عالم المثال: بحث مدى الحياة في أحد من التطورات الأكثر تطورا في الفكر الإسلامي
Eschatology and the World of Image in Suhrawardi and His Commentators
1. The first way is how the philosopher Suhrawardī (d. 1191) and his commentators developed the notion. They eventually propose this term to denote a world beyond our earthly world, to be reached in sleep, meditation or after death. This world of image consists of non-physical (imagined) bodies, providing a philosophical interpretation of bodily resurrection.
Ibn Arabi's Reshaping of the Muslim Imagination
2. Ibn ʿArabī (d. 1240), the great mystic who had a tremendous influence on Islamic culture, together with his commentators, also uses the notion, but in a different way. For them, the world of image explains the multiplicity of creation and its characteristic of constantly going in and out of existence. If God alone truly exists, then the actual creation is a mere act of imagination of Him. Humans can therefore penetrate the truth of existence best through their imaginative faculty of imagination, not their intellectual faculty.
European Research Council, Starting Grant #263308
I was part of a team from November 2011 to August 2014, as a doctoral researcher.
Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, Veni Grant #275-63-009
I am the principal investigator of a grant running from July 2018 until June 2022.
1 book
6 peer-reviewed articles
2 conference panels
10 talks
In progress
My name is Cornelis but I also go by Eric. You will see me publish under "L.W.C. van Lit." I grew up in the Netherlands
where I studied Mathematics, Philosophy, and Arabic. In my masters in Islamic Studies at McGill University,
I first encountered the notion of a 'world of image'. In my dissertation I studied many texts that discuss
the notion in the context of eschatology. I decided to make it the focus of my first book. Next to working
on stage two of my life-long commitment to study the world of image, I also work on other parts of Islamic
philosophy, notably the influence of al-Ghazālī's
Tahāfut al-falāsifa. I am also experienced in Digital Humanities, about which I write on my website
The Digital Orientalist.