Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion

(Amelia) #1

FALSE


86

is infallibly known, it is incorrigible (not
subject to correction), but it is possible
(logically) for a belief to be incorrigible
without being infallible.


FALSE. See TRUTH & FALSEHOOD.


FALSAFA. An Arabic word derived from
the Greek philosophia. (“Philosopher”
translates as Faylasuf, sg., Falaasifa, pl.)
In the Islamic context, falsafa originally
referred to the intellectual practices and
arguments encountered in Aristotelian
and Neoplatonic schools of the Byzantine
and Sassanian lands conquered by
Muslims, though these schools and their
texts were understood by many Muslims
of the era to be continuous with ques-
tions, concerns, and principles found in
the sources of Islamic revelation. Begin-
ning in the eighth century, significant
numbers of logical, linguistic, metaphysi-
cal, and ethical texts were translated into
Arabic, and when drawn into conversa-
tion with pre-existing ideas and commit-
ments, this gave rise to intense debates
and intellectual development in centers
of learning such as Baghdad. Though not
all philosophers of this era were Muslims,
the Islamic cultural and intellectual con-
text framed the development of the tradi-
tion. This initial watershed gave rise to
the achievements of philosophers such as
al-Kindi, Avicenna, al-Farabi, Averroës,
and al-Suhrawardi. Among the philoso-
phers, some who claimed to be Muslim


were accused of being kuffar (sg., kafir),
or unbelievers, and strong, though not
necessarily hegemonic, currents within
Islamic thought have been aggressively
antagonistic toward the rationalism of the
philosophers. Falsafa as a discipline dis-
tinct from theology did not flourish much
beyond the twelfth century in Western
Islamic lands, though many of its meth-
ods and commitments were absorbed by
theology as well as Sufi mystical thought.
In the East, particularly Persia and India,
falsafa has maintained a more robust
identity.

FALSIFIABILITY. Karl Popper proposed
that an essential condition of meaningful
scientific statements was their liability to
falsifiability. On Popper’s view, Freudian
psychoanalysis was suspect because it
seemed incapable of being shown to be
false. In the 1950s and 1960s Anglophone
philosophers questioned whether religious
beliefs were falsifiable. Paradoxically,
a prominent non-theistic philosopher
Moritz Schlick claimed that the existence
of an afterlife is not falsifiable (the living
will never know if the dead survive in
some other realm) but it is verifiable if
true. See also TRUTH & FALSEHOOD.

FARRER, AUSTIN MARSDEN (1904–
1968). British philosopher, theologian,
biblical scholar, and Anglican priest, pri-
marily known for his metaphysics, view
of divine action, and theory of revelation.
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