On the Actuality of Integrative Intellect-Mystical Asceticism as Self-Realization in View of Nicolaus de Cusa, Ibn Sīnā, and Others
Abstract
:Without my lover, |
Were my chamber Heaven’s horizon, |
It were closer than an ant’s eye, |
And the ant’s eye wider were |
Than Heaven, my lover with me there! |
—Nur ad-Dīn Abd ar-Rahmān Jāmī |
1. Introduction
2. Intellect-Mystical Asceticism
“claim that we can be unconsciously aware of ourselves at first glance seems like an oxymoron […,] the property of being an object of awareness even in the absence of conscious thought is a basic feature of all innate or primary knowledge for Avicenna [Ibn Sīnā], and primitive self-awareness too possesses this property in virtue of being innate”.(68, insertion DB)
“Therefore, the truth in the mind is, as it were, an invisible mirror in which the mind observes everything visible through it. But this simplicity of the mirror is so great that it exceeds the power and sharpness of the [rational, self-unfolding conceptual dimension of the] mind. But the more the power of the spirit is increased and sharpened, the more certain and clearer everything is seen in the mirror of truth”.
“In the moment of tasting, in the actual experience of taste, outside and inside are elevated and absorbed in an ineffable—enjoyable—way. In the act of tasting, the world and our reflexive consciousness coincide. The taste reflected as such is then also, in a broader figurative sense, the actuality of the [U]nity through difference of inside and outside, world and thought, subject–object”.
3. Intellect-Mystical Asceticism as a Path to Human Reintegration
“They gazed, and dared at last to comprehendThey were the Simorgh and the journey’s end.They see the Simorgh—at themselves they stare,And see a second Simorgh standing there;They look at both and see the two are one,That this is that, that this, the goal is won”.
“As Muslim scholars and poets throughout the ages have noted, the word manṭiq in this verse, commonly translated as “speech” or “language” [or “conference”], also means “logic”, expressing the close relationship between logic and poetry, while the second half of the verse conveys the all-encompassing nature of the latter as a bounty of clarifying exposition (another meaning of the term mubīn) and wisdom, uniting all things.
“shows something that has not been found yet. […] An Aufweis may well be so constituted in such a way that it contains in its course intermediate argumentation and also various conclusions. But the whole of the process that is called ‘Aufweis’ has only the same meaning as a pointing rod with which we point to something and make it visible, so that the other may see it better, or see it at all”.
“[…] every ontological datum of the world must be considered an intersection of an infinite number of contextures, the fact that—any two data we choose to describe in their common two-valued relations belong to one contexture does not exclude that the very same data may also—apart from the contexturality chosen for our description—belong separately to additional and different contexturalities”.
4. The Effort and Stages of Practical Realization: An Outline
“How do we know about other persons? How is it that these exist for us at all? What we perceive when another person confronts us is a gestalt, an outer appearance, a sum of life expressions. But this is not the other person, I mean the emotional or mental, the suffering, rejoicing, hoping, fearing, etc., personality of the other. The image of this person can only be composed of elements of our own personality […]. The image that we have of the other person is the idea of ourselves being attached to another body, that is, in the sense of a modified idea of ourselves according to the nature of this other body and the particularity of this other body’s expressions of life”.(Lipps 1898, pp. 222–23, my translation, bracketing and emphasis; quoted from Bartosch 2022b, p. 42)
“[1] Asceticism for one who is not a knower is a kind of business deal, as if one buys the delights of the second life with the delights of the present one. But [only] for the knower it is a kind of abstinence from that which distracts one’s innermost thought from the Truth and an elevation over everything other than the Truth. [2] Worship for one who is not a knower is a kind of business deal, as if one acts in the present life for a salary that one will receive in the second life as a retribution and a reward”.
“But for the knower [‘Ārif], [asceticism] is a kind of exercise of one’s faculties (himamih), including the estimative and imaginative powers of one’s soul, to orient them by habit from the side of error to the side of Truth. Thus they become receptive to the private innermost thought of the soul, so that, when this thought seeks the revelation of Truth, these powers will not be in conflict with it”.
