The Philosophy Book

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78 AVICENNA


Avicenna’s medical knowledge
was so vast that it won him royal
patronage. His Canon of Medicine
influenced European schools of
medicine until the mid-17th century.

The secret conversation
is a direct encounter
between God and the soul,
abstracted from all
material constraints.
Avicenna

appears as a treatise, On the Soul,
within his Book of Healing, and it
aims to strip away any knowledge
that can possibly be disproved, and
leave us only with absolute truths.
It remarkably anticipates the much
later work of Descartes, the famous
dualist of the 17th century, who also
decided to believe nothing at all
except that which he himself could
know for certain. Both Avicenna
and Descartes want to demonstrate
that the mind or self exists because
it knows it exists; and that it is
distinct from the human body.


The Flying Man
In the Flying Man experiment,
Avicenna wants to examine what
we can know if we are effectively
robbed of our senses, and cannot
depend on them for information.
He asks us each to imagine this:
suppose I have just come into
existence, but I have all my normal
intelligence. Suppose, too, that I am
blindfolded and that I am floating in
the air, and my limbs are separated


from each other, so I can touch
nothing. Suppose I am entirely
without any sensations. None the
less, I will be sure that I myself exist.
But what is this self, which is me?
It cannot be any of the parts of my
body, because I do not know that I
have any. The self that I affirm as
existing does not have length or
breadth or depth. It has no extension,
or physicality. And, if I were able
to imagine, for instance, a hand,
I would not think that it belonged
to this self which I know exists.
It follows from this that the
human self—what I am—is distinct
from my body, or anything physical.
The Flying Man experiment, says
Avicenna, is a way of alerting and
reminding oneself of the existence
of the mind as something other
than, and distinct from, the body.
Avicenna also has other ways
to show that the mind cannot be
something material. Most are
based on the fact that the type of
intellectual knowledge the mind
can grasp cannot not be contained

by anything material. It is easy to
see how the parts of physical, shaped
things fit with the parts of a physical,
shaped sense organ: the image of
the wall that I see is stretched over
the lens of my eye, each of its parts
corresponding to a part of the lens.
But the mind is not a sense organ;
what it grasps are definitions, such
as “Man is a rational, mortal animal”.
The parts of this phrase need to be
grasped at once, together. The mind
therefore cannot be in any way like
or part of the body.

The immortal soul
Avicenna goes on to draw the
conclusion that the mind is not
destroyed when the body dies, and
that it is immortal. This did not
help to make his thinking more
palatable to orthodox Muslims, who
believe that the whole person, body
and mind, is resurrected and enjoys
the afterlife. Consequently, Avicenna
was attacked in the 12th century
by the great Islamic theologian
al-Ghazâlî, who called him a heretic
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