Ethnics And Spiritual Intelligence

Authors

  • Eric Winkel

Abstract

As with other writers around the works of Muyhiddin Ibn’ Arabi, the non-academic “I” often makes its appearance. It is personal with me, too. Frankly, I have my doubts about writing about Ibn’Arabi. But not speaking about him. To start to explain why, I have to go back what brought me to Ibn’ Arabi

                My first contact with Ibn’ Arabi was the translated book Sufis of Andalusia (R.W.J. Austin). I was in college, and I had been reading Foucault. I was visiting the friends in D.C. who were my best friends from Geneva, Switzerland. I like Foucault because he was telling me that everything was discourse, that “crime” was not just this thing we all know about, nor was “punishment” or “civilization.” These things were in fact social constructs. So the entire enterprise of “fighting” “crime” with “police” was a game played by people who constructed and maintained the rules. If you wanted to find out what was behind that game, you had to ask from where did “police” come? You had to go back to Prussia and the beginnings of bureaucracy, and the notion of policy and procedure and police, because these things were not givens. No, they came into being for certain reasons. They were sustained for curtain reason, and they morphed into something else for certain reasons.

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Published

2018-01-17

How to Cite

Winkel, E. (2018). Ethnics And Spiritual Intelligence. KATHA- The Official Journal of the Centre for Civilisational Dialogue, 6(1), 55–76. Retrieved from https://ejournal.um.edu.my/index.php/KATHA/article/view/10539

Issue

Section

Research Article