Cyrus Ali Zargar
Paperback
9781786072016
Islamic philosophy and Sufism evolved as distinct yet interweaving strands of Islamic thought and practice. Despite differences, they have shared a concern with the perfection of the soul through the development of character. In The Polished Mirror, Cyrus Ali Zargar studies the ways in which, through teaching and storytelling, pre-modern Muslims lived, negotiated, and cultivated virtues. Examining the writings of philosophers, ascetics, poets, and saints, he locates virtue ethics within a dynamic moral tradition.
Contents
Part One: Islamic Philosophy
1 - The Humors (Al-Akhlat) and Character Traits (Al-Ahklaq) According to the Brethren of Purity
2 - Virtue Ethics in Avicenna’s Philosophical Allegories
3 - The Virtues, From Philosophy to Scripture: Refining Character Traits in Miskawayh and Ghazali
4 - Reason, Revelation, and Discovering the Virtuous in Ibn Tufayl’s Literary Thought Experiment
5 - From Humors to Pure Light: Knowledge and Virtue in the Allegories of Suhrawardi
Part Two: Sufism
6 - The Soul’s Constant Returning: Repentance (Tawba) in the Sufi Legacy of Ja’far Al-Sadiq
7 - Distancing Oneself from the Worldly: Renunciation (Zuhd) According to Al-Muhasibi and Al-Sarraj
8 - Self-Awareness that Leads to Self-Loss: Futuwwa as a Compound Virtue in the Legacy of Ansari
9 - The Completion of Ethics: Self-Annihilation (Gana’) Through the Lens of ‘Attar
10 - Virtue in the Narrative Poetry of Rumi