Scientia Sacra

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Scientia sacra

In perennial philosophy, scientia sacra or sacred science is a form of spiritual knowledge that lies at the
heart of both divine revelations and traditional sciences, embodying the very essence of every sacred
tradition. It recognizes sources of knowledge beyond those accepted by modern epistemology, such as
divine revelations and intellectual intuition. Intellectual intuition is believed to allow access to an innate
knowledge of God, which is to be reawakened through the use of human intellect. The principles and
doctrines of scientia sacra are derived from reason, revelation, and intellectual intuition, with the
conviction that these sources of knowledge can be reconciled in a hierarchical order, and applied in the
human quest to understand different orders of reality. Its objective is to show how the transmitted,
intellectual, and physical sciences are related and unified within the framework of metaphysics, as
traditionally defined.

According to this perspective, scientia sacra is synonymous with metaphysics, which is seen not as a
branch of philosophy but rather what the Sufis call ma'rifa or gnostic knowledge—the ultimate goal of
which is the knowledge of "the Real". It is based on a holistic and hierarchical view of reality that
emphasizes the connections between the various levels and states of being. This viewpoint holds that
God, the Principle or the One, is the Ultimate Reality—who is absolute, eternal, infinite, and necessary
but whose knowledge lies beyond the reach of sense perception and reason. According to the doctrines of
scientia sacra, the universe is not a separate reality, but rather only a "manifestation and theophany" of the
"Divine Essence", which is essentially the source and center of all other realities.

The notion of scientia sacra may be traced back to Islamic intellectual tradition, particularly the ideas of
Ibn Arabi and Suhrawardi. This was further explored in modern times by the French metaphysician René
Guénon and others, including Frithjof Schuon and Titus Burckhardt. However, the concept was most
notably conceptualized in contemporary language by the Iranian philosopher Seyyed Hossein Nasr in his
1981 Gifford Lectures, published in the same year as Knowledge and the Sacred. He elaborated further on
the concept of sacred science in his 1993 book The Need for a Sacred Science.

Terminology
Scientia sacra is a Latin term that means "sacred science".[1] Although Nasr employs the terms "scientia
sacra", "sacred science" and "sacred knowledge" interchangeably, he prefers the term "scientia sacra" to
others because he thinks the word "science" in modern English usage can be misleading.[2] For Nasr,
"scientia sacra" refers to the ultimate metaphysical science that encompasses the "principial knowledge of
things", while "sacred science" pertains to the application of sacred knowledge to different dimensions of
reality, both physical and spiritual.[3] The terms "scientia sacra", "sacred knowledge", "philosophia
perennis", "perennial philosophy", "sophia", "sophia perennis", "metaphysics", "esoteric knowledge",
and "principial knowledge" are all consanguineous terms and relate to the "eternal Truth", which Nasr
claims is at the heart of authentic religions and manifests itself in the form of "sacred traditions".[4][5][6]
For Nasr, this Truth is attainable by everyone through intellect.[4]

Origins
Scientia sacra is not a new idea. It has its origins in the Islamic philosophical tradition, or, more broadly,
in the traditional thought and culture. Asfa Widiyanto attributes the notion to Suhrawardi's theory of al-
ilm al-huduri (knowledge by presence). Suhrawardi defined al-ilm al-huduri as knowledge that is self-
evident, self-present, and self-objective – which indicates that consciousness and cognizable reality are
one and the same. Such knowledge is acquired through intellection, which Suhrawardi defines as a sort of
vision that allows humans to perceive archetypes in the imaginal realm (alam al-mithal, or mundus
imaginalis in Henry Corbin's terminology).[7] The notion of scientia sacra may also be traced back to Ibn
Arabi's concept of "intuitive science", which he viewed as knowledge of the Truth, of the reality of all
things. Ibn Arabi frequently refers to such knowledge as ma'rifa, which he connects with divine
wisdom.[7]

According to the Encyclopedia of Science and Religion, Seyyed Hossein Nasr has championed the
concept of "Sacred Science", which has its roots first and foremost in the thought of French metaphysicist
René Guénon, and then in authors who followed in his footsteps, such as, Frithjof Schuon and Titus
Burckhardt.[8]

