Samir smiled and pointed to the sun setting behind the mountains. “Look. Does the sun decide to shine? Does it pause, calculate, and choose to send its rays to the rosebush, but not to the stone?”
He stood, brushing sand from his robe. “That is why al-Farabi’s theory is not a cold mechanism, Layla. It is an invitation. The stars, the intellects, the cycles of the moon—they are not distant machinery. They are a ladder. And every true act of understanding, every moment of selfless wonder, is a rung.” al farabi theory of emanation
In the city of Rayy, under a dome of stars so thick they seemed to drip like honey, lived an old philosopher named Samir. He had spent his life studying a single question: How did the Many come from the One? Samir smiled and pointed to the sun setting
“Teacher,” she said, “the theologians argue that God created the world from nothing, by an act of will. But you speak of emanation —like light from a lamp, or water from a spring. Why?” Does it pause, calculate, and choose to send
His student, a sharp-eyed young woman named Layla, found him one evening in his courtyard, tracing circles in the sand with a reed.