Does Allah SWT Exist?
What is it to exist?
The Arabic word, “Kawn” implies being created. If existence depends on being within
Creation, then certainly, Allah cannot be said to “exist.”
When we say, “Allah exists,” what kind of statement are we
making? As we have mentioned, there are
two forms of perception, tasawir/conceptions and tasdiq/assertions. Tasawir are either possible or
impossible. Assertions are of two kinds
as well, factual and analytical. Although
the logical positivist philosophers contend that factual statements can be
verified, and hence rendered conclusively established by experience, others
such as Alfred Ayer, the English logical empiricist, held that verifiability
means only that a statement is rendered more probable by experience. This is true because factual assertions are
verified through induction and as we have seen in Part I, induction only
renders statements probable, not necessarily actual. “Induction is a probable inference.” (Our
Philosophy, Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr, Trans. Shams Inati, p. 76, footnote
22). Such probable statements have
potential. In our swan example, swans
have a strong potential to be white based on the probability statistics
generated by our experiential observations and use of inductive logic.
Analytic statements, on the other hand, are verified through
deductive logic, and hence are proven to be either true or false. If they are proven true, then they are
necessarily actual, and if they are proven false, then they have no
actuality.
So, when we say, “Allah exists,” we are making a factual
statement, subject to induction. Unlike
swans, though, there is only one Allah, so how do we make the multiple
observations necessary to generate an inductive proof? Moreover, such a proof would only generate
potential, not actuality. If Allah
exists, then surely His existence must be necessary. “Allahu as-Samad.” “Allah is the self-sufficient upon which all
depends.” (Surah al-Ikhlas). The very
definition of Allah as the Being that is most primary, the First Principle, the
Unmoved Mover, the Source of All, means that if anything exists, then He
must. So again, this Ontological Proof
is circular. If the definition of the
tasawir, Allah, includes His existence, then of course, He must exist.
So can we prove the existence of Allah? Allah Himself does not attempt to do so. First, He makes it clear that Allah – the One
most Worthy of Worship – is a tasawir, and tasawir are either possible or
impossible. So is Allah a possible
being? We have explored the idea of
infinity and found that infinity is impossible, but Allah is not
impossible. He is Witr – Singular – and Samad
– the self-sufficient upon which all depends.
Certainly, Allah as a tasawir, as the first tasawir, the primary tasawir
upon which all else is based and upon which all else depends, which is
singular, without beginning nor end, which is of no duration or extent; is
possible.
Then the next question is not “Does God exist?” but “Is
Allah actual?”
Allah SWT Himself answers this in the Qur’an through
inductive means.
1 By the sun and his
brightness,
2 And the moon when she
followeth him,
3 And the day when it
revealeth him,
4 And the night when it
enshroudeth him,
5 And the heaven and Him Who
built it,
6 And the earth and Him Who
spread it,
7 And a soul and Him Who
perfected it
8 And inspired it (with
conscience of) what is wrong for it and (what is) right for it. (Surah
Al-Shams)
Here Allah SWT swears by the things He has created that He
is actual. Because there is a sun, moon,
day, night, heaven and earth, and soul, then there must exist the One who
Created them. Over and over in the Qur’an,
Allah used such inductive proofs for His actuality.
1 The Beneficent
2 Hath made known the Qur'an.
3 He hath created man.
4 He hath taught him
utterance.
5 The sun and the moon are
made punctual.
6 The stars and the trees
adore.
7 And the sky He hath
uplifted; and He hath set the measure,
8 That ye exceed not the
measure,
9 But observe the measure
strictly, nor fall short thereof.
10 And the earth hath He
appointed for (His) creatures,
11 Wherein are fruit and
sheathed palm-trees,
12 Husked grain and scented
herb.
13 Which is it, of the favours
of your Lord, that ye deny ? (Surah
Al-Rahman)
Here again, Allah recounts all of His favours. Which of them can we deny? All of them are inductive evidence of His
actuality.
However, as we have noted, induction only produces
probability, degree of potentiality. If
Allah is actual, He must be fully actual, the most actual, with no degree of
potential. He must be completely
actual. For this, we must turn to
deduction. Only a deductive proof can
bring us such a degree of necessary actuality.
Is Allah SWT Actual?
And for this, we turn to our great teacher, Shaheed Sayyed
Muhammad Baqir Al Sadr. Hidden in his
book refuting dialectic materialism and socialism, is a gem. Embedded in his discussion of Matter and God,
he states a proof for the necessity of the actuality of God. Without rehashing his entire work at this
time, we start with the conclusions of modern physics regarding the substance
of the universe. Scientists agree that
the original matter of the world is one substance. All qualities of this matter (including
extension and duration) are accidental to this primary matter. For example, fluidity, vaporousness,
solidity, are qualities that can be removed from the underlying substance. If they can be removed, then they are not
essential.
We also hold that matter is divisible into elements – the periodic
table. And that matter is made up of
particles such as atoms. However, even
these qualities are not essential. For
example, light behaves as both a particle and as a wave. Even the attribute of physicality is not
essential.
This last point is very important. Unlike Descartes, who held that there are two
substances, physical and mental, Materialists who hold that there is only
physical substance, and Idealists, like Berkeley, who hold there is only mental
substance, Baqir al Sadr held that there is only one substance and that
physicality and mentality are merely attributes of one substance. The mental or non-physical is merely a higher
quality, not a distinctly different quality.
So Baqir al Sadr is not a minimal attribute dualist or dual-aspect
theorist. He says there is only one
substance, and physical and mental are merely different attributes among many
attributes.
In answer to materialism, Shaheed al Sadr then states that
singular matter could not be the source of multiple attributes. In fact, materiality itself is an accident,
so how could it produce other attributes?
The substance of the universe is merely clay. Something else has to give it attributes and
qualities. Something else has to mold it.
“Empirical and scientific experiments have shown that all
the qualities, developments and varieties of primary matter are not essential;
rather, they are accidental.” (Our Philosophy, p. 246). “Similarly, the variation and difference in
the qualities of the common matter also reveal a cause beyond matter. The result of this is that the efficient
cause of world is other than the material cause of the world. In other words, the cause of the world is
different from its raw matter that all things share.” (Id).
Here, Shaheed al-Sadr has shown that the essential cause of
the world must be of necessity actual.
Because we observe qualities, and we observe physical matter, and even
physicality is an accident, then whatever is the essential cause must be actual,
and it must be actual of necessity. And
the cause of these attributes must be something other than this one substance
of the universe. And the only thing that
this could be is Allah, SWT.