Philosophy at its Best!
This is a remarkable book by a remarkable author. I was so excited to see it was even written/published, and then really blown away with the contents. Toshihiko Izutsu’s writing (very much that of a careful professor) is both perceptive and clarifying, and especially on the Sufi part, easier to read than Henry Corbin (the 20th century Sufi scholar who is also wonderful, but less grounded seeming, but perhaps that is just a reflection of the French it was written in, or the translator’s touch, or both), who is the only other Sufi source I’ve studied. However, overall I wouldn’t say it’s an easy read, due to the demanding nature of the subjects; demanding but equally rewarding.
Izutsu organizes his extended lesson by separately explaining, first Sufism, then Taoism, concluding with a brief comparison. Part 1 (from pages 7-283) presents the Sufism of Ibn ‘Arabi (the great 12th-13th century Islamic mystic-philosopher), Part 2 (pgs. 287-466) explains the Taoism of Lao Tzu and Chuang Tzu (5th and 4th century BCE Chinese sages), then the concluding Part 3 (pgs. 469-493) is Izutsu’s brief (24 page) summary of what these two seemingly disconnected systems (one inherently dualistic and monotheistic, the other simply nondual and non-theistic) have in common (through the lens of the Perennial/Traditionalist Philosophy).
The basic view of such Traditionalist's is that mystical truth (as experienced directly by the individual) is acultural (ie. universal), and so once you get down beneath the cultural differences (those particulars of time and place) it’s pretty easy to see the sages, mystics and prophets are speaking of the same experience (which we all share and may have from time to time, although perhaps without recognizing the significance), which in essence is ineffable (made even more difficult to discuss productively when the views and vocabularies are so different as Islam and Taoism’s!), and so, easy to misinterpret within our cultural and intellectually territorial world-views - the literal exoteric vs. figurative esoteric views (and this misinterpretation of course applies to the mystics and prophets themselves when they put their own intellect into action to try and explain and/or understand what they’ve experienced!).
In this regard the extensive presentation of the first two parts needs little more elaboration, but what is unique is the comparison of these two systems in the first place. And in the comparison (ie the back/ground work) the fascinating details of each (and the shared ineffability of Life – the One before the many and the one consisting of many – expressed most succinctly by Lao Tzu in his very first line, “The Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao”) are revealed – leaving us with a (refreshed) opened space to do our own experiencing within…. And perhaps, come to understand and appreciate each other a little more.