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been thought necessary before the elaborate and formal method of argumentation could be
followed. All this al-Ghazzali changed, or at least tried to change. His Tahafut is
not addressed to scholars only; he seeks with it a wider circle of readers, and contends
that the views, the arguments, and the fallacies of the philosophers should be perfectly
intelligible to the general public.
Of these four phases of al-Ghazzali's work, the first and the third are undoubtedly the
most important. He made his mark by leading Islam back to its fundamental and historical
facts, and by giving a place in its system to the emotional religious life. But it will
have been noticed that in none of the four phases was he a pioneer. He was not a scholar
who struck out a new path, but a man of intense personality who entered on a path already
blazed and made it the common highway. We have here his character. Other men may have been
keener logicians, more learned theologians, more gifted saints; but he, through his
personal experiences, had attained so overpowering a sense of the divine realities that
the force of his characteronce combative and restless, now narrowed and intenseswept
all before it, and the Church of Islam entered on a new era of its existence.
So much space it has been necessary to give to this great man. Islam has never outgrown
him, has never fully understood him. In the renaissance of Islam which is now rising to
view his time will come and the new life will proceed from a renewed study of his works.
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From this time on, the Ash'arites may be fairly regarded as the dominant school so far
as the East is concerned. Saladin (d. 589) did much to aid in the establishment of this
hegemony. He was a devout Muslim with the taste of an amateur for theological literature.
Anecdotes tell how he had a special little catechism composed, and used himself to
instruct his children in it. He founded theological academies in Egypt at Alexandria and
Cairo, the first there except the Fatimid Hall of Science. One of the few blots on his
name is the execution of the pantheistic Sufi, Shihab ad-Din as-Suhrawardi, at Aleppo in
587. Meanwhile, in the farther East, Fakhr ad-Din ar-Razi (d. 606) was writing his great
commentary on the Qur'an, the Mafatih al-Ghayb, "The Keys of the Unseen,"
and carrying on the work of al-Ghazzali. The title of his commentary itself shows the dash
of mysticism in his teaching, and he was in correspondence with Ibn Arabi, the arch-Sufi
of the time. He studied philosophy, too, commented on works of Ibn Sina, and fought the
philosophers on their own ground as al-Ghazzali had done. Kalam and philosophy are now, in
the eyes of the theologians, a true philosophy and a false. Philosophy has taken the place
of Mu'tazilism and the other heresies. The enemies of the faith are outside its pale, and
the scholasticizing of philosophy goes on steadily. According to some, a new stage was
marked by al-Baydawi (d. 685), who confused inextricably philosophy and kalam, but the
newness can have been comparative only. A century later al-Iji (d. 756) writes a book, al-Mawaqif,
on kalam, half of which is
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