“The knower needs spiritual exercise. This […] is directed towards three goals: […] remove from the path of choice whatever is other than the Truth […,] to render the commanding soul obedient to the tranquil soul so that the power of imagination and that of estimation will be attracted to the ideas proper to the saintly affairs […]. The third is to render the innermost thought sensitive to attention”.
“[…] situation does not depend on a wish. Rather, whenever he notices one thing, he also notices another, even if his noticing is not for the purpose of consideration. Thus, it is available to him to move away from the world of falsehood to the world of Truth, remaining in the latter, while the ignorant move around him”.
“The [perfect K]nower is bright-faced, friendly, and smiling. Due to his modesty, he honors the young as he honors the old. He is pleased with the unclearheaded as he is with the alert. How could he not be bright-faced when he enjoys the Truth and everything other than the Truth, for he sees the Truth [in the implicate logical sense of the Unity of the unity and difference of infinite, superordinate Truth] even in everything other than the Truth [cognition in terms of concepts and finite things]! Furthermore, how could he not treat all as equal when, to him, all are equal! They are objects of mercy, preoccupied with falsehoods”.
5. Conclusions
“And [… this higher intellective] symbol, in turn, is the seed of new knowledge. This is how an organism develops—and one can interpret it in any way one sees fit—a scientific [S] organism. Science [S] always grows from symbol [in relation to the source of differentiation]. But the reverse is not necessarily true”.
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1. | In this sense, the present train of thought adds a new observer perspective in the direction of the problem horizon of how spiritual intelligence can evolve personal and transpersonal potentials that can help to develop a long-term sustainable perspective for humanity (for advances in the same direction—partly on common ground, partly on the basis of different theoretical terrain—see, for example, Chittick 2008; Collins 2010; Emmons 2009; Rimanoczy and Klingenberg 2021). |
2. | It is sufficient to refer to Vladimir I. Vernadsky’s original concept of the noosphere here. The term is derived from the ancient Greek word noûs (νοῦς) or its variant nóos (νόος) (mind; spirit). |
3. | It is possible to find comparable designations in other traditions of thought, but this does not lie within the scope of interest of the present study. |
4. | Much less can the reintegration and peace of humanity with itself and its environment be achieved by mere political activism in the direction of, for example, minimizing and taxing “carbon footprints”, etc. It is by no means as “easy” as that. |
5. | The idea of the technology-based artificial environment that we create for ourselves goes back to Aristotle. For example, in The Politics he states that humans are by nature city-building living beings. In modern terms, this means that it is part of our biology, of our life process as a species, to create more and more complex technological systems. We are the driving element of the autopoiesis of a planetary technosphere that is self-emancipating from its organic barriers. |
6. | The idea of technology as the historical process of an instinctive projection of human nature into its environment was first explored by Ernst Kapp (1808–1896), who thereby initiated the whole discipline of the philosophy of technology (Kapp 1877). |
7. | This does not only pertain to the classical “emancipation from the organic barrier” (Cassirer 1985, p. 73, tr. DB) in the realms of machines but, more importantly, in the context of AI and self-learning, non-biological systems. |
8. | It also represents the implicit core of all discussions on spiritual intelligence (SI) in this context; see also fn. 1. |
9. | The term ‘thinking of thinking’ (nóēsis noḗseōs [νóησις νοήσεως]) relates to Aristotelian and Neoplatonic reflections (ancient and medieval), but what it formulates, or rather, what it “hints at” in an intellect-mystical sense has been reflected in other non-Western traditions (by means of other ways of formulation), too (see, for example, my comparison of the philosophies of Nicolaus de Cusa and Wang Yangming 王陽明 (1472–1529) in Bartosch (2015, pp. 233–300)). |
10. | An earlier French translation of the same segment is to be found in Mehren (1891, pp. 10–14). |
