islam
-
Introduction This reflection paper explores the epistemological tension between the discourse of “integration” and the tawḥīdic worldview that underpins Islamic psychology. Many contemporary Muslim scholars and clinicians continue to frame the relationship between Islam and psychology through the paradigm of integration—attempting to merge Western psychological models with Islamic spiritual principles. While this intention is noble,
-
Part I: Physiological & Psychological Dimensions of the Menstrual Cycle 1.1 Hormonal and physiological fluctuations Modern research affirms that the menstrual cycle involves marked hormonal fluctuations (primarily estrogen and progesterone) that influence not only physical but also psychological and emotional states. For example: In a review of menstrual cycle influence on cognition and emotion, it
-
This paper examines rain (al-maṭar) as an instrument of Divine mercy and purification through the lens of Qur’an, Sunnah, and the insights of classical ‘ulamā’, correlating them with contemporary findings in ecotherapy and psychophysiology. Modern research shows that rain exposure — through sensory, olfactory, and auditory stimuli — reduces anxiety, enhances mood, and restores cognitive
-
From Lived Suffering to Juristic Categories Islamic law is not abstract speculation. From its earliest centuries, fiqh grew by watching how people actually lived, suffered, and acted. Jurists observed how human minds worked, how illnesses disrupted capacity, and how treatments affected dignity, then classified these realities into the framework of taklīf (legal responsibility). The majnūn
-
1. The Historical Problem: Why Creativity Was Devalued Across intellectual traditions — Islamic, Western, and modern — creativity has often been sidelined compared to science and rationality. Several reasons explain this: a. The Legacy of Rationalism Greek philosophy (Aristotle, Plato) ranked imagination (phantasia) as a lower faculty of the soul, below reason (logos). Aristotle saw
-
Within the Mujaddid Model of Intelligence (MMI), Creative Intelligence (CI) is not merely artistic expression, but the faculty that transforms khayāl (imagination), basīrah (insight), and ilḥām (inspiration) into vehicles of divine remembrance and discernment. Among the profound ways Islam cultivates this faculty is through ruʾyā ṣāliḥa (true and righteous dreams). The Qur’an itself records dreams
-
Is Reason its Own God, or a Servant of Truth? “ʿAql without wahy is lost; waḥy without aql is unapplied. But aql with waḥy is light upon light.” This paradox captures the Islamic answer to a crisis that has long haunted both philosophy and neuroscience. On one extreme, modern neuroscience reduces reason to an illusion
-
The Need for Purification of Intellect When Muslims hear the word tazkiyyah (purification), they usually think of the heart (qalb) — purifying the self from pride, envy, arrogance, or anger. But what about the ʿaql (intellect)? Just like the heart, the mind can be clouded by disease. The most dangerous disease is not ignorance, but
-
Conclusion & Call to Action The discourse on junūn in classical fiqh was never meant to be a rigid fossil of the past. It was a living attempt by jurists to grapple with the limits of human reason, to discern when Allah’s mercy suspends obligation, and when accountability remains. Their categories of junūn dāʾim, junūn
-
The lives of the mujaddidūn remind us that tajdīd is not a theory, nor a matter of abstract speculation, but a lived reality. They embody the principle that furqān (clarity of intellect) must be safeguarded by taqwā (God-consciousness) if it is to bear the fruit of tajdīd (renewal). Their stories are not distant memories, but