Guénon explained how modern Western civilization is an anomaly insofar as it is the only
civilization in the world that developed without reference to transcendence. Guénon mentions
the universal teaching of humanity's religions and traditions, all of which are nothing but
adaptations of the original—essentially metaphysical—tradition. The destiny of human beings
is the intellectual knowledge of eternal truths, not the exploration of the quantitative aspects of
the cosmos. In this context, Nasr denounces....Western societies that are obsessed with
developing a scientific knowledge anchored in a quantitative approach to reality and in the
domination of nature, which results in its pure and simple destruction.[8]

— Bruno Guiderdoni, Encyclopedia of Science and Religion, 2003

Soumaya Pernilla Ouis credits Nasr for introducing the concept of scientia sacra. According to Nidhal
Guessoum, Seyyed Hossein Nasr "almost single-handedly" developed the concept of sacred science,
which was afterwards embraced and upheld by a number of his followers.[note 1] Nasr developed his
notion of scientia sacra in his book Knowledge and the Sacred, originally published in 1981, which
contained his Gifford lectures delivered in the same year.[11][5][12] He expanded on his idea of sacred
science in his 1993 book The Need for a Sacred Science.[13][14]

Meaning
Scientia sacra has been described as "the heart of perennial philosophy",[15] the ultimate purpose of
which is the "discernment of the Real".[6] According to Nasr, scientia sacra – or knowledge of Reality –
is "at the heart of every revelation and is the center of that circle which encompasses and defines
tradition."[16][3] For him, this knowledge is identical with metaphysics as traditionally defined – that is,
"as the ultimate science of the Real" – or marifa (Gnostic knowledge) in Sufi terminology,[16] and not as
a branch of philosophy as is understood in the contemporary world.[17] Nasr describes metaphysics as the
knowledge that allows man to "distinguish between the Real and the Illusory" and provides him with the
ability "to know things in their essence or as they are", which is essentially the same as knowing them "in
divinis".[18]

The knowledge of the Principle which is at once the absolute and infinite Reality is the heart of
metaphysics while the distinction between the levels of universal and cosmic existence,
including both the macrocosm and the microcosm, are like its limbs. Metaphysics concerns not
only the Principle in Itself and its manifestations but also the principles of the various sciences
of a cosmological order.[19]

— Seyyed Hossein Nasr quoted in Adnan Aslan, Religious Pluralism in Christian and
Islamic Philosophy: The Thought of John Hick and Seyyed Hossein Nasr, 2004

According to The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Nasr's ultimate aim is "to revive scientia sacra (sacred
science) by showing the underlying unity and interrelatedness of the transmitted, intellectual, and
physical sciences under the umbrella of metaphysics".[20] This metaphysics "is centered around a holistic
and hierarchic view of reality" that shows the "interrelatedness of the various levels and states of being",
with the idea of the great chain of being serving as its "conceptual spine".[21][5] It is heavily influenced by
traditional theocentrism that regards God or the One as the origin, center, and culmination of everything
that exists. Although this principle is expressed in a wide variety of ways throughout various traditions, it
always retains its basic meaning. In line with premodern philosophy, it upholds that "the spiritual has a
higher ontological status over the material because the former is taken to reveal the divine and the latter
to conceal it".[21] For Nasr, "every level of reality has its own meaning and place in the total economy of
divine creation". They cannot, therefore, be reduced to a single plane. According to Nasr, the premodern
sciences of nature were able to avoid becoming reductionist and materialistic because of their teleological
and hierarchical perspective of the universe.[20]

