Sabtu, 27 April 2013

Causality and the Question of Being


by; Nader El-Bizri
 Abstract
This paper investigates the manner in which Mull¡ s¯adra relies on causation in his articulation of the question of being, and of the distinction between essence and existence, in terms of the modalities of necessity, contingency and impossibility. My investigations will be mainly focused on a close textual, exegetical as well as hermeneutic, interpretational reading of Kit¡b al-mash¡‘ir (Le livre des pénétrations métaphysiques, or what is also rendered in English as: The Book of Prehensions). This will be conducted from the standpoint of a comparative consideration of Avicenna’s ontology in the light of accounting for Martin Heidegger’s critique of the history of metaphysics in Sein und Zeit, wherein the history of metaphysics is construed as being the history of the oblivion of being. Like what I have attempted to show in my book, The Phenomenological Quest Between Avicenna and Heidegger (Binghamton, 2000), I will argue in this paper, that Mull¡ ¯adr¡’s ontology, like Avicenna’s ontology before him, does indeed divert from the confines of the Aristotelian and Peripatetic substance-based ontology (ousiology, that is based on ousia). Given this state of affairs, his ontology overcomes some dimensions of Heidegger’s critique of metaphysics while anticipating the emergence of phenomenological methods of investigation in ontology. Yet, even if some aspects of Mull¡ ¯adr¡’s ontology were akin to some of what is encountered in Heidegger’s thinking, it nevertheless remains to be the case that an articulation of the question of being, in terms of causality, falls within the confines of a ‘metaphysics of making’ that is oblivious of being.

In the introduction of Kit¡b al-mash¡‘ir (Le livre des pénétrations métaphysiques),1 the reader encounters an arrogation of the philosophical voice, whereby the author, with an ex professo gesture, appropriates with humbleness the representative illuminating guidance with respect to matters related to onto-theology. Mull¡ ¯adr¡ calls those who are guided by the light of gnosis, on the path to God, to listen with their hearts in order that the light of his own wisdom penetrates their souls. Ontology, and the arguments and speculations that surround it, or emerge from it, are to be addressed as being matters of the heart that cause inner sensations and penetrating feelings; namely that arouse al-mash¡‘ir. After all, theological questions are themselves construed as being identical with the articles of the faith in God and in His attributes. Metaphysics, and ontology in particular, is accordingly identifiable with theology and faith. This is further accentuated by Mull¡ ¯adr¡’s appeal to the proofs of the credo (al-adilla al-naql¢yya), that are based on the Qur’¡n and ¦ad¢th, which are placed alongside the logico-rational proofs (al-adilla al-‘aql¢yya). Within this conceptual and religious framework, the question of being or existence (mas’alat al-wujËd) remains to be the ground of philosophical principles themselves. Hence, neglecting the question of being is indicative of some sort of philosophical, if not theological, ignorance. To attend properly to the question of being is to attempt to affirm the originary character of being or existence as the origin, truth and reality, of all beings and existents. Accordingly, as Mull¡ ¯adr¡ asserts, all that is other than being is a mere reflection, a shadow or an.

The treatise, Kit¡b al-mash¡‘ir, which representatively summarizes the main traits of Mull¡ ¯adr¡’s ontology, is pervaded by hermeneutic dimensions that tend to clarify the relation between the inner, esoteric, and hidden meaning of a term (al-b¡§in) from one side, and its apparent and subtle exoteric sense (al-¨¡hir) from the other side. With a modern philosophical sensibility, his ontological speculations are mediated through a hermeneutic turn that pervades his consideration of the question of the meaning and truth of being. With a voice of authority, Mull¡ ¯adr¡ proclaims in the prologue (section 5) of Kit¡b al-mash¡‘ir, that:

The thatness of being (‘inn¢yyat al-wujËd) is the most clear an evident of all entities in its givenness [or presence] and in its revelation; while its quiddity is the most hidden in conception and in apprehension; while its notion is in no need of identification, and is the most manifest, clear, general and all encompassing of all entities. As for its identity, it is the most determined of determined entities in concreteness and individuation.

