Ibn ‘Arabi and the Shi’i Tradition: Texts, Ideas, Receptions
When and Where
Description
The Department of Philosophy and the Shi’a Research Institute present a conference on Islamic Philosophy.
Just as ‘post-classical’ philosophy in Islam is associated with the many receptions of Avicenna (d. 1037), similarly the broader scope of Islamic thought is punctuated with the receptions of the Andalusian Sufi buried in Damascus, Muḥyī al-Dīn Ibn ʿArabī (d. 1240), undoubtedly one of the most intriguing and influential figures in Islamic intellectual history. His major literary production, especially Fuṣūṣ al-ḥikam (The Ring-settings of Wisdoms) and al-Futūḥāt al-Makkīya (The Meccan Revelations) has spawned a considerable commentary tradition, including receptions and critiques written by Shīʿī thinkers, starting with ʿAbd al-Razzāq Kāshānī (d. 1336) and Sayyid Ḥaydar Āmulī (d. after 1385) in the pivotal fourteenth century.
This workshop will focus upon the reception of Ibn ʿArabī in Shīʿī intellectual production across space and time. Because we are concerned with a thinker who had a complicated relationship with falsafa and ḥikma as possible permutations of philosophy, and because his adherents and respondents often did not self-identity as philosophers, and because we are concerned with the rhetoric, spirit and form of argumentative expressions, we take philosophy in a broad sense to refer to genres of writing beyond the narrow labels of falsafa and ḥikma.
In that sense, William Chittick in his entry in the Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy opined that Ibn ʿArabī could be considered as the greatest of Muslim philosophers. How has Ibn ʿArabī been imagined, appropriated, and reconceptualised in Shīʿī scholarship? How did scholars deal with his hermeneutics as well as his metaphysics and his conception of divine friendship and sainthood? What may have been some of the motivations behind doing so and the contestations that arose in the process of integrating his theories? To what extent did the reception of Ibn ʿArabī represent a ‘confessional ambiguity’ among Persianate elites? What is necessary for some thinkers to adopt him as a fellow Shīʿī believer in order to make his work more palatable in Shīʿī scholarly circles?
This workshop will endeavour to address some of these questions and more broadly to investigate the scholarly output of Ibn ʿArabī with a specific focus on its intersection with Shīʿism and the apologetics or polemics that ensued as a result and that formed the emergence of modern Shiʿi philosophy and mystical thought.
Keynote speaker
- Todd Lawson, University of Toronto
Presenters
- Nizamudin Ahmed – Florida International University
- Emaan Alebban – Providence College
- Mukhtar H Ali – University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
- Vinay Khetia – Shi’a Research Institute
- Mohammad Amin Mansouri – Central Washington University
- Sajjad Rizvi – University of Exeter
- Eliza Tasbihi – McGill University
- Cyrus Zargar – University of Central Florida
To register, visit: Ibn ‘Arabi and the Shi’i Tradition: Texts, Ideas, and Receptions | Shi’a Research Institute (shiaresearch.ca)
Note: Limited seats available, registration is mandatory.