11. | To avoid any misreadings or misinterpretations of this article, I would like to emphasize that I am developing a synthetic approach here, or, as one could also put it with regard to the respective sociohistorical contexts, an etic approach instead of an emic one. Apart from that, one could define the present approach as “trans-classical” in the sense of the philosopher Gotthard Günther (see also further below) in addition, namely in that subjective consciousness is to be (consciously!) included in (self-)reference to objective representations (Günther 1979, pp. 278–79). |
12. | I use double quotation marks for quotations, terms that are used in the transferred sense, or unusual formulations. Single quotation marks are used to refer to terms and words as objects of the reflection. Single expressions or parts of phrases in foreign languages that are written in Latin characters are set in italics. |
13. | The modern philosophical distinction became possible due to the evolution of concepts that resulted in the establishment of the substantivated form of the expression ‘Mystick’ in the German-speaking context of the early 18th century (e.g., Thomasius 1713; Historisches Jahrbuch vom Jahr Christi 1736 1737; Stiebritz 1747). The subsequent development of the terms ‘Mystik’ and ‘Mystizismus’ in the further history of partly affirmative and partly dismissive philosophical discussions of the 19th century (Lessing 1984) further prepared the above contemporary distinction. It pertains to the difference between intellect mysticism (M) in the sense of a real, highly reasonable (intellective), or rather, eminent dimension of possible human self-realization and, on the other hand, a false mysticism in the sense of mere mystification (fM) (see further below in the above para). |
14. | The history of the philosophical concept starts in the context of Eduard von Hartmann’s (1842–1906) philosophy of the unconscious (e.g., von Hartmann 1870, pp. 286–87). |
15. | A German philosophical term for this is ‘Schwärmerei’. |
16. | The way of Cusanus’s thinking, which is more directly alluding to it than Hegel’s approach to create a system based on dialectical progression, has also been characterized as “meditative variation” (Borsche 2007). |
17. | In the double sense of the word (theoretical and practical realization)! |
18. | The idea of consciousness and experience as the foundation of life can be traced to Plotinus (2018, sct. 3.8.1, p. 356) and has been revived in various ways at different times. In the 20th century, Alfred North Whitehead proceeded in that direction. From the perspective of present-day science, Ford informs us that “[i]ngenious, perceptive and intelligent behaviour is apparent in a single living cell” (Ford 2017, p. 282). In regard to cognitive differentiation in non-human life forms, I refer to the discussion in von Weizsäcker (1978, pp. 219–21). |
19. | The substantivated term ‘logikon’ is derived from the Greek adjective λογῐκόν (neuter of logikós λογῐκός). At the same time, it represents the Esperanto word ‘logikon’. This is supposed to allude to the transcultural or culturally ubiquitous connotation of my new formulation ‘meta-logikon’ here, too. |
20. | For example, in contemporary Christian terminology, Augustine of Hippo (354–430) has referred to it in the sense that if one understands the (meta-logical) relationship of the “Father” and the “Son”, one is elevated into the realm of the “Holy Spirit” (here to be read as another word for the metalogical Unity of the unity and difference of “Father” and “Son”)—nota bene, under the conditions of finiteness (expressing the infinite) (Kreuzer 2001, pp. XXIII–XXIV). “Thinking the Trinity means thinking the ‘unity of difference and unity’, the inseparabilis distinctio et tamen distinctio” (XXIV, tr. DB). |
21. | I am alluding to Cusanus’s term ‘visio intellectualis’ here. |
22. | It can also be trodden on the paths of other traditions of other civilizations, of course. For some examples, see further below. |
23. | Already Nicolaus de Cusa talks about this difference in the sense of modes of cognition (Bartosch 2015, pp. 467–88). |
24. | This is not to be mistaken in an absolute sense, of course. Lucid dreaming and certain meditation techniques (see below, fn. 25) mean exceptions from such a lack of consciousness. |
25. | In its most evolved form, this mystical awareness of the “gateless gate” (another aenigma for the meta-logikon, namely of the Unity through the difference of ‘gate’ and ‘non-gate’) can even be extended to the dream state by special training, as Buddhist practitioners claim (Chang 1959, pp. 147, 215). |
26. | Exceptions are provided by dialectical (Hegelian, Marxist, etc.) conceptions of science, or situational approaches, such as in the cases of Alfred Korzybski or Gotthard Günther’s conceptions of science, and also in philosophical cosmologies in relation to quantum physics (e.g., David Bohm). All of them point in the direction of the possibility of a more profound form of “comprehensive science” (Attila Grandpierre) that is based on the implicate logic (of the Unity of unity and difference). |
