Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/11499/56275
Title: Poets, Oracles, and Nabıs as Messengers: An Evaluation of the Philosophy of al-Farabı and Avicenna*
Authors: Kocakaplan, Nursema
Keywords: Poetry
divination
love
nubuwwa
poet
oracle
lover
nabi
Publisher: Scientific Studies Assoc-Ilmi Etudler Dernegi-Ilem
Abstract: Due to the inequality regarding the susceptibility level of people's souls as well as their temperamental balance, differences occur in how they accept news containing messages arriving from the celestial realm. People who have a more competent mind, stronger intuition (hadth), and higher imitation (muhakat) ability compared to others more strongly accept what is revealed from the celestial realm. This article provides information about people who accept what is conveyed from metaphysical substances and who've been informed about unknown events in three stages: (i) The place of Plato's distinction among poets, oracles, and lovers in Aristotelian and Plutarchian philosophy; (ii) the position of poets and oracles in the pre-Islamic period, polytheists' attribution of both poetry and divination to Prophet Muhammad, and the description of Muhammad as a nabi in the Qur'an; and (iii) the meanings al-Farabi and Avicenna attributed to oracles, poets, lovers, and nabis (prophet). In this context, the article attempts to find answers to the questions of what the philosophical basis of both al-Farabi's and Avicenna's ideas is regarding poets and oracles and what the religious basis of their views is regarding the concept of nabi. While trying to find answers to these questions, the study also aims to determine how a nabi differs from poets, oracles, and lovers by considering the superiority nubuwwa (prophecy) has over poetry and divination.
URI: https://doi.org/10.12658/Nazariyat.9.1.M0197en
https://hdl.handle.net/11499/56275
ISSN: 2528-8563
2547-9415
Appears in Collections:WoS İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / WoS Indexed Publications Collection

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