Abbasids, 135, 149
‘Abd al-Malik (80-150/699-767), collection of traditions by, 155
‘Abd al-Mu’min, 174
‘Abd al-Quddus of Gangoh (d. 945/1538), 112 (V 1)
Absolute Ego, 52, 54
Abu Hanifah (c. 80-150/c. 699-767), 159-60; introduced the principle of Istihsan, 155; made practically no use of traditions, 155-56; modern Hanafi legists have eternalized the interpretations of, 160: school of, possesses much greater power of creative adaptation, 160
Abu Hashim (d. 321/933), 61-62 (III 10)
Abu Hurairah (d. c. 58/678), declared by Nazzam, an untrustworthy reporter, 135 (VI 10)
accident, doctrine of, see Ash’arites
act, profanity and spirituality of, determined by the invisible mental background, 139 (VI 21)
activity, all, a kind of limitation even in the case of God as a concrete operative Ego, 73: while enjoying his creative, man has a feeling of uneasiness in the presence of his unfoldment, 150
Adam, endowed with the faculty of naming things, 12; first act of disobedience of, also the first act of free choice, 77; forbidden the fruit of occult knowledge, 78 (III 66); God’s Vicegerent on earth, 75 (III 48); is ‘hasty’, 78 (III 66); painful physical environment best suited to the unfolding of the intellectual faculties of, 78; the chosen of God, 86
Afaq, 114 (V 5)
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