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Al-Ghazālī and the Ashʽarite School

✍ Scribed by Richard M. Frank


Publisher
Duke UP
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Leaves
165
Series
Duke Monographs in Medieval and Renaissance Studies 15
Edition
First Edition
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Widely regarded among students of medieval thought as the most important of the medieval Islamic thinkers, al-Ghazali (1058–1111) remains an extremely complex figure whose texts continue to present serious challenges for scholars. In this book, Richard M. Frank confronts the traditional view of al-Ghazali as a loyal supporter of Ash arite doctrine and reexamines his relationship to the school theologians.This reexamination, Frank argues, is essential to an understanding of al-Ghazali’s work, a diverse series of texts made difficult by the various postures and guises assumed by their author. Statements by al-Ghazali regarding the kalam (the speculative theology of the schools) and its status as a religious science provide the focus for a detailed analysis that contrasts the traditional school theology with his own. From this, the question of al-Ghazali’s relationship to the Ash arite school becomes a key to the basic characteristics of his method and language and therefore to the overall sense that governs much of his work. Finally, as reflected in the chronological sequence of al-Ghazali’s writings, Frank’s analysis demonstrates al-Ghazali’s commitment to basic elements of Avicennian philosophy and his progressive alienation from the Ash arite establishment.Al-Ghazali and the Ash arite School offers an important and provocative reassessment of a major medieval Islamic thinker. It will be of interest not only to specialists in the field, but also to a broad range of historians of the period and to those interested in all aspects of Islam.

✦ Table of Contents


Title page......Page 4
ISBN 0-8223-1427-4......Page 0
Contents......Page 7
Preface......Page 9
1. Introduction......Page 13
2. AI-Ghazali on the Place of Kalam Amongst the Religious Sciences......Page 19
3. Two Ash'arite Tracts: al-Iqtisad fi l-i'tiqad and al-Qudsiyyah......Page 40
4. Open Conflict with the Ash'arite School......Page 88
5. Conclusions......Page 98
Notes......Page 115
Primary Sources......Page 149
Secondary Sources......Page 152
Index of Proper Names......Page 155
Index of Subjects......Page 157
Index of Arabic Words......Page 161


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