He then adds that being (al-wujËËË£d) cannot be identified, given that identification is based on either definition or description. Being cannot be defined since it has no genus nor species, while it cannot be described given that it cannot be perceived or grasped by way of what is more manifest, apparent or prevalent than it (sections 6-7). Furthermore, nothing in the realms of forms is correspondent or correlative with it. In a manner that is akin to what is encountered in 20th century methods of investigation in ontology, particularly those indicative of Martin Heidegger’s inclinations in Sein und Zeit, being (Sein, être, al-wujËd) is not taken to be a handy and available concept, nor is the ontological difference between being and beings articulated in terms of a talk about genus and species.2 This turn in ontology is indicative of the extent of the indebtedness of metaphysicians, like Mull¡ ¯adr¡, to Avicenna’s methods of investigation in ontology.

Pointing to the originary and primary character of being, Mull¡ ¯adr¡ holds (III, 16) that the truth and reality of anything is encountered in its being or existence. This is the case, given that being is the truest and most real of true and real things. Although being or existence must have correlates in the world, as beings and existents, it is nevertheless distinct from that to which it is predicated (III, 19). In addition, the originary character of being entails that if there were no being, that is if there is no ‘is’ as such, then there would be no things. This itself is phenomenally experienced in terms of saying that the counterfactual: "If there is no ‘being’, then there would be no thing", is itself ungrounded, given that there is no position or situation in the world, or in any conceivable possible world, whereby that counterfactual might make sense. Even with possible world semantics we obtain the tautological conditional: if there is something, then ipso facto ‘there is being’; namely that: ‘there is’, es gibt Sein, il y a, hun¡lika. This is itself a lesson that could be learnt from the instructive scenes that are enacted in Descartes’ Meditations and Avicenna’s De anima (Kit¡b al-nafs). Based on Descartes’ cogito argument and Avicenna’s ‘suspended person’ argument, ‘being’ cannot but be affirmed. Being is revealed within hyperbolic processes of doubt as being convergent with thinking. The logical conditional that pervades ontology is: If ‘x’ is not in union with being, then ‘x’ cannot be; or: ‘x’ is, if and only if, ‘x’ is in union with being. Given this, how would we attend to ‘being’ or ‘existence’, that is, how would we attend to ‘al-wujËd’ with which beings and existents are united? In the fourth mash‘ar (metaphysical penetration or prehension) Mull¡ ¯adr¡ asserts that ‘al-wujËd’ is characterized by a concrete determinate givenness (‘aynn¢ya) that is, hic et nunc, realized in the world that is external to the mind. The reality of existence is not realized in the mind, rather its reality is realized in a determinate concrete givenness in the world, namely in a realm that is external to the mind (IV, 55, 57). In this sense, existence is not super-added to essence like what is claimed to be the case with Avicenna’s proclaimed ‘essentialism’, as it has been hastily declared by I . Gilson, A. –M. Goichon, H. A. Wolfson, and J. Caputo. However, this does not readily entail that being or existence is reducible to being a concrete and determinate existent entity that is realized in the world. This is the case given that such construal of being or existence would entail that the existence of ‘existence’, as an existent, would require an existence, and so on ad infinitum (IV, 39). Existence is not reducible to the order of an existent, nor is being reducible to the order of a being; in other terms, the ontological is not reducible to the ontic. As indicated in a quotation taken from Avicenna, Mull¡ ¯adr¡ asserts that existence is existing or the state of existing. This is similar to what in a contemporary philosophical sense is encountered in Emmanuel Levinas’ ontological remarks in Le temps et l’autre: wherein ‘être’ is taken to be ‘exister’, similarly, al-wujud huwa-l-mawj£d¢ya, its truth is that it ‘is’ (IV, 47). This polemically opens up the perplexing question of the difference between the ontological and the ontic. This might be captured by the expression: ‘exister sans existant’, ‘existing without an existent’, ‘being without a being’, which is almost unthinkable, and thus falls beyond the limits of being articulated in a meaningful discourse.

In accounting for the question of being in terms of its originary character, one mediates the reflection on this matter through a consideration of being in terms of the modality of necessity. In this regard, and in a manner that is akin to what is encountered in Avicenna’s account of being in terms of necessity, Mull¡ ¯adr¡ holds that, in contrast with contingents, the Necessary Existent is prior to every existent, It is what depends on nothing other than Its-self. Its necessity is an Eternal Necessity, and It is what has no imperfection whatsoever (IV, 42). Given the primary character of existence/being, and the concrete determinacy of its givenness, Mull¡ ¯adr¡, like Avicenna before him, asserts that substance, quality, and the other [Aristotelian and Peripatetic] categories are all kinds of essences. As for existence/being, it is the ground of existential realities which are characterized by a determinate and concrete mode of givenness. Being, or existence, is thus not a substance (jawhar), nor is it a quality, nor a quantity. Being, or existence, overcomes the confines of ousiology (an ousia based ontology) and its categories. After all, based on Aristotle’s Metaphysics (Book IX), dealing with ‘beings in the primary sense’ leads the inquiry to that which ‘all other beings are referred back to’, namely ousia.3 Based on this reading, and quoting Aristotle, one could say that ‘everything that is (the other categories than ousia) must, in and of itself, have the saying of ousia’.