In Nasr's view, scientia sacra perceives the cosmos not as a separate reality, but rather as a "manifestation
and theophany" of the "Divine Essence". It is comparable to Plato's idea that the "immaterial realm" is
"concrete reality". From a metaphysical perspective, God is seen as concrete Reality, whereas other
realities are regarded as abstractions of God.[22] Nasr believes that scientia sacra is more than just a
theoretical conception of Reality. It has a practical aspect in that it aids man in his quest of the sacred. As
a result, its explanations can serve as a catalyst for exposing the human mind to the higher order of
reality. According to Nasr, "scientia sacra contains both the seed and the fruit of the knowledge tree." He
describes its seed as theoretical knowledge and its fruit as realized gnosis. From an axiological point of
view, scientia sacra has a transformative function, that is, it transforms the human person in order for
them to attain the sacred.[16]

.....although knowledge of the universe can be attained through those sciences which are based
on sense perception and reason, knowledge of the ultimate reality or God can be achieved only
through what is known as sacred knowledge (scientia sacra). The reason for this is that the
universe constitutes a veil which hides and conceals the Ultimate Reality of which it is a
manifestation. None of the sciences based on sense perception and reason can pierce this veil,
and it is thus only by means of sacred knowledge that the Ultimate Reality can be
apprehended.[23]

— Nicholas Heer, Review of Knowledge and the Sacred, 1993

In Nasr's view, knowledge of the Ultimate Reality is only possible if one actively participates "in one's
inmost being, in that supraindividual reality". For him, "Self Knowledge" is the ultimate or most interior
form of knowledge, and that one can attain it "through the sun of the Divine Self residing at the center of
the human soul."[6]

Epistemological perspectives
Scientia sacra varies from discursive knowledge in that it recognizes sources of knowledge other than
those recognized by contemporary epistemology. According to Nasr, the sources of "ordinary
knowledge", as defined by modern epistemology, are sense perception and inductive reasoning, but the
sources of sacred knowledge are revelation and intellectual intuition, together with reason and sense
perception. Nasr contends that unlike other forms of knowledge, which are based on speculation or
reasoning about the subject matter, sacred knowledge is centered on intuition.[24] He believes that
reasoning originates in the mind, while intellection emerges from the heart, which enlightens the mind of
the individual in question. According to Nasr, this does not imply that it is unintelligible. For him,
knowledge acquired through intellectual intuition is intelligible in and of itself. The human intelligence
that receives this knowledge "does not impose upon it the intellectual nature or content of a spiritual
experience of a sapiential character". Human intelligence does not serve as a source, but rather as a
participant in the formation of such knowledge, [24] since, in Nasr's view, "consciousness is reality and
knowledge is being".[25]

Intellect, for Nasr, is the very substance that lies within man's being and is concerned with unveiling
archetypal realities.[26] It is what the Sufis refer to as the "eye of the heart" (ayn al-qalb),[27] which is
"the microcosmic projection of the Divine Intellect".[28] In light of this, it can by definition serve as a
"source of inner illumination or inner revelation".[28] Reason, on the other hand, is a manifestation of the
intellect. In Nasr's view, intellection is the process through which our individual consciousness
participates in Divine Consciousness. This method transcends logic and grasps reality without disturbing
its harmony. It arrives at the truth by an a priori intuitive perception of it. This demonstrates Nasr's
Platonic resemblance in that it preserves the notion of primordial knowledge and truth contained within
man's being.[26] However, humanity has "become removed from that primordial state" or fitra, in which
human intellect had direct access to knowledge of the sacred. They now require revelation for utilizing
their divine gifts.[25][29] The act of intellection thus refers to the process of invoking and activating of this
fundamental knowledge that is at the heart of man's intellect, which is essentially a reflection of the
Divine Intellect. For Nasr, Divine Intellect is the source of all knowledge and being, and revelation that
comes from it is the divine aid for the human intellect.[26] According to William Chittick, "intellect is
nothing but the soul that has come to know and realize its full potential". This potential is often referred
to as fitra or innate disposition in the Islamic tradition. The fitra is the original self of Adam, who God
"taught all the names" to (2:31) in the Quran. Every human being has this primordial Adam within them.
The fitra is naturally inclined towards tawhid, which is the foundation for acquiring true knowledge of
God, the universe, and oneself. Essentially, the fitra is good and wise, as it leads one towards tawhid and
the pursuit of true knowledge.[30]

