Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Contents
- Publisher's Note on Transliteration
- Abbreviations and Note on Sources
- 1 The Study of Philosophy as a Religious Obligation
- 2 The First Two Positive Divine Commandments
- 3 Maimonides' Knowledge of the Philosophical Literature in his Rabbinic Period
- 4 Maimonides' Shemonah perakim and Alfarabi's Fuṣūl Muntaza'a
- 5 Maimonides' Knowledge of the Philosophical Literature in his Later Period
- 6 Maimonides on Metaphysical Knowledge
- 7 A Problematic Sentence in Moreh nevukhim, ii. 24
- 8 Maimonides' Ethical Systems
- 9 Maimonides the Rationalist
- Works Cited
- Index
6 - Maimonides on Metaphysical Knowledge
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Contents
- Publisher's Note on Transliteration
- Abbreviations and Note on Sources
- 1 The Study of Philosophy as a Religious Obligation
- 2 The First Two Positive Divine Commandments
- 3 Maimonides' Knowledge of the Philosophical Literature in his Rabbinic Period
- 4 Maimonides' Shemonah perakim and Alfarabi's Fuṣūl Muntaza'a
- 5 Maimonides' Knowledge of the Philosophical Literature in his Later Period
- 6 Maimonides on Metaphysical Knowledge
- 7 A Problematic Sentence in Moreh nevukhim, ii. 24
- 8 Maimonides' Ethical Systems
- 9 Maimonides the Rationalist
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
It would surely appear the better, indeed the obligatory, course to controvert even what touches us closely for the sake of upholding the truth, especially since we are lovers of wisdom. For while both [Plato and the truth] are dear, it is a sacred duty to give preference to the truth.
ARISTOTLE Nicomachean Ethics, 1.6Introduction
MAIMONIDES CONSIDERED apodictic demonstration (burhān) to be the surest tool the human intellect has for acquiring knowledge, since no one but the ignorant would think of rejecting a demonstration. At the same time, he acknowledges that some issues are not amenable to demonstration and consequently remain in dispute; issues of the sort, in his view, are absent from mathematics, present to a small extent in physics, and numerous in metaphysics. 1 Metaphysics here has the sense that Aristotle gives it in effect when he writes: knowledge of what is ‘eternal, immovable, and separate [from matter], if there is such a thing’, belongs to the science that is prior to mathematics and physics; the subject of metaphysics is what is eternal and incorporeal.
Maimonides nonetheless recognizes a role for demonstration even in metaphysics. He never tires of stating that the existence, unity, and incorporeality of a first cause of the universe, and hence the existence of God, can be demonstrated. He stresses that a number of negative propositions about God have likewise been demonstrated, among them: God is free of potentiality; God's essence is not composite; God possesses no characteristic distinct from His essence; His essence is unknowable, and no descriptive term can therefore be predicated of Him. The more demonstrations a person masters of what God is not, the more the person narrows down what He is, and the greater his knowledge of God. It is further ‘demonstrable’ that in God, intellect, the intelligizing subject, and the intelligible object of thought are identical with one another. ‘It has been demonstrated’ that God acts in the universe through intermediaries.
Knowledge of the supernal realm outside God is possible too, with the proviso that to some extent, recourse must be had there to proofs, which are less probative than demonstrations.
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- Maimonides the Rationalist , pp. 173 - 211Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2011