Like Avicenna before him, Mull¡ ¯adr¡ opens up the ontological investigations to a realm that does not reduce being to essentia or substantia. Being, or existence, has no genus, no species, no differentia, no essence or quiddity. Moreover, none of the categories apply to it (IV, 60-61). Mull¡ ¯adr¡, also asserts that the category of relation (al-mu¤¡f), and the other nine categories belong to the domain of essences not existences. Although the Necessary Existent is the source of everything, and that the relation of every state of affairs is due to It, however It transcends the category of relation and does not belong to it (VII, 99). With a Neoplatonic tone, modes of existence or being are taken to be primordial and originary realities and truths, like the ‘rays and reflected lights of the True Light and of the Eternal Existence’ (VI, 85). Furthermore, with an evident Neoplatonic parlance, and in a careful distinction from the positions held by Stoics and Peripatetics, Mull¡ ¯adr¡ holds that what is emanated and made by-itself, in everything that has a maker (j¡‘il), is the concrete and determinate mode of givenness of existence (VII, 89). In this, the existence of the maker, or creator, acts as the ground for the existence of the created entity. Based on causal explanations, one could say that the existence of the effect is due to the existence of its cause, and is strengthened by it. In this sense, one cannot claim that it is possible to conceive an effect while being oblivious of the existence of the cause that necessitates it (VII, 91-92). Based on this, the causal nexus itself is seen as being that of a necessary connection between the cause and the effect, whereby the knowledge of the effect is mediated through the knowledge of its cause. Therefore, explanations, and the issuing understanding that is coupled with knowledge, cannot take place unless a thorough account of causes is in place. In this sense, Occasionalism will undo our knowledge as well as undo the grounds by virtue of which beings are encountered in the world. One could even say that the concrete and determinate mode of givenness of things and beings is itself dependent on the principle of causation. This is the case given that the knowledge of a specific mode of existence cannot be accomplished unless it is mediated through a knowledge of the ‘emanating cause’ of that specific mode of existence. It is therefore said that: ‘the knowledge of what belongs to a cause, namely an effect, cannot be achieved except through the knowledge of its cause’ (VII, 92). And the meaning of posteriority and priority, in knowledge and in existence, emerges from the standpoint of the relationship between a cause and its effect. This is the case given that the cause is evidently prior to an effect, and priority itself is understood in terms of being a priority in existence as well as being a priority in time (VII, 100). Furthermore, the created or constituted entity is not essentially distinct from its cause, given that the truth of an effect is not its essence but its existence. Based on this, the existential truth of an effect is essentially linked to what brought it to existence, that is its cause (First Path, Auxilliary mash‘ar VIII, 116). In order to understand what beings are, and how they come to be, they have to be accounted for from the standpoint of causation. It is therefore imperative to reflect on how the ‘concept’ of something is itself reducible to being merely ‘the effect of a cause’. Any being is thus the effect of something other than itself. Beings are therefore the effects of the creator and maker. Based on their concept, they are created beings (VII, 93). Accordingly, the notion of what something is, that is the concept by virtue of which the quiddity, and even the existence, of that thing is revealed, is in itself known by way of being construed as the effect of a maker or a creator. In this sense, and in tune with Mediaeval doctrines, beings are construed as ens creatum, and this in itself raises contemporary phenomenological doubts about how the question of being is addressed from that standpoint. After all, according to Heidegger’s assessment, a construal of beings as ens creatum, is a an onto-theological undertaking that falls under the rubric of the metaphysics of productivity and making as exemplified by the workings of the Vorhandenheit, wherein being is reduced into an objective and produced handy presence.4 But is it the case that being is reduced to a mere productive act of making that characterizes creation? It is clear that based on an emanation scheme, which itself may be articulated and understood in terms of accounts of causation, one could hypothesize that ‘whatever has a simple nature, its action is simple’. Therefore, creation and existence by way of Eternal Necessity, are both synchronously concurrent. However, given the priority of a cause over the effect, one could argue that there is some sort of an analogical hierarchical significance (tashk¢k) that pervades the relation of a cause to its effect, and that such state of affairs is translated into a priority in being and/or in time. If the relations, between the maker (or creator) and the made (or created), are those of deficiency to perfection, of weakness to strength, then would it not also be the case that such relations obtain between a cause and an effect? This is the case given that the creator or maker, that is the one that causes, is more perfect and more complete in realization, than the created or made, that is its effect. The cause in this sense is more perfect, more complete, and stronger than what issues from it as an effect. One could also add that the cause is more concretely determined in its mode of givenness in existence than its effect. The hierarchy unfolds along a ‘great chain of being’ which is intricately articulated through the intermediacy of the causal nexus. This grounds our understanding of the process of emanation, which is construed as being a mode of explaining creation, whereby the chain of created beings must have its terminus in the Necessary Existent (First Path, Auxiliary mash‘ar: 1,AI, 104).

