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*Signs Within Ourselves*



*We will show Our signs to them in the universe, and in their own selves,
until it becomes manifest to them that this (the Qur'an) is the truth. Is it
not sufficient in regard to your Lord that He is a witness over all things?
(Qur'an, 41:53)** *

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The Qur'an uses "nafs" (self) to express consciousness, the quintessence of
our personality. "Nafs" is integrated with our physical body; the author of
all good and bad acts is our "nafs."



The atoms of our physical body - of which 99 percent is vacuum - deprived of
all consciousness, perform such conscious acts as seeing, hearing, and
thinking.



The verse above alludes to signs in our selves. There are a priori
categories that the mind is constitutionally endowed with, concepts or ideas
that are not derived from experience.



Here we find ourselves surrounded by available data of a rich philosophical
background. The tribe to which the Prophet (peace be upon him) belonged
dealt in trade and animal husbandry. The Prophet (peace be upon him) himself
was not brought up in a milieu like Plato's Academy or in an environment
where the colorful and lively schools of philosophy like Cartesianism
flourished. Therefore, the fact that the Qur'an made a distinction between
the outward signs and the signs imminent in man's soul is noteworthy.



The basic message transmitted by all the religions revealed by God is the
fact that He is a Perfect Being. This becomes all the more apparent when we
witness all the entities created by God. In the ontological argument,
attainment of God is achieved not through exterior means, but from the idea
of "Perfection" or "Perfect Being" inherent in each of us.



Farabi and Avicenna were among the first philosophers to refer to the
initial arguments of ontology. Farabi analyzes the ontological argument
together with the cosmological argument. According to them, God must be
self-existent (Necessary-Being); assuming that He does not exist would be a
contradiction in terms. All other creatures are possible creatures; both
their existence and nonexistence can be a topic of discussion. If the
possible entities are not resolved in the Necessary-Being, there would be a
contradiction in terms. Given the fact that Farabi's conclusion is a
combination of ontological and cosmological arguments, many thinkers are
believed to have found traces of this for the first time in the works of
Avicenna.



Nevertheless, this argument is, more often than not, associated with
Descartes. To avoid committing error, he sets out in his philosophical quest
by considering all past knowledge as if it were nonexistent. He begins with
the statement that many of the preconceived opinions he has accepted since
childhood have turned out to be unreliable; so it is necessary once in a
lifetime to demolish everything and start again right from the foundations.
There follows a systematic critique of previous beliefs. Anything based on
the senses is potentially suspect, since I have found by experience that the
senses sometimes deceive and it is prudent never to trust completely those
who have deceived us even once.



Elsewhere Descartes expresses this "cogito argument" in the famous phrase,
"cogito ergo sum" (I think, therefore I am). He derives from this argument
that he exists incontestably and that thinking can never be confuted. Later
he realizes that knowing is more perfect than doubting and explains how this
idea of perfection leads him to the most perfect, to the idea of a supremely
Perfect Being.



He reasons that the representational content (or objective reality) of this
idea is so great that it cannot have originated from inside his own
(imperfect) mind, but must have been planted in him by an actual Perfect
Being - God. Things outside him like the sky, the earth, the light and the
heat and a thousand other things, all these things contained nothing that
would surpass him. If they were unreal he might have concluded that he had
acquired them from the void. However, this could not hold true of a Perfect
Being. He could not have acquired it from nothingness.



Descartes concluded the existence of God after having examined the evidence
inherent in the self. He said that this conclusion was not an invention of
his imagination, and that to add or subtract anything to or from it was
beyond him. He had to accept the fact that he had come to the world with
this a priori sign. Like the initials that an artist imprints on his work,
God had implanted this idea as He created him.





Compiled from various sources.



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*Note that an English translation of the Qur'an is an interpretation of the
Qur'an, and does not have the perfect status as the Qur'an in its original
Arabic form. ***

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