The book approaches the conceptual background of Avicenna's account of efficient causality, outlining the positions held by him and his early interpreters (eleventh and twelfth centuries), as well as the arguments that support those positions. The first aim of the book is to show the systematic unity of the Avicennian doctrines on ontology and aetiology, highlighting the threads connecting the two. The second aim is to investigate Avicennaâs influence over his interpreters, assessing continuities and discontinuities.
Francesco Omar Zamboni, Ph.D. (2021), Scuola Normale Superiore (Pisa), is post-doctoral researcher at the university of Jyväskylä. He has published several articles on Mediaeval Islamic metaphysics, as well as a full Italian translation of Avicenna's IshÄrÄt.
Acknowledgements
Introduction
â1âAvicenna
â2âThe Avicennians: BahmanyÄr, LawkarÄ«, KhayyÄm, and SÄwÄ«
â3âThe Anti-Avicennians: GhazÄlÄ«, Ibn al-MalÄḥimÄ«, ShahrastÄnÄ«, MasʿūdÄ«, and Ibn GhaylÄn
â4âThe Innovators: AbÅ« l-BarakÄt and SuhrawardÄ«
â5âThe Systematiser: Fakhr al-DÄ«n al-RÄzÄ«
â6âThe Thirteenth Century: Traditional MutakallimÅ«n, Post-RÄzians, IshrÄqis, and Neo-Avicennians
â7âGeneral Overview of the Study
1 Efficient Causality in Avicenna
â1.1âThe Subject of and the Reason for Causal Dependence
â1.2âCategories of Efficient Causality
â1.3âNecessitation Contra Contingent Choice
â1.4âCorollaries of Efficient Causality
â1.5âThe Epistemic Function of Avicennaâs Aetiology
2 The Essence of Existence
â2.1âAvicenna: Primitivity, Simplicity, Identity with Reality, Distinction from Quiddity
â2.2âBahmanyÄr, KhayyÄm, and RÄzÄ«: The Rejection of Grounding and Dependent Knowability
â2.3âMasʿūdÄ« and AbÅ« l-BarakÄt: Grounding and Inferential Knowability
â2.4âIbn al-MalÄḥimÄ«: Reduction to Quiddity, Nominalism, and Extensionalisation
â2.5âDebates: on Grounding
â2.6âDebates: on Simplicity and Knowability
â2.7âDebates: on Primitivity
3 The Universality of Existence and Mental Existence
â3.1âAvicenna and the Majority: the Universality of Existence and Mental Existence
â3.2âMasʿūdÄ« and RÄzÄ«: the Rejection of Mental Existence and the Aporia of Universality
â3.3âAvicenna, KhayyÄm, AbÅ« l-BarakÄt, and RÄzÄ«: the Distinction between Mental and Concrete
â3.4âDebates: on Universality
â3.5âDebates: on Mental Existence
4 The Conceptual Invariance of Existence
â4.1âAvicenna and the Majority: Conceptual Invariance
â4.2âIbn al-MalÄḥimÄ«: Unrestricted Conceptual Variance
â4.3âShahrastÄnÄ«: Restricted Conceptual Variance
â4.4âDebates: on the Case for Invariance
â4.5âDebates: on the Case for Variance, Unrestricted and Restricted
5 The Modulation of Existence
â5.1âAvicenna and SÄwÄ«: The Modulation of Existence by Priority and Worth
â5.2âIbn al-MalÄḥimÄ«, ShahrastÄnÄ«, and SuhrawardÄ«: the Rejection of the Modulation of Existence
â5.3âBahmanyÄr: Modulation by Intensity and Accidental Unity
â5.4âIbn al-MalÄḥimÄ«, ShahrastÄnÄ«, MasʿūdÄ«, and RÄzÄ«: Essential Unity and the Rejection of Intensity
â5.5âDebates: on Intensity
â5.6âDebates: on the Accidentality and Essentiality of Unity
6 The Accidentality of Existence
â6.1âAvicenna, BahmanyÄr, SÄwÄ«, MasʿūdÄ«, and RÄzÄ«: the Accidentality of Existence
â6.2âGhazÄlÄ« and Ibn al-MalÄḥimÄ«: the Rejection of Distinction (Nominalism)
â6.3âKhayyÄm, ShahrastÄnÄ«, Ibn GhaylÄn, and SuhrawardÄ«: the Rejection of Concrete Reality (Conceptualism)
â6.4âAbÅ« l-BarakÄt: the Rejection of Inherence
â6.5âDebates: on Distinction
â6.6âDebates: on Concrete Reality
â6.7âDebates: on Externality
â6.8âDebates: on Inherence
7 The Contingency of Existence
â7.1âAvicenna: Intuitivity, Temporal Neutrality, Equidistance, Attribution to Pure Quiddity, and Concrete Reality
â7.2âBahmanyÄr and LawkarÄ«: Relativity, Modulation, and the Problem of Concrete Reality
â7.3âGhazÄlÄ« and MasʿūdÄ«: Contingency as Causal Dependence
â7.4âIbn al-MalÄḥimÄ«: Temporal Qualification and Non-equidistance
â7.5âThe Majority: the Rejection of Concrete Reality
â7.6âDebates: on Contingency as Causal Dependence
â7.7âDebates: on the Possibility of Contingency
â7.8âDebates: on Equidistance
â7.9âDebates: on Concrete Reality
8 The Signs of Contingency
â8.1âAvicenna and the Majority: the Contingency of the Conditional and of What Comes-to-be
â8.2âGhazÄlÄ« and MasʿūdÄ«: the Insufficiency of Conditionality for Contingency
â8.3âIbn al-MalÄḥimÄ«: the Insufficiency of Composition for Contingency
â8.4âSuhrawardÄ«: the Contingency of the Imperfect and the Multipliable
â8.5âDebates: on the Contingency of the Conditional
â8.6âDebates: on the Contingency of What Comes-to-be
â8.7âDebates: on the Contingency of the Imperfect and the Multipliable
9 The Principle of Sufficient Reason
â9.1âAvicenna and the Majority: Sufficient Reason, Causal Necessitarianism, Unrestricted Applicability
â9.2âGhazÄlÄ« and Ibn GhaylÄn: Non-applicability to Voluntary Actions
â9.3âIbn al-MalÄḥimÄ«: the Weakening of the Principle
â9.4âShahrastÄnÄ«: Possible Applicability to Divine Actions
â9.5âRÄzÄ«: the Preference for Non-applicability to Divine Actions
â9.6âDebates: on the Intuitivity of Sufficient Reason
â9.7âDebates: the Inferential Case for Sufficient Reason
â9.8âDebates: the Case against Sufficient Reason
10 The Coexistence of Cause and Effect
â10.1âAvicenna and the Majority: Coexistence as Entailed by Sufficient Reason
â10.2âRÄzÄ«: Coexistence as Distinct from Sufficient Reason
â10.3âShahrastÄnÄ«: the Rejection of Coexistence with God
â10.4âIbn al-MalÄḥimÄ«, MasʿūdÄ«: Causeless Persistence
â10.5âDebates: on Coexistence
â10.6âDebates: on Coexistence with God
â10.7âDebates: on Causeless Persistence
11 Causal Priority
â11.1âAvicenna and the Majority: Causal Priority as Existential Priority
â11.2âRÄzÄ«: the Problematisation of Causal Priority and Its Corollaries
â11.3âDebates: on Causal Priority
â11.4âDebates: on Self-Causation
â11.5âDebates: on Essential Coming-to-be
Conclusion
Bibliography Index
Post-graduate students and specialists in History of Islamic philosophy, History of Metaphysics, and History of Ethics.