Bringing Things Back from Nothingness: The Restoration of the Non-Existent before and after Avicenna

This paper presents the evolution of the Islamic debates on i‘ādat al-ma‘dūm [restoration of the non-existent], examining the notion itself, the motives behind its adoption and rejection, and the arguments for and against its possibility. Restoration consists in an act of recreating a previously ann...

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Main Author: Francesco Omar Zamboni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scientific Studies Association (ILEM) 2022-05-01
Series:Nazariyat: Journal for the History of Islamic Philosophy and Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://nazariyat.org/content/5-sayilar/16-cilt-8-sayi-1/2-francesco-omar-zamboni/2_f_omar_zamboni_en.pdf
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author_facet Francesco Omar Zamboni
author_sort Francesco Omar Zamboni
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description This paper presents the evolution of the Islamic debates on i‘ādat al-ma‘dūm [restoration of the non-existent], examining the notion itself, the motives behind its adoption and rejection, and the arguments for and against its possibility. Restoration consists in an act of recreating a previously annihilated entity while preserving its identity. Most pre-Avicennian theologians accept the possibility of restoration, while disagreeing on one preliminary issue (the reality of the non-existent) and one derivative issue (the restorability of specific classes of entities). Adopting restoration enabled the mutakallimūn to reconcile a corporealist anthropology with the possibility of resurrection. Avicenna presented an influential case against the possibility of restoration consisting of three main arguments: from intuition (in light of the unreality of the non-existent), from the indiscernibility of a restored entity from its equivalent copy, and from the contradiction entailed by the restoration of time. Among the post-Avicennian schools, only the Ash‘arites defended the possibility of restoration. The debates of the post-Classical period built upon the basic argumentative core outlined by Avicenna and the early Mutakallimūn, considering more sophisticated formulations (the argument from modal invariance), objections, and answers, as well as designing some totally new arguments both for (from the possibility of the conceptual parts, from remembrance, from presumptive possibility) and against restoration (from intermittence, from the restoration of the causal factors).
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spelling doaj.art-dd252b81dca741c0a6f74b6bfc3cd5652023-02-15T16:13:06ZengScientific Studies Association (ILEM)Nazariyat: Journal for the History of Islamic Philosophy and Sciences2547-94152022-05-01812562Bringing Things Back from Nothingness: The Restoration of the Non-Existent before and after AvicennaFrancesco Omar Zamboni0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0860-0225 University of JyväskyläThis paper presents the evolution of the Islamic debates on i‘ādat al-ma‘dūm [restoration of the non-existent], examining the notion itself, the motives behind its adoption and rejection, and the arguments for and against its possibility. Restoration consists in an act of recreating a previously annihilated entity while preserving its identity. Most pre-Avicennian theologians accept the possibility of restoration, while disagreeing on one preliminary issue (the reality of the non-existent) and one derivative issue (the restorability of specific classes of entities). Adopting restoration enabled the mutakallimūn to reconcile a corporealist anthropology with the possibility of resurrection. Avicenna presented an influential case against the possibility of restoration consisting of three main arguments: from intuition (in light of the unreality of the non-existent), from the indiscernibility of a restored entity from its equivalent copy, and from the contradiction entailed by the restoration of time. Among the post-Avicennian schools, only the Ash‘arites defended the possibility of restoration. The debates of the post-Classical period built upon the basic argumentative core outlined by Avicenna and the early Mutakallimūn, considering more sophisticated formulations (the argument from modal invariance), objections, and answers, as well as designing some totally new arguments both for (from the possibility of the conceptual parts, from remembrance, from presumptive possibility) and against restoration (from intermittence, from the restoration of the causal factors).https://nazariyat.org/content/5-sayilar/16-cilt-8-sayi-1/2-francesco-omar-zamboni/2_f_omar_zamboni_en.pdfavicennaibn sīnāeschatologyontologyresurrectionrestoration
spellingShingle Francesco Omar Zamboni
Bringing Things Back from Nothingness: The Restoration of the Non-Existent before and after Avicenna
Nazariyat: Journal for the History of Islamic Philosophy and Sciences
avicenna
ibn sīnā
eschatology
ontology
resurrection
restoration
title Bringing Things Back from Nothingness: The Restoration of the Non-Existent before and after Avicenna
title_full Bringing Things Back from Nothingness: The Restoration of the Non-Existent before and after Avicenna
title_fullStr Bringing Things Back from Nothingness: The Restoration of the Non-Existent before and after Avicenna
title_full_unstemmed Bringing Things Back from Nothingness: The Restoration of the Non-Existent before and after Avicenna
title_short Bringing Things Back from Nothingness: The Restoration of the Non-Existent before and after Avicenna
title_sort bringing things back from nothingness the restoration of the non existent before and after avicenna
topic avicenna
ibn sīnā
eschatology
ontology
resurrection
restoration
url https://nazariyat.org/content/5-sayilar/16-cilt-8-sayi-1/2-francesco-omar-zamboni/2_f_omar_zamboni_en.pdf
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