but without the air supporting him in such a way that he would have to feel it, and the limbs of his body are stretched out and away from one another, so they do not come into contact or touch. Then he considers whether we can assert the existence of his self. He has no doubts about asserting his self as something that exists without also [having to] assert the existence of any of his exterior or interior parts, his heart, his brain, or anything external. He will, in fact, be asserting the existence of his self without asserting that it has length, breadth, or depth, and, if it were even possible for him in such a state to imagine a hand or some other extremity, he would not imagine it as a part of his self or as a necessary condition of his self - and you know that what can be asserted as existing is not the same as what cannot be so asserted and that what is stipulated is not the same as what is not stipulated. Thus, the self whose existence he asserted is his unique characteristic, in the sense that it is he himself, not his body and its parts, which he did not so assert. Thus, what [the reader] has been alerted to is a way to be made alert to the existence of the soul as something that is not the body - nor in fact any body - to recognise it and be aware of it, if it is in fact the case that he has been disregarding it and needed to be hit over the head with it. (Avicenna, Al-Shifa: Soul, I.1)

Here it is important for us to look at the key phrase in the flying man argument and understand what it is that Avicenna wants us to grasp, "...and you know that what can be asserted as existing is not the same as what cannot be asserted and that what is stipulated is not the same as what is not stipulated". For Avicenna, to assert that the self exists, that it is real, is not the same as asserting that square circles exist. Just as the world itself is exists and we cannot doubt that this is true, it is to be taken as evident that the self exists. Furthermore, in thinking of body parts it would not follow that these would naturally be connected to his self, nor would they appear to be necessary for his self to exist, for that is far from obvious that they do. Whilst it can be stipulated that sight would require an eye, or hearing would require ears, it is not stipulated that the self would have a body, even though, for the most part, we do have one. This is the crux of his floating man argument, the self or soul can be imagined abstracted from a body. The body is not necessary for the souls existence, though the opposite is true if we are to have a living animal or plant. For Avicenna, the soul is like a form, but the form is used in reference to matter and it is not enough, this soul he speaks of is a perfection of the body. Like a captain to a ship or a ruler to a city, each is a perfection of something though they are not the form of it. In this way, Avicenna wants us to know that a soul is the perfection of the body. It is "...a first perfection of a natural body possessed of organs that performs the activities of life."

To say that modern science has managed to map all 25,000 genes in the human genome, to be able to give a clear overall picture of the intricacies of human life, is precisely what Avicenna is not concerned with. In the same way that he discounts Aristotles First Cause as a satisfactory explanation for the existence of the world, so too is the explanation of causation for why living creatures differ from inert bodies. As we saw earlier, when Avicenna tells us "what can be asserted is not the same as what cannot be asserted", he is telling us that what we can claim exists without causing a contradiction is not the same as what would. Furthermore, that which we claim exists must be examined to see whether it is necessary through itself or through another and here we can use our imagination to see that the point in question is not about the set of events which led to the first flickers of life in some primordial mud millions of years ago, but as to the necessity of life itself and whether it was necessary through itself or through another for existence. If the causal chain of events which led to that particular point were themselves what resulted in the existence of soul in previously inanimate objects, then life is necessary through itself and there is no need to seek a soul to explain it. But that is to say that something is because it is, which is a circular argument. The only way out of this circular argument for a critic of Avicenna would be to begin the investigation by saying the following: 

We commonly observe certain bodies perceiving by the senses and being moved by volition; in fact we observe certain bodies taking in nutrients, growing, and reproducing their like. That does not belong to them on account of their corporeality; so the remaining option is that in themselves there are principles for that other than their corporeality.

This is how Avicenna begins his investigation, and where the circular argument of those who deny the existence of a principle called "soul" eventually leads them. When Avicenna is telling us that this same principle is responsible for the issuance of any actions that "do not follow a uniform course devoid of volition", he is attacking the strict determinism which the proponents of a material and only biological view of life express. Avicenna is telling us that there is a principle which is beyond the material, beyond the formal which is inseparable from the matter, a principle that perfects life and makes it what it is - necessary. The "I" which is the subject of the flying man experiment is the first perfection of this complete unit of life. It has come to exist with the existence of the human body and the components of life necessary for it, but it then continues to develop and grow through its second perfection, "a body possessed of organs that performs the activities of life". The temporal cage within which this "I" grows to find itself becomes the very key which will allow it to reach beyond the temporal and grasp universals, the true objects of knowledge and philosophy.

The flying man argument is intended to remind us that we cannot know empirically what it is that makes living beings qua living beings alive necessarily. We possess this soul, on account of our intellect, at a level much higher than plants and animals. Avicenna gives us a crude method for experiencing what it is he is referring to through this simple thought experiment, which is not telling us much, nor is it supposed to. It is simply a pointer that would allow us, as fellow souls, to begin seeking questions higher than what can be answered through only a cursory reading of the input from our body's senses. Avicenna wants us to demand more from these bodies, to look further inwards to develop that innate "I" that we all experience and from which there is nothing to escape from. If understood in this more sobre light, where we succeed in imagining our souls existing separately from our bodies, Avicenna is successful in his goals and the flying man helps him to achieve this objective.
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