Traditional sciences and scientia sacra


Nasr's construction of traditional science may be seen through its ontological, epistemological, and
axiological foundations. Unlike modern science, traditional science recognizes the direct connection
between "hierarchical degrees of being" and "hierarchical degrees of knowing" at the ontological level. It
is never divorced from its metaphysical foundations, and is epistemologically based on the "dialectics of
revelation, intellect, and reason". Nasr considers scientia sacra, which deals with the Real, as the supreme
form of knowledge that lies at the heart of traditional sciences.[31] Insofar as they apply the immutable
metaphysical principles to the world of temporality and change, natural, mathematical, or intellectual
sciences that place the sacred at the center of their structure are regarded as sacred. All sacred sciences
can be classified as traditional sciences since they apply the traditional metaphysical principles to the
scientific study of nature, and therefore can be characterized as different forms of applied
metaphysics.[32]

The ‘Sacred Science’ approach of Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Frithjof Schuon and others thus takes
an exception to the advancements in modern science and considers it as anomalous and
responsible both for disconnecting man from God and for major environmental and social ills,
fragmentation and disorder. According to this view, whereas modern science pursues objectives
such as accuracy and confirmation by repeatability, scientific thinking in Islamic civilisation
considered nature as sacred and consequently gave priority to values such as purpose, meaning
and beauty.[33]

— Hasan, U.; Osama, A., Muslim Responses to Science's Big Questions: Report of the
Ihsanoglu Task Force on Islam & Science, 2016

However, Nasr does not dismiss modern science, which he believes "is legitimate if kept within the
boundaries defined by the limitations of its own philosophical premises concerning the nature of physical
reality as well as its epistemologies and methodologies."[34] In this perspective, the sacred sciences, from
cosmology to medicine, share a set of cardinal principles. The sacred sciences view the universe through
the viewpoint of a hierarchy of existence and knowledge. The physical universe is not dismissed as an
illusion, maya, or a shadow to be reduced in the presence of the Absolute. It is also not seen an ultimate
reality by itself.[32]

Were a true metaphysics, a scientia sacra, to become once again a living reality in the West,
knowledge gained of man [and nature] through scientific research could be integrated into a
pattern which would also embrace other forms of knowledge ranging from the purely
metaphysical to those derived from traditional schools of psychology and cosmology. But in the
field of the sciences of man, as in that of the sciences of nature, the great impediment is
precisely the monolithic and monopolistic character which modern Western science has
displayed since the seventeenth century.[35]

— Seyyed Hossein Nasr quoted in Ali Zaidi, Muslim Reconstructions of Knowledge: The
Cases of Nasr and al-Faruqi, 2011
Traditional civilizations that nurtured sacred sciences emphasized on the divine origin of the cosmos and
maintained a hierarchy between the absolute and the relative, the eternal and the temporal, the necessary
and the contingent. For Nasr, traditional sciences are inherently anti-reductionist since hierarchy entails a
multilayered structure. This largely explains the continuity of the concept of the "great chain of being"
throughout traditional civilizations that does not allow reality to be reduced to a "pure idea" or "pure
matter". The sacred sciences study each domain of reality on its own level, instead of reducing reality to a
material existence, relying on a metaphysical framework that allows the One and the Many to coexist
without contradiction.[36]

According to this perspective, nature is viewed as a sacred entity, as vestigia Dei or as ayat Allah (signs
of God). Traditional sciences see nature as the abode of both change and permanence, in opposition to
modern science, which reduces the order of nature to perpetual change and impermanence. Although
nature is commonly seen as a "perennially changing structure", the "world of nature" also exhibits
extraordinary continuity, persistence, and harmony, as evidenced by the preservation of species and the
longevity of natural forms. This dual aspects of nature, according to Nasr, proves beyond doubt the
Divine character in nature: the world of nature has not been consigned to the unending sequence of
random and senseless changes that allow no telos in the universe. Nature, on the other hand, incorporates
both the principles of change and permanence and alludes to a "big picture" in which all of its
components are viewed as constituting a meaningful unity and harmony.[36]

