Generations of scholars, attempting to grapple with Aristotelian
metaphysics and his notion of first philosophy as the study of being qua
being, had to deal with the seeming confusion in the Metaphysics
concerning its subject matter and purpose. Was the Metaphysics a work
about the abstract notion of being, was it a primary science that determined
the subject matter of all the other branches of knowledge, was it another name
for theology (or perhaps more specifically what the post-Heideggerian tradition
calls onto-theology), or was it somewhat a study of ultimate causes? At the
heart of the problem was the very notion of metaphysics and indeed of being
itself. This question and problematic animated the young Ibn Sīnā and as he
famously noted in his autobiography, he read and read the text and failed to
grasp its purpose until serendipity intervened and he chanced upon a copy of
al-Fārābī’s short work explaining the Metaphysics. It is this Avicennan
turn, and the wider question of metaphysics as first philosophy, as a
transcendental science whose subject matter itself ought to be transcendental
that accounts for the research focus of Koutzarova’s published dissertation
that deservedly won one of the Iranian Book Agency’s Book of the Year award in
2011. Central to the thesis is the insight that making sense of the metaphysics
is a focal step in the critical systematisation of Aristotelian science and the
very possibility of science. Metaphysics as science is only possible if it is transcendental
and has a transcendental subject.
The text is divided into four parts and three sets of conclusions. The
first part lays out the problematic and considers the scope of metaphysics
taking its inspiration from that famous passage in the autobiography of Ibn
Sīnā just mentioned and then considers what it means to define the subject of
metaphysics as the Being of beings (al-mawjūd al-muṭlaq). For someone
like myself more in tune with later discussions the use of mawjūd as
opposed to wujūd is interesting: the texts I tend to study prefer the
latter and the constant conflation of the two in favour of the latter by the
likes of Mullā Ṣadrā may account for his creative misreadings of Ibn Sīnā, a
point on which Koutzarova takes me to task. The second part focuses on this
concept of mawjūd as the primary referential subject of metaphysics and
engages in four chapters of careful textual analysis of Ibn Sīnā’s Metaphysics
linking the ontological structure of being with the epistemological
architecture of science. The third part examines the term mawjūd,
starting with a chapter on al-Fārābī and continuing with chapters that locate
the notion in category theory and concern the predication of the term. Central
to this section is a discussion of what one understands by the tertium quid
of tashkīk that locates being as a term that is neither univocal nor
equivocal. The fourth part furthers the epistemological issue of conceptualisation
(taṣawwur) by engaging with mawjūd and ‘its sisters’ namely the
status of being a thing (shayʾ) or being necessary (ḍarūrī). In
Ibn Sīnā’s work this is partly a critique of kalām ontology that
displaces mawjūd as the ultimate ‘genus’ (or at least quasi-genus) is
favour of the term ‘thing’ which in its first diaresis divides into
‘existent’ (mawjūd) and ‘non-existent’ (maʿdūm). For Ibn Sīnā,
the fact that something exists is equivalent to stating it is a thing (in
whichever mode of existence one takes that since Ibn Sīnā is one of the first
Muslim thinkers to conceive of a mental mode of existence that the later
traditions terms al-wujūd al-dhihnī), and to its being necessary – as
the axiom of Islamic philosophy states (in genuflection to the related radical
contingency of his proof for the existence of God as the necessary being):
‘that which is not necessary cannot exist (lam yajib lam yūjad)’. The conclusions that follow consider metaphysics
as a transcendental science, the significance of the notion of the
transcendental in Ibn Sīnā and the problematic legacy of the Avicennan notion
of the existent in consequent philosophical discussions. This clarifies further
also why Ibn Sīnā consider his philosophical approach to be superior to
theology as a means for understanding the true nature of reality and of God as
the ultimate existent. Throughout the work one notices the careful attention to
textual analysis with copious citations and considerations from the Avicennan
corpus that one expects from the best traditions of German Arabism and
specialists of medieval philosophy. In particular her inter-textual approach is
an important facet of Avicennan studies today – the need to understand how to
locate meaning assigned to terms across his works from the Metaphysics
to the Organon and through the Physics. No serious study of
Avicennan ontology can neglect his category theory addressed in the logic and
she certainly does not fail to do so.
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