27. | This stands in a certain parallel to the abstractions and generalizations that represent personal conclusions that we draw from various individual experiences in our daily lives. A new experience may provide a new perspective that, if we are honest to ourselves, leads to a progressive readjustment and reevaluation of our views of things. |
28. | In its all-encompassing function, this includes the aspect of morality, for example, in Nicolaus de Cusa’s intellect-mystical sense of ‘laus Dei’ as a permanent exercitium (Bartosch 2015, pp. 658–79). |
29. | Against this background, it is not surprising that the image of the mirror plays an eminent role in intellect-mystical speculation. Even the word ‘speculation’ in the sense of ‘philosophical speculation’ (towards the meta-logikon) is derived from it (Kreuzer 2011, pp. 50, 54, 63; Schwaetzer 2006, pp. 108–9; Bartosch 2015, pp. 319–23). |
30. | Very recently, Alasdair Beal (2024) discovered simple mathematical errors in Albert Einstein’s 1905 paper on special relativity. How this will be dealt with—or not—will provide an interesting future case example for those who are interested in the sociology of science. |
31. | See the whole quote further below. |
32. | It took Cusanus until old age to become fully aware of it in its utmost simplicity: “The simpler the Truth, the clearer it is. I once believed it was easier to find in the dark. The Truth is of great power. In it, ability itself shines very brightly, for it is shouting in the streets” (Nicolaus de Cusa 1982a, p. 120, tr. DB). |
33. | This could also be associated with Ken Wilber’s following diary entry: “Just this greets me this morning; just this, its own remark; just this, there is no other; just this, the sound of one hand clapping—the sound, that is, of One Taste. The subtle and causal can be so overwhelmingly numinous and holy; One Taste is so pitifully obvious and simple” (Wilber 2000, p. 173). |
34. | Cusanus’s expression ‘non aliud’ for God can be traced to Plato, Eriugena, and Meister Eckhart (Bartosch 2015, pp. 64–65, fn. 126). |
35. | This also relates to the shortcomings of our language in the sense of Friedrich Nietzsche. He emphasized that the related “seduction of language” (Nietzsche 2006, p. 26) and grammar result in “fundamental errors of reason” (Nietzsche 2006, p. 26), which further mistaken beliefs in alleged truths. In relation to the present perspective, one can add that these shortcomings result from the absence of the meta-reflection of that which is “worded” (verbatur) (Nicolaus de Cusa 1959a, p. 54) in and with every word. This absence also opens the gates for the “reification” (Verdinglichung) of the other (to connect this problem horizon to another field of German philosophy), that is, when the other’s capability of suffering is ignored and he/she/it is treated as if representing a merely lifeless “thing”. Intellect mysticism (in the sense of the present meaning) inherits the possibility to free oneself from this rather common fallacy by establishing the necessary openness and “cognitive leeway” to overcome exactly those petty egoisms that are (also) furthered by the shortcomings of language. This is achieved by establishing a mode of eloquent silence (beredtes Schweigen), as is also explained further below. In addition, please also see the reference to Alfred Korzybski in relation to Aristotelian logic on page 16 of this paper. |
36. | A “classical” example is provided by John Scotus Eriugena: It is not surprising that his Periphyseon was condemned since the High Middle Ages and even placed on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum—while exerting a hidden influence on many great minds at the same time. |
37. | In more recent times, the artist Joseph Beuys (1921–1986) stated that we have to learn to see the human being not only as an artist in the most general and ubiquitous sense, but as his/her own self-transformative work of art at the same time. Beuys emphasized the necessity to further and to unleash the self-reflected creativity of the human individual without limitation, namely to initiate a self-transformation that would lead to an intellect-mystical self-revelation of the source of all possible productivity and innovation itself (Knacken n.d., min. 57:50). |
38. | He was the teacher of the more famous poet Rumi (1207–1273). |