Other developments
The Hungarian philosopher Béla Hamvas, who was influenced by René Guénon and his traditionalist
school, undertook a study of various religious and spiritual traditions from around the world, which he
compiled under the title Scientia Sacra. His three volume works, the first two of which were composed in
the years 1943 and 1944 and the third, incomplete, in the early 1960s, were published posthumously in
1988.[37][38][39] According to The Handbook of Contemporary European Social Theory, Hamvas's
Scientia Sacra contains "an overview of the wisdom contained in the sacred tradition of mankind".[38] In
this work, Hamvas made an effort to demonstrate the connections between metaphysics, anthropology,
and culture.[39]

See also
Resacralization of knowledge
Resacralization of nature
Fitra
Dhikr
'Aql

Notes
1. Nidhal Guessoum: "Sacred science, which Seyyed Hossein Nasr developed almost single-
handedly (though it was later adopted and defended by several of his disciples)."[9]
Soumaya Pernilla Ouis: "The well-known Muslim scholar, Seyyed Hossein Nasr has
introduced the concept of scientia sacra and defined it as the sacred knowledge which lies
at the heart of every revelation and is the centre of that circle which encompasses and
defines tradition."[10]

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7. Widiyanto 2017, p. 260.
8. Guiderdoni 2003, p. 468.
9. Guessoum 2014, p. 24.
10. Ouis 1998, p. 152.
11. Allen 2003, p. 195.
12. Heer 1993, p. 147.
13. Saeed 2006, p. 111.
14. Gangadean 2009, pp. 137–138.
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36. Kalin 2000, p. 448.
37. Szőnyi 2018, p. 305.
38. Wydra & Szakolczai 2006, p. 229.
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Further reading
Aminrazavi, Mehdi (2000). "Philosophia Perennis and Scientia Sacra in a Postmodern
World". In Hahn, Lewis Edwin; Auxier, Randall E.; Stone Jr., Lucian W. (eds.). The
Philosophy of Seyyed Hossein Nasr. Open Court. ISBN 978-0812694147.
Kiatpapan, Siriporn; Giordano, John (2020). "Scientia Sacra: A Holistic Educational
Approach For Transforming Environmental Consciousness" (http://www.assumptionjournal.a
u.edu/index.php/PrajnaVihara/article/view/4801). Prajñā Vihāra: Journal of Philosophy and
Religion. 21 (1): 75–98. ISSN 2586-9876 (https://search.worldcat.org/issn/2586-9876).
Moten, Abdul Rashid (2013). "Islam and Civilisational Renewal: The Case for Sacred
Science". Islam and Civilisational Renewal. 4 (4). TechKnowledge General Trading LLC:
562–578. doi:10.12816/0034788 (https://doi.org/10.12816%2F0034788). ISSN 1394-0937
(https://search.worldcat.org/issn/1394-0937).
Noaparast, Khosrow Bagheri (2016). "A Twofold Negligence and Contention In
Eurocentrism: A Critical View on the Case of Nasr's 'Sacred Science' " (https://books.google.
com/books?id=fNAeDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA13). Eurocentrism at the Margins: Encounters,
Critics and Going Beyond. Global Connections. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-317-13996-6.
Omar, Irfan A. (1995). "The Need for a Sacred Science: An Intellectual Defence of the
Tradition by Seyyed Hossein Nasr" (https://doi.org/10.35632%2Fajis.v12i2.2377). American
Journal of Islam and Society. 12 (2). International Institute of Islamic Thought: 263–267.
doi:10.35632/ajis.v12i2.2377 (https://doi.org/10.35632%2Fajis.v12i2.2377). ISSN 2690-
3741 (https://search.worldcat.org/issn/2690-3741).
Stenberg, L. (1996). "The Quest for a Sacred Science – the Position of Seyyed Hossein
Nasr". The Islamization of Science: Four Muslim Positions Developing an Islamic Modernity
(https://books.google.com/books?id=RWV3QgAACAAJ). Lund studies in history of religions.
Almqvist & Wiksell International. ISBN 978-91-22-01723-3.

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