Both causation and emanation are traced back to the process of the modalization of the First Principle along the many modes of Its epiphany and manifestation (1, AVIII, 117). Mull¡ ¯adr¡ holds that ‘an existent is either the truth of being and existence, or it is something else’. By the ‘truth of being’, he means ‘a pure existence that is not contaminated by anything like definition, end (telos), deficiency, generality or specificity. The truth of being is the ‘Necessary Existent’ (1, AI, 104). Based on this, the Necessary Existent is pure being, esse only. Without this truth, no thing would ever exist. Every essence and quiddity exists due to that truth. Anything that is an existent, yet that is not the truth of being, is a composite and contingent entity. It is composed of what marks its being and existence and of something that is other than existence. And anything that is other than being or existence manifests a partaking in privation. Furthermore, every composite is posterior to what is simple and is in need of it. As for privation, it has no part in the ‘existing’ of existents although it partakes in the shaping of their definition or meaning. From this, the pure truth of being, which is not contaminated by whatever is not of the order of being, is the origin and ground of the existing of every existent; the ground of the beingness of every being (1, AI, 104).

The Necessary Existent (Ex necesse esse) is the truth and reality of being that is not affected by anything other than pure being and existence, that is Its-self. Being as such, the Necessary, is not subject to definition or limit, given that what is subject to definition and limit is not pure being, it is rather that which is in need for a cause or reason (sabab) to define it and specify it. Being pure being, is being beyond definition, description and limit. It is what is without differentia, form, agent, purpose, telos and end. In a revisionist position viz. Plato’s theory of forms, the Necessary Existent is even taken by Mull¡ ¯adr¡ to be that which is the form of Its-self. It is what cannot be described or made known but by being Its-self (1, AII, 105). Being as such, The Exalted Necessary, is neither bound up with anything nor dependent on anything. It is a simple truth and reality, Necessary in all respects with the exclusion of contingency and impossibility, otherwise this would entail composition. Pure being, as the Necessary Existent, is unparalleled, incomparable, without similar, opposite, contrary or like. It is rather pure being as the ‘fountain of all goods’, a perfect above perfection (1, AIII, 106-107). The Necessary Existent is the primordial origin and telos of everything. It emanates everything without having partners in emanation. All that is other than It is merely of the order of contingent essences that are deficient in themselves and dependent on what is other than themselves. All contingents, in their hierarchies and ranks in being, are indigent in themselves towards the Necessary. They are contingent due to themselves and conditionally necessary due to the Necessary Existent. Without It they are false and perishable. The Necessary Existent is the completion and perfection of all things, It is the Light of lights, the reference of all that is (1, AIV-AV, 108-110). All beings, all creatures, tend back to It as their maker, origin, and telos. In a dialectical sensibility, Mull¡ ¯adr¡ argues that the Necessary Existent, as a simple truth and reality, as a simple pure being, encompasses in its unity all that is, except what is of the order of privations, lacks and deficiencies. However, we are cautioned as to not imagine that the relation of contingent beings with the Necessary Existent implies any sense of incarnation or union that would entail a duality in the ground of being (1, AVIII, 117). By way of illustrating this point, Mull¡ ¯adr¡ conjectures that if an entity ‘x’ exists, such as ‘x’ is ‘not y’, then by saying ‘x’ we already imply that ‘it is not y’, and that it is not anything that is ‘not x’. In a dialectical structure, this entails that every being thus contains the negative as one moment of its own determination, in its very own essence, it is also an affirmation of the negative within itself, being and non-being are two moments of the same determination of being. Affirmation and negation are thus revealed as being one and the same. However, this implies that whoever conceives a human being, also conceives that it is not a horse, yet, it is the case that conceiving something as not being a horse does not entail that what is conceived is a human being. Given that the consequent is not true, so would be the antecedent; accordingly, ‘being x’ is different from ‘being not y’ (1, AVI, 110).

