Sohravardi, Majmu`é-ye āsār-e fārsi-ye Shaykh-e Eshrāq, p. 177.
See H. Ziai, Knowledge and Illumination (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1990), p. 141. Sohravardi offers the example of water that becomes ice in cold weather or vapor by interaction with fire. Each experiment and interaction reveals a property, but not the full potential, of an element. "True" knowledge of water only occurs in perceiving all its possible states and the full potential of each state.
Sohravardi, Majmu`é-ye āsār-e fārsi-ye Shaykh-e Eshrāq, p. 186. In translation, certain missing words have been added to clarify the original Persian text: l. 1, "qavi [va] roshan"; l. 2, "moluk [rā] khās bāshad" .
Ibid., pp. 186-87.
From the "Partownāmé" (Epistle of emanation), ibid., p. 81.
Ibid., p. 76.
Ibid. Sohravardi cast himself as a philosopher-sage in his relationship to the `Ayyubid prince al-Malek az-Zāher, son of the famous Saladin (Salāhoddin, r. 1169-93). But, encountering the wrath of traditional Islamic jurists, he was charged with blasphemy and executed by the order of Saladin in 1191. Sohravardi's involvement with the young `Ayyubid prince and the possible causes of his demise have been elaborated by H. Ziai in "The Source and Nature of Al-Suhrawardi's Illuminationist Political Doctrine," in Aspects of Islamic Political Philosophy, ed. C. Butterworth (Harvard University Press, forthcoming).
Ibid. According to Sohravardi, the light given to "illuminated" sages was passed down in the course of history through philosophers and sages of Persian, Greek, and Indian traditions to the visionary mystics of the Islamic tradition. To emphasize the universality of his doctrines, he intermittently used equivalent terms from all these traditions, including Biblical ones found in the Qorān.
Ibid.
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