39. | I would like to emphasize again that the various expressions of the foundation of this are not restricted to Western Eurasian traditions of mysticism (see also Bartosch 2015). For example, although Laozi alludes to the fact that a way that is abstracted or conceptualized (in the sense of a way) is not the “Way” (dao 道) that is sought for in (Philosophical) Daoism, he still makes use of words (in this case ancient Chinese characters). In regard to mystical theology, Wohlfart remarks: “The mystical theologian names the divine. He calls it—the nameless. Nothing is without language” (Wohlfart 1986, p. 160). This is also to say that this tradition can be compared to Western Eurasian traditions of intellect mysticism (Buber 2013, pp. 201–2; Forke 1922; Bartosch 2015, pp. 257–59). |
40. | I am adding the source text as provided in Fariduddin Attar (n.d.), because I have found no other translation and could not manage to find any other Western edition and translation of this particular poem. The translator of the German interpretation is unknown: “rah-e meyḫāne-wo masǧed kodām ast ره ميخانه و مسجد كدام است ke har do bar man-e meskīn ḥarām ast كه هر دو بر من مسكين حرام است miyān-e masǧed-o meyḫāne rāh-ī-st ميان مسجد و ميخانه راهيست beǧū’īd ey ‘azīzān k’īn kodām ast بجوئيد اى عزيزان كين كدام است”. |
41. | See also Farīd ad-Dīn-e ‘Aṭṭār quoted in (Buber 2013, p. 75): “Since the essence I proclaim is apart from [any countable/finite] unity and [any] number [itself], cease to contemplate the eternity of the before and the eternity of the after; and since the two eternities have passed away, remember them no more.” (tr. from the German translation DB). |
42. | For an original quote, see: “Im Begriffe der Theilung liegt schon der Begriff der nothwendigen Beziehung des Subjects und Objects aufeinander, und die nothwendige Voraussetzung eines Ganzen wovon Subject und Object die Theile sind” (Friedrich Hölderlin quoted in Kreuzer 2014, p. 359). |
43. | This double-sense includes the Heraclitan reference to “fire” as a symbol of the lógos (λόγος). |
44. | See also the article by King and Sherwood (2023), who emphasize that we have added the energy equivalent of 25 billion Hiroshima bomb explosions to our atmosphere since the early 1970s. |
45. | |
46. | An important voice in this context that is still very inspirational today is the quantum physicist, philosopher, and peace researcher Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker (1912–2007) (e.g., von Weizsäcker 1982, 1985, pp. 634–40; 1993). |
47. | Regarding this characterization of the human being in ancient Greek philosophy, see Hügli (1980). According to the physiologist and philosopher Adolf Portmann (1897–1982; see also Jaroš and Klouda 2021), humans are born approximately one year too early. This relates to our physiological development at the time of birth. Every member of our species undergoes a physiologically normalized premature birth (extrautinares Frühjahr). Compared to other mammals this is also a physiological necessity, because otherwise our comparatively oversized heads would not fit the birth canal at a later stage. Even at this premature stage, the human birth process is the most complicated and most dangerous compared to other mammals. According to Portmann’s theory, the unique feature of “normalized” premature birth and the related physiological “immaturity” manifest a lack of physiological specialization compared to other mammals. And it is the reason that we are “secondary nestlings” (sekundäre Nesthocker), that is, we need much longer and more parental care until maturity than any other life form. In a complementing perspective, Arnold Gehlen (1904–1974) observed the “‘disengaging’ of the sensory organs from their ties to functions […,] the reduction of instincts” (Gehlen 1988, p. 22), and the human being as being able to “draw back and establish distance” (33). As a “world-open being” (33), the movements and the possibilities to acquire new forms of movement are much less specified than that of animals (34). |
48. | The assumption was not unusual during the 18th century (Bartosch 2023b). |
49. | This relates to the ancient thesis that the human being is a deficient being, was later revived and adapted to German Enlightenment discourse by Johann Gottfried Herder, and became part of modern philosophical discourse. Since the early days of Greek thought, the idea was associated with the notion of nature as a “bad stepmother” (later: natura noverca), which then triggered the view that man should exploit and suppress nature already in ancient Greek thought (Hügli 1980, pp. 1063–64). There is the well-known motif of the compassion of Prometheus, who, due to our deficient nature, our nakedness and helplessness, decides to present us with the forbidden “gift” of fire. The “Forethinker” (literal translation of “Prometheus”), who is severely punished by Zeus for this act of disobedience, personifies the role of human imagination and understanding according to later Renaissance discourse. One may allude to the ambivalence of Prometheus’s “gift” in the sense that the etymologically related German word Gift means ‘poison’. |