According to Mull¡ ¯adr¡, the effect of an agent is either natural, compulsory, coercive, intentional, or it is due to resignation, providence, or epiphany. These determinations of the effect of the agent may vary with the doctrinal positions of such groups like the materialists, the naturalists, the Mu‘tazilites, the Illuminationists, the philosophers, and the ¥£f¢s (3, AI, 123). If it has been shown that causation accounts for the coming to existence of something, it might itself also account for the subsistence of something in existence. In this regard, it might be said that everything in the world constantly acquires a renewed identity without fixity in its mode of being or in its individuation. Accordingly, it may be observed that nature is in a state of ever self-renewing itself. In this, ontology, which breaks away from ousiology, may be turned into a metaphysics of processes. This state of affairs may be attributed to a ‘substantial form’ that always grants the modification, renewal (tajaddud), division, disappearance, and destruction of all bodies. This view is itself founded on the claim that the maker or creator, makes or creates the self-renewal in entities by way of creating their self-renewing essences. Accordingly, entities will be caused by their essential self-renewing causes. Based on this account, creation or making may be restricted to the creation or making of self-renewing essences which themselves grant the self-renewal of things without the intermediacy of existential causes. In that sense, the essential cause allows for the endurance and self renewal of things while the existential cause grants the possibilities for having such self-renewing essence. Thus, the created being will be linked to the Eternal by way of self-renewal. However, stamping being with becoming is indicative of processes and motions rather than self-same, eternal and necessary substances. Yet, motion is understood Mull¡ ¯adr¡ as being the indicator of a transition from potentiality to actuality rather than being the means by virtue of which such transition is effected. In this sense, he asserts that motion is ‘the gradual transition’ of a substance ‘from potentiality into actuality’, and ‘time is the measure’ of this transition. Yet, neither this substantial motion, nor time, nor accidents, are suitable to act as mediators between what is generated and the Eternal. Contingency, ‘being in need’, and ‘being an effect’, all are auxiliaries [if not supplements] to existence and being, but not to its truth and reality. They are linked to being by way of deficiencies and privations that are external to the truth of being. Pondering on necessity/contingency, or richness/indigence, leads to the affirmation of the unity of the attributes of the Necessary Existent, and consequently tends towards unveiling the quality of Its states and influential traces. Like what is attested with Avicenna, being is a simple reality and truth, that has no genus, no differentia, no definition, no description or proof.5 The difference between its ‘ones’ and ‘numerous many’ is merely a difference in levels of perfection and deficiency, priority and posteriority, richness and indigence, or due to accidental matters like it is the case with the same essence that persists in different individuals. This being the case, Mull¡ ¯adr¡, asserts that the deficiency in being or existence does not emerge from the truth or reality of existence, given that it entails privation which is the negative moment in the perfection of being or existence. After all, pure being cannot be associated with privation and non-being. Privation, deficiency, and lack cannot arise at the source and origin of being. They are negative moments in the determination of being which arise due to posteriority, as what is implied in the privation and indigence that arise due to the process of emanation. Based on the ranks in being, the caused cannot be equal to what causes it, the made is weaker and posterior to the maker, the created is not equal to the creator, and the emanated is not equal to the source of emanation. Beings, as caused entities and originated existents, are all creatively ranked, without strict fixity, from the noble to the nobler, with varying motions and degrees of intensity in their participation in being in the movement of self-perfection (Epilogue, 144-146). Being as becoming, initiates the rise of a process ontology that breaks away from ousiology, yet by the structuring force of the principle of causation, the substantial movement is itself subjected to a determining and ordering fixity. Furthermore, the process ontology itself is eventually turned into a classical onto-theology that is reductive of being in view of religious ends. The structuring order of causation and the transformation of ontology into onto-theology, both work hand in hand as principles that counteract the aspiration to take metaphysics to be the science of being qua being as conceived by Avicenna. ‘Being’ is central to Mull¡ ¯adr¡’s onto-theology, yet apparently it is not the most central and primary subject matter of his metaphysics. Based on his onto-theology, the subject matter of his metaphysics is eventually Divinity and the Divine. In this regard, one wonders how one would still be able to religiously affirm all the divine attributes, on the grounds of them being mentioned in God’s word, al-Qur¡n, and in the Prophet’s words, al-¦ad¢th, while philosophically refuting all the categories viz. the Exalted One. The perplexing matter that calls for thinking is how can one still talk about the Exalted One as maker, origin, and telos, if the category of relation is refuted? In order to avoid such seeming inconsistencies, do we not have to accentuate the priority of the religious elements in Mull¡ ¯adr¡’s thinking up and above his philosophical onto-theological inclinations? Would it not be the case that, piety and worship, if not mysticism, are more powerful matters of the heart, which in this regard are of more significance than following the philosophical tendencies of systematic onto-theology? After all, one could say that, to attend to the question of being requires a thinking that ‘lets beings be’, that ‘lets being lie forth’. If one would ponder on this matter from a contemporary standpoint, and thus receive Martin Heidegger’s critique of metaphysics with philosophical seriousness, then one would say that a ‘causal-ontological’ account inevitably emerges from a philosophy of actualitas that is based on a ‘language of production and making’. This would unveil the traits of a metaphysics that attends to the realitas, causalitas, and actualitas, and neglects the ‘truth as unconcelament’ (aletheia).6 Ultimately, ‘causal-ontology’ belongs to the history of the metaphysics of Vorhandenheit (objective presence), energeia, ousia, and techne, which all fall under the rubric of the metaphysics of making or of productivity that is ultimately oblivious of being.

