Al-Ghazali’s Views on
Cause-Effect Relation and Free Will
One reason al-Ghazali is put squarely against rationality is
Hoodbhoy’s understanding of the term. Following Nietzshe,
Hoodbhoy defines “rationality” as “a matrix of connections which
assigns cause to effect”. In this form, the definition can
hardly exclude any one from rationality, since almost every
human being, from the primitive man living in jungles to the
most sophisticated researcher, in some way accepts the validity
of cause and effect relationship. Even animals must at some
level have a notion of this relationship, for otherwise they
could not function as living organisms. The difference lies in
the degree to which the relationship is viewed as deterministic
or necessary. Hoodbhoy often seems to assume -- and make part of
rationality -- a strictly deterministic connection, that is,
every event (with the possible exception of the big bang?) can
be assigned a set of causes that uniquely determine that event.
The problem with this view of rationality is that it has
identified rationality with a particular position on the
cause-effect relationship. A satisfactory definition of
rationality, however, should leave room for questioning all
positions including a position on the cause-effect relationship.
The irreducible minimum of such a definition should consist only
of: a) a belief in the general intelligibility of the universal
order, b) some rules of logic, and c) use of observations and
experiments in validating all models of the universe.
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