EL-GHAZALI (1056–1111)
The twelfth-century philosopher and Sufi El-Ghazali quotes in his Book of Knowledge this line from El-Mutanabbi: 'To the sick man, sweet water tastes bitter in the mouth.' This could very well be taken as Ghazali's motto.
Ghazali not only points out that what people call belief may be a state of obsession; he states clearly, in accordance with Sufi principles, that it is not inescapable, but insists that it is essential for people to be able to identify it.
His Books were burnt by Mediterranean bigots from Spain to Syria, Nowadays they are not put into the flames, but their effect, except among Sufis, is perhaps less; they are not read very much.
He regarded the distinction between opinion and knowledge as something which can easily be lost. when this happens, it is incumbent upon those who know the difference to make it plain as far as they are able.
Ghazali's scientific, psychological discoveries, though widely appreciated by academics of all kinds, have not been given the attention they deserve because he specifically disclaims the scientific or logical method as their origin, He arrived at his knowledge through his upbringing in Sufism, among Sufis, and through a form of direct perception of the truth which has nothing to do with mechanical intellection. This, of course, at once puts him outside the pale for scientists. What is rather curious, however, is that his discoveries are so astonishing that one would have thought that investigators would have liked to find out how he made them.
"Mysticism" having been given a bad name like the dog in the proverb, if it cannot be hanged, can at least be ignored. This is a measure of scholastic psychology: accept the man;s discoveries if you cannot deny them, but ignore his method if it does not follow your beliefs about method.
The influence of Ghazali on Western thought is admitted on all hands to be enormous. But this influence itself shows the working of conditioning; the philosophers of medieval Christendom who adopted many of his ideas did so selectively, completely ignoring the parts which were embarrassing to their own indoctrination activities.
Ghazali's way of thought attempted to bring to a wider audience than the comparatively small Sufi one a final distinction between belief and obsession. He stressed the role of upbringing in the inculcation of religious beliefs, and invited his readers to observe the mechanism involved, He insisted upon pointing out that those who are learned may be, and often are, stupid as well, and can be bigoted, obsessed. He affirms that, in addition to having information and being able to reproduce it, there is such a thing as knowledge, which happens to be a higher form of human thought.
The habit of confusing opinion with knowledge, a habit which is to be met with every day at the current time, Ghazali regards as an epidemic disease.
In saying all these things, with a wealth of illustration and in an atmosphere which was most unconducive to scientific attitudes, Ghazali was not merely playing the part of a diagnostician. He had acquired his own knowledge in a Sufic manner, and he realized that higher understanding - being a Sufi, in fact - was only possible to people who could see and avoid the phenomena which he was describing.
Ghazali produced numerous books and published many teachings. His contribution to human thought and the relevance of his ideas hundreds of years later are unquestioned. Let us partly repair the omission of our predecessors by seeing what has to say about method. What was the Way of El-Ghazali ? What does man have to do in order to be like him, who was admittedly one of the world's giants of Philosophy and Psychology ?
Ghazali on the Path
A Human being is not a human being while his tendencies include self-indulgence, covetousness, temper and attacking other people.
A student must reduce to the minimum the fixing of his attention upon customary things like his people and his environment, for attention-capacity is limited.
The pupil must regard his teacher like a doctor who knows the cure of the patient. He will serve his teacher. Sufis teach in unexpected ways. An experienced physician prescribes certain treatment correctly. Yet the outside observer might be quite amazed at what he is saying and doing; he will fail to see the necessity or the relevance of the procedure being followed.
This is why it is unlikely that the pupil will be able to ask the right questions at the right time. But the teacher knows what and when a person can understand.
The Difference between Social and Initiatory Activity.
Parable of the People with a Higher Aim
He went on his way, until he came to a third group of people. They looked like people who had endured much, but their faves shone by joy.
Isa asked them: 'What has made you like this?' and they answered: 'The Spirit of Truth. We have seen Reality, and this has made us oblivious of lesser goals.'
Isa said: 'These are the people who attain. On the Day of Accounting these are they who will be in the Presence of God.'
The Three Functions of Perfected Man
- The form of belief which surrounds the Sufi;
- The capacity if students, who are taught in accordance with their ability to understand;
- A special circle of people who will share and understanding of the knowledge which is derived from direct inner experience.
Attraction of Celebrities
The Nature of Divine Knowledge
Love and Self Interest
You Must be Prepared
You must prepare yourself for the transition in which there will be none of the things to which you have accustomed yourself, says Ghazali. After death your identity will have to respond to stimuli of which you have a chance to get a foretaste here. If you remain attached to the few things with which you are familiar, it will only make you miserable.