The Story of Reason in Islam begins with the theme that this is a story about Islamic thought and the Arabic language, and thanks to the suggestion of the wonderfully-named Buraq (Nusseibeh's youngest son), a story that is quite reader-friendly.
Arabic is a language of great significance. It is a language of power and a language of staggering triumph as it catapulted an Arab world into a world of advanced scientific thought.
Arabic sparked this intellectual revolution, the birth of reason, which ultimately produced some of the greatest minds in the history of thought and science.
It is poetry, Nusseibeh argues that embodies the authentic spirit of creativity transcending imagination to be the progenitor of reason.
Poetry is key.
Arabic as the revered language of poetry owes its mystification to the silence of the Arabian Desert.
poetic rhymes following the soft, rhythmic beats of camels, trending along the undulating sands; from this soil, the finest lyric of Arabic literary tradition would grow.
With Arabic having the power to command, the Arab, as poet, becomes the voice of his people, a gifted master of the Arabic language.
The poet- the receiver of visions, the free thinker, the Promethean emissary of light- now qualifies a an outsider, an outcast, he grows estranged from his own community and is forced to roam alone. He is feared and despised; sometimes, he is demonized to the point of suffering incarceration and crucifixion.
The brilliance of Arabic is that it was chosen as the language of the Quran, a Quranic Arabic, the language of Divine Speech, a linguistically commanding language with unparalleled linguistic characteristics and Quranic grammar, to express the Holy Message, Divine Poetry, the poem of the universe.
Consider the heavens, the Quran exhorted, the seven skies bejeweled by the stars and planets, each of them following a prescribed path. Consider how they are held together- as if by invisible anchors. Do those who will not believe not see how the earth and skies were once fused together- that We tore them asunder and made water the source of all life?
The poetic verses of the Quran made the reader, the listener, the reciter question the meaning of life and called upon living in harmony with the Universe.
The Quranic verses addressed - in whole and in detail- a range of psychological and existential concerns: yearning for enduring life, a future of comfort and bliss, instinctive fear of punishment or retribution for doing wrong; the promise of reward for dong right. Above all, however, the verses spoke to- and roused- the imagination and the intellect.
As such Islam gave us the Sufi saint Rabi'a Al Adawiyyah and Imam Hasan al Basri, both stretching the limits of language to a different realm of rational investigations.
Resolving the great questions of existence depends on linguistic skill and analytic ability. Intellect-reason, that is enables one to "unravel" deeper layers of meaning within the Sacred text.
Arabic became the lingua franca of intellectual discourse.
The Story of Reason in Islam is told through Kalam, the science of speech that draws meaning from the contextual use of language, an oral debate spoken in ordinary speech, that promoted inquiry into pressing questions.
Kalam began- by espousing and developing views about God and His relationship to the world.
Nusseibeh presents the Story of Reason in 24 parts. His scholarship impresses throughout, but it is the part about language and reason that makes it a work of great significance.
The Word was Arabic- which was also a living language that continued to be used for intellectual discourse.
The last pieces of why the Islamic world fell into decline fall into place. Nusseibeh gives us perhaps arguably one of the most interesting theories to explain the Islamic intellectual demise.
His brilliance lies in his tour of Islamic thought and his examination of Islamic reasoning.
While The Story of Reason in Islam is clearly not a candidate for least readable, it does require having a will for exploring both rational and transrational knowledge.
The pleasure of reading such a story is that Nusseibeh as a philosopher and Arab intellectual posits that including philosophers in today's debates would challenge where innovative judicial deliberation has all but ceased, consequently, past judgments on ethical conduct have become more and more stratified, and politics has failed to ensure that modern Muslims can live their lives without being encumbered by archaic codes of conduct.
The Story of Reason In Islam is a well-crafted, illuminating account of Muslim intellectual thinking that paved the way for European Enlightenment. Marked by its honesty and sobriety, Nusseibeh teaches us that
As natural twins, East and West - need each other; one should not view them as destined to clash. Nor, in the Muslim world, should reason ( the pursuit of knowledge and progress) and religion ( a virtuous code of ethics) be viewed as mortal enemies.
With details well- chosen throughout:
the "East" represents a region where the imagination provides both a spiritual map and a practical guide for how the human soul may best live in the world. "The West" on the other hand- even if he described it in the imaginative terms, too- stands for the natural world: the earth and its place in the cosmos. East and West complement each other, but the whole is best seen from the East.