50. | As Nicolaus de Cusa did, for example. |
51. | In this regard, one can also think of the Neoplatonic ternar ‘μονή—προόδος—ὲπιστροφή’/‘principium—medium—finis’ (Proclus, Nicolaus de Cusa) and the related thoughts that go back to Plotinus and have exerted great influence on thinkers like Ibn Sīnā or, to provide another example, Mullā Ṣadrā. |
52. | For the locus classicus, see Lunyu 論語—The Analects (n.d.), chap. “子罕—Zi Han”, para. 8: “吾有知乎哉?無知也。” |
53. | In the sense of the meta-logikon, as discussed earlier. |
54. | From a transcultural perspective in the history of philosophies it obviously has a much wider geographical and historical extension than Cusanus’s rendering of the formulation ‘docta ignorantia’. |
55. | See also Nicolaus de Cusa’s original remark: “Unde hic videtur magna speculatio, quae de maximo ex isto trahi potest: quomodo ipsum est tale, quod minimum est in ipso maximum, ita quod penitus omnem oppositionem per infinitum supergreditur. […] Qui hoc enim intelligit, omnia intelligit […] ” (Nicolaus de Cusa 1932, p. 30). Regarding the preceding conceptual history of ‘coincidentia oppositorum’, see Bartosch (2015, p. 434, fn. 32). |
56. | Korzybski (2000, p. lxv) refers to the example of the conceptual intension of ‘house’ “as a ‘building for human habitation or occupation’, etc. [… and the] extensional activity [of buying a house …, which after moving into it] with our furniture […] collapses because termites have destroyed all the wood, leaving only a shell, perhaps satisfying to the eye. […] It becomes obvious […] that by intension the term ‘house’ was over-defined, or over-limited, while by extension, or actual facts, it was hopelessly under-defined, as many important characteristics were left out. In no dictionary definition of a ‘house’ is the possibility of termites mentioned”. |
57. | In the above-stated sense of nóēsis noḗseōs (νóησις νοήσεως). |
58. | Lipps was an influential figure in German philosophical discourse prior to 1914. He also influenced Sigmund Freud’s development of psychoanalysis, etc. |
59. | Cusanus also refers to this as the invisible Truth that is not seen with the carnal eyes but with the spiritual or intellectual eye (Nicolaus de Cusa 2000, p. 20). |
60. | Remember Cusanus’s earlier-mentioned allusion to this by means of his etymological derivation of the meaning of ‘theōria’ (θεωρία) from the meanings of ‘I see’ and ‘I walk’ (Moran 1990, p. 280). |
61. | In the case of Cusanus, one can refer to the description in Nicolaus de Cusa (1932, p. 163). |
62. | The realization of this ideal may not be achievable for every individual human being, but research has shown that the presence of more practitioners of ways of self-perfection and self-cultivation raises the general quality level of a social system. |
63. | Regarding all three concepts, see the discussion in Bartosch (2015, pp. 601–56). |
64. | This is, of course, a Christian symbolic representation of self-realization on the general and transcultural ground of the meta-logikon. “Le concept […] de christiformitas comme conformitas au Christ pourrait […] servir de conciliateur entre identité et difference” (Reinhard 2006, p. 98; Vannier 2006). |
65. | One may also see this in parallel to the three stages of possible human existence or self-realization according to the Table of Cebes. |
66. | One might conjecture that this is due to the fact that Cusanus mainly focused on the objective of providing ‘Aufweise’ (see further above) to initiate first glimpses and insights into the meta-logikon of intellect mysticism—probably in the way that he describes it in regard to his own initial aha experience in the “Epistola auctoris” to De docta ignorantia: “Accipe nunc, pater metuende, quae iam dudum attingere variis doctrinarum viis concupivi, sed prius non potui, quousque in mari me ex Graecia redeunte, credo superno dono a patre luminum, a quo omne datum optimum, ad hoc ductus sum, ut incomprehensibilia incomprehensibiliter amplecterer in docta ignorantia, per transcensum veritatum incorruptibilium humaniter scibilium” (Nicolaus de Cusa 1932, p. 163, italics DB). We can see here that in the italicized part of the quotation, Cusanus describes his insight into the meta-logikon with many words as a moment of, as he expresses himself here, incomprehensibly encompassing the incomprehensible in knowing non-knowing (the