Explaining thinking in the structure of Mohi-ud-Din Ibn Arabi's writing

Document Type : Original Article

Authors

1 Professor, Department of Arabic Language and Literature, Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran.

2 Graduated in PhD in Arabic Language and Literature, Department of Arabic Language and Literature, Faculty of Literature, Humanities and Social Sciences, Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran.

Abstract

The place of the principles of belief and Sufism in the course of time goes back to the beginning of revelation. Sufi thinkers in the east and west of the Islamic world, from the second century to the sixth century AH, gradually strengthened the foundations of Sufism until Ibn Arabi became fully acquainted with the world of Sufism in the middle of the sixth century, given the environment in which he was born. The land of Andalusia has historically been full of mystical clerics and sects who have voiced such spiritual thoughts. It is true that some previous Sufis, such as Hakim al-Tirmidhi and Bayazid Bastami, had discussed the issues of divine wisdom and the transformation of the common man into a perfect human being, and there were cosmological theories in the works of Attar and Ibn Masra, so this article seeks to explain Mohi's thought. Al-Din Ibn Arabi and the great mystics in human analysis, most of whose books depict the mystical lexical structure and how the results are expressed between the perfect man and the unity of existence. The present article is based on the assumption that Ibn Arabi, according to the ancient Sufi mystical theories in the expression of man, who has taken a place for himself as an objective world, has been able to create a special mystical color and meaning for himself in the world of Sufism.

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