Notes:
1-In this paper, I have mainly relied on the Arabic version of the text Kit¡b al-mash¡‘ir which appears in the bilingual Arabic/English edition: Mull¡ ¯adr¡, Book of Prehensions (Kit¡b al-mash¡‘ir), trans. Parviz Morewedge (Binghamton: Society for the Study of Islamic Philosophy and Science, 1992). All references to Kit¡b al-mash¡‘ir are inset within the body of the text of this paper, and they are all based on the Arabic text that is included in the above edition.
2-After all, it could be argued that one of the main features of Heidegger’s critique of metaphysics is expressed in the claim that being has fallen into oblivion throughout the history of Western metaphysics. This in itself reflects a deep interest in thinking about the unthought ontological difference between being and beings in terms of addressing what opens up that difference in its very own differing.
3-For the interpretation of this passage in relation to Martin Heidegger’s critique of the history of metaphysics, see: Martin Heidegger, Aristotle’s Metaphysics, IX 1-3: On the Essence and Actuality of Force, trans. Walter Brogan and Peter Warneck (Bloomington, Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1995), p. 2.
4-Heidegger’s critique of metaphysics expresses a critical concern with a particular side of the history of metaphysics that is oblivious of being and that has been dominated by making and productivity. Such particular history is that of the metaphysics of Vorhandenheit (objective presence), energeia, ousia, and techne, which all fall under the rubric of the metaphysics of making or of productivity.
5-After all, in more than one occasion, Avicenna holds that, the First has no genus, nor quiddity, nor quality, nor quantity, nor place, nor time, nor a counterpart, nor a partner, nor a contrary opponent. He also asserts that the First has no definition or demonstration. That It is rather the proof and originary principle of all that is and It is not a thing among things. For furtter elaboration on this issue, refer to: Kit¡b al-Naj¡t, ed. Majid Fakhry (Beirut: D¡r al-‘¡f¡q al-jad¢da, 1985), pp. 265-266; Livre des Directives et Remarques, trans. A. –M. Goichon (Paris: Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin, 1951), pp. 351-357.
6-For a brief account of how Martin Heidegger’s critique of metaphysics may be applied to metaphysicians like Thomas Aquinas and Avicenna, see: John Caputo, Heidegger and Aquinas: An Essay on Overcoming Metaphysics (New York: Fordham University Press, 1982), p. 6; John Caputo, The Mystical Element in Heidegger’s Thought (New York: Fordham University Press, 1986), pp. 76, 80.


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