most well-established translation for Cusanus’s ‘docta ignorantia’ in German is ‘wissendes Nichtwissen’, which also translates as ‘knowing non-knowing’) by transcending the indestructible truths of that which is knowable to man. This means the transcendence of the forms of two-valued Aristotelian either-or logic to the highest and at the same time most basic ground of its (implicit, or rather, implicate logical) foundation, the process of differentiation which inherits the non-difference at the same time (as its conditio sine qua non). In his following works, it was Cusanus’s goal to provide more and more direct and “economic” allusions and enigmata (or “semantic pointing rods”) with each of his philosophical works in this regard (Bartosch 2015, pp. 290–95). Implicitly, this also reflects his growing understanding and his own realization of an intellect-mystical practice, which is also conveyed in the following statement from his last work: “Veritas quanto clarior tanto facilior. Putabam ego aliquando ipsam in obscuro melius reperiri. Magnae potentiae veritas est, in qua posse ipsum valde lucet. Clamitat enim in plateis […]” (Nicolaus de Cusa 1982a, p. 120, italics DB). Maybe, he was of the opinion that these developmental stages of increasing intellective reintegration cannot be properly described in such detail as provided by Ibn Sīnā (in the sense of “mystical backcasting”, so to speak), or should be left enclosed in the personal experience of intellect-mystical asceticism; or maybe he preferred not to speak about it in the concrete sense of a “ladder” (he alludes to the metaphor at some point), because he was a high-ranking cleric and political functionary. We can only guess the reason for the absence of a concrete and more detailed outline of intellect-mystical self-unfolding comparable to that of Ibn Sīnā. As mentioned above, very basic differences between developmental stages are indicated in Cusanus’s works, however. |
67. | See fn. 25 further above. |
68. | Besides the elaboration of the nine steps of intellect-mystical (re)integration, Ibn Sīnā presents many more admonitions and remarks like the above in the fourth part of al-Ishārāt wat-Tanbīhāt (Remarks and Admonitions). These are supposed to provide practical advice and guidance along the path of mystical ascetism. For reasons of space, and also because this would “transgress the boundaries” of this little investigation, these cannot be discussed here. |
69. | Such an integrated approach to science and intellect-mystical foundations was provided by the famous physicist David Bohm, who was also influenced by Cusanus (e.g., Bohm and Wilkins 1987). Likewise, Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker developed an integrated perspective of intellect-mystical spirituality and quantum physics (e.g., von Weizsäcker 1982, 1985, 1993). |
70. | |
71. | In this sense, and to stay with the example of a “secular applicability”, it is not surprising that the aforementioned Marxist philosopher Ernst Bloch made reference to the intellect mystic Ibn Sīnā. Ernst Bloch has shown that also a secular worldview such as Marxism can and must be extended into the realm of the meta-logikon. From the perspective of quantum physics, the “logikon in matter” (Bloch 1972, p. 47, tr. DB) cannot be denied either. One has to assume that a long-term sustainable liberation from poverty and the holistic “total human being” that the early Marx imagined cannot be achieved without developing consciousness to the level of its unfathomable and all-integrating foundation. A holistic reintegration of humanity could never be achieved when the root of consciousness and cognition is excluded from view. |
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Bartosch, D. On the Actuality of Integrative Intellect-Mystical Asceticism as Self-Realization in View of Nicolaus de Cusa, Ibn Sīnā, and Others. Religions 2024, 15, 819. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070819
Bartosch D. On the Actuality of Integrative Intellect-Mystical Asceticism as Self-Realization in View of Nicolaus de Cusa, Ibn Sīnā, and Others. Religions. 2024; 15(7):819. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070819
Chicago/Turabian StyleBartosch, David. 2024. "On the Actuality of Integrative Intellect-Mystical Asceticism as Self-Realization in View of Nicolaus de Cusa, Ibn Sīnā, and Others" Religions 15, no. 7: 819. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070819
APA StyleBartosch, D. (2024). On the Actuality of Integrative Intellect-Mystical Asceticism as Self-Realization in View of Nicolaus de Cusa, Ibn Sīnā, and Others. Religions, 15(7), 819. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070819