by Fethullah Gülen
Much
has been said on the issue of information sources. Some of the people
who have commented on this issue have sometimes been restricted by their
knowledge and/or faith, thus they have vocalized different opinions.
According to the Islamic perspective, there are three types of information sources:
Knowledge
obtained through the five senses or relating to these senses. These
include, seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, and touching. For example,
something that is seen is there, and something that is felt through
touching exists.
According
to the trend which accepts only this source of information, anything
beyond the perception of these senses cannot be a subject of knowledge.
This positivist trend has lost its influence over recent decades;
however it was widely popular at the beginning of the twentieth century.
The
second source of information is the mind. When the "mind" is mentioned,
an unbiased decision making entity, capable of evaluating matter within
its pure form, and competent of making an objective decision is
implied. The importance of a non degenerate, unbiased, non oppressed,
functional mind is undeniable for information. In the modern world,
rationalism is the representative of this tendency. Since its emergence,
Rationalism has always advocated the "mind" as the only source of
information. However, even rationalism is not sufficient to achieve true
knowledge.
Another
source of information is "authentic narration." Authentic narration
should be understood in two ways. Firstly, it is knowledge that has been
transmitted by a number of different people and accepted as true. For
example, a narration about a continent or a country to which one has
never been is an authentic narration. To illustrate further, for a
person who has never visited the continents of Australia or America, any
accurate information, or first hand information, obtained is of this
type. It is possible that we may not have visited or seen these places,
however millions of people live on these continents and hundreds of
thousands of people visit these continents every year. The information
gathered from these people is so powerful and trustworthy that anyone
who has not seen these places cannot doubt their existence.
Secondly,
authentic narration can also be considered to be that of "Divine
Revelation." In other words, this would consist of the Divine Books
revealed to the messengers by God Almighty, where the revelations were
brought by the Archangel Gabriel.
In
order to discover the wonders of the universe and to achieve a better
and more accurate knowledge with our five senses and mind, we must make
evaluations under the light and wisdom of Divine revelations. Only when
manipulated to work under these principles will science be able to
accomplish its task of producing the fruit that it should.
Human
beings are not capable of seeing or hearing everything that exists, and
thus they are not capable of knowing everything that exists. The mind
cannot comprehend everything that exists. There are so many things that
exist but which are not sensed through our senses or understood by our
minds, or even, if the mind does understand them, can never be sensed or
reached. Hence, the human being can only learn these facts through the
teachings of a Divine Being whose knowledge, power, and will surround
everything. We can only learn the things He knows to the extent that He
teaches us in His Divine Books; in this way we become knowledgeable of
those matters.
Otherwise,
partial falsification or incorrect interpretations of the Divine Books
is inevitable. Moreover, if only the senses and experience will be the
basis of information, then one will be forced to say "I do not believe
in anything other than what I see, hear. . ." This is tantamount to
rebelling against everything that the mind puts forward. In fact, if
only sensory information is taken as the basis of knowledge, then people
will be forced to search for compatibility between their deduced
knowledge and the universe that is created by God Almighty. In such a
system, whatever facts agreed with their theorems would be true,
anything else would be false. However, as God says in the Qur'an: We did
not take the human beings as witnesses to the creation of the Heavens
and the Earth (Kahf 18:51). When the Divine revelation is not taken into
consideration, every explanation is no more than a theorem or a guess.
Unfortunately,
because only the first two types of sources were accepted, many Divine
Revelations were rejected. With the progress of science, their validity
has once again been proved. For example, the stages of an embryo in the
mother's womb have been well defined. When Omar Khayyam, who was an
extreme rationalist, was asked about these verses, his response was to
comment against the Qur'anic truth by commenting that the verses were
not meant literally. Some other scholars thought that a person can only
have faith in the resurrection, as it cannot be understood by the mind;
however, Said Nursi has explained it with a simple analogy. The
resurrection is like the spring that follows the winter. We do not have
any actual sensory knowledge that this will happen, we know from
observation and reasoning that the spring will come. Since some people
only trust in the two types of sources, they had to twist what they read
in the Divine Book, even the fundamentals of faith. For example,
through the influence of philosophy, Farabi and Ibn Rushd, even though
they were geniuses of their time, considered the Divine Revelations and
the prophethood as being human made concepts.
Some
thought that philosophers were higher in status than the Messengers of
God. The All Knowing God was aware of how the Messengers would perform
their duty of conveying the message; i.e. with an extraordinarily
superior performance. This is why they were given the prophethood in
advance; yet philosophers could not see this fine nuance. Moreover, it
can be concluded that philosophers are only translating what Aristotle
had earlier said to suit their time.
If
the Islamic World is considered as a whole, it can be seen that not
everybody fell into these traps. Zahrawi, Ali Kuşçu, Jalaladdin Dawwani,
Gelenbevi and many others, did not fall into these traps; they were
very religious, and they were very influential in their times. People
like Molla Husrev and Khwarizmi, with their work in sciences that led
their fields of study for many centuries, even in the West, were still
able to maintain their faith without experiencing any conflict and lived
for the most part as religious, pious people.
In
conclusion, it would be proper to say that all sources of information
must be handled together if one is to achieve an end result.
Discriminating between these information sources and taking them
discretely will open up pitfalls for humanity. The same pitfalls will
continue to open if the same mistakes are repeated. Humanity will have
to say "True" to those things it claimed as "False" the day before.
However, using the Divine Revelations as the foundations of knowledge,
and surrounding and framing them with the information attained from the
senses and mind is the only path that will lead us in a true direction.
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