|
and absolutely free-minded speculators. They were applying to the ideas of the Qur'an
the keen solvent of Greek dialectic, and the results which they obtained were of the most
fantastically original character. Thrown into the wide sea and utter freedom of Greek
thought, their ideas had expanded to the bursting point and, more than even a German
metaphysician, they had lost touch of the ground of ordinary life, with its reasonable
probabilities, and were swinging loose on a wild hunt after ultimate truth, wielding as
their weapons definitions and syllogisms. The lyric fervors of Muhammad in the Qur'an gave
scope enough of strange ideas from which to start, or which had to be explained away.
Their belief in the powers of the science of logic was unfailing, and armed with
Aristotle's "Analytics," they felt sure that certainty was within their reach.
It was at the court and under the protection of al-Ma'mun that they especially flourished,
and some account of the leading spirits among them will be necessary before we describe
how they reached their utmost pride of power and how they fell.
An-Nazzam (d. 231) has the credit among later historians of having made use, to a high
degree, of the doctrines of the Greek philosophers. He was one of the Satans of the
Qadarites, say they; he read the books of the philosophers and mingled their teachings
with the doctrines of the Mu'tazilites. He taught, in the most absolute way, that God
could do nothing to a creature, either in this world or in the next, that was not for the
creature's good and in accordance with strict justice. It was not only that
|
|
|
God would not do it; He had not the power to do anything evil. Evidently the
personality of God was fast vanishing behind an absolute law of right. To this, orthodox
Islam opposed the doctrine that God could do anything; He could forgive whom He willed,
and punish whom He willed. Further, he taught that God's willing a thing meant only that
He did it in accordance with His knowledge; and when He willed the action of a creature
that meant only that He commanded it. This is evidently to evade phrases in the Qur'an.
Man, again, he taught, was spirit (ruh), and the body (badan) was only an
instrument. But this spirit was a fine substance which flowed in the body like the
essential oil in a rose, or butter in milk. In a universe determined by strict law, man
alone was undetermined. He could throw a stone into the air, and by his action the stone
went up; but when the force of his throw was exhausted it came again under law and fell.
If he had only asked himself how it came to fall, strange things might have happened. But
he, and all his fellows, were only playing with words like counters. Further, he taught
that God had created all created things at once, but that He kept them in concealment
until it was time for them to enter on the stage of visible being and do their part. All
things that ever will exist are thus existing now, but, in a sense, in retentis.
This seems to be another attempt to solve the problem of creation in time, and it had
important consequences. Further, the Qur'an was no miracle (mu'jiz) to him. The
only miraculous elements in it are the narratives about the Unseen World, and past things
and things
|
|