Muslim, Not Supermuslim: A Critique of Islamicate Transhumanism †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Transhumanism
3. Transhumanist Demographics
4. Transhumanism and the Modern/Colonial World System
5. Critique
5.1. Assimilation
5.2. Transcendence
5.3. ‘Man’, Coloniality, and the ‘Clash of Civilisations’
5.4. Textuality and Liberalism
5.5. Transhumanism, Islamicate Modernism, and Iqbal
5.6. Transhuman—Islamicate Parallels
5.7. Transhumanism, Iqbal, and Nietzsche
5.8. Transhumanism and Divinization
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Albeit a little dated, Steinhart’s (2010) ‘Transhumanism and Religion Bibliography’ traces the earliest instance of such a work to Barrow and Tipler’s The Anthropic Cosmological Principle (1986). It should be noted that Steinhart’s bibliography is restricted to peer-reviewed scholarly articles and/or monographs and with a specific focus on theological rather than ethical concerns. |
2 | Notwithstanding concerns about the applicability of the category ‘religion’ to non-Christian traditions (including Islam), and Ahmed’s (2016) extended engagement with and critique of Hodgson’s schematic distinctions between Islam, Islamdom, the Islamic, and the Islamicate, I follow Hodgson’s framing of the ‘Islamicate’ as “a culture, centred on a lettered-tradition … which has been naturally shared in by both Muslims and non-Muslims”, and his restricting the ‘Islamic’ to that “pertaining to Islam in the proper, the religious sense.” (Hodgson 1974, pp. 57–59). On this framing, the Islamicate (as culture, civilisation, etc.) encompasses the Islamic (as religion, faith, etc.) Where I differ with Hodgson is in his tying the Islamicate to ‘Islamdom’, that is, “the society in which Muslims and their faith is recognized as prevalent and socially dominant in one sense or another [emphasis added].” (Hodgson 1974, pp. 57–59) Against this, and as argued elsewhere, I suggest that under postcolonial conditions of Muslim diaspora, the Islamicate has expanded beyond its pre-colonial geographical confines such that it is now globally diffuse (Ali 2019b). |
3 | This work should be viewed as a contribution to my ongoing project of exploring the entangled relationship between techno-scientific conceptions of the posthuman, Transhumanism, and the phenomenon of whiteness against the background of what is, ostensibly, a contemporary resurfacing—or re-iteration—of the historical phenomenon of ‘White Crisis’ (Ali 2019a, 2021b). |
4 | On this point, see (Jotterand 2010; Bostrom 2011; Hughes 2012; Ferrando 2013) among others. While endorsing this position, Al-Kassimi (2023) goes somewhat further to suggest that “trans-humanist philosophy is the most logical and coherent consequence of (post)modern philosophy since it is an anti-theist and anti-human movement which seeks a post-human future and accepts as valid different experiments longing for the biological and technological engineering and enhancement of humans [emphasis added].” (p. 9). It is important to note here a certain reductive conflation of postmodernism with its technological—or rather, techno-centric—manifestation insofar as at least some critical posthumanists attempt to differentiate their position from technological posthumanism. |
5 | The acronym GRIN refers to the confluence of genetics, robotics, information technology and nanotechnology in the service of self-directed evolution—that is, enhancement of the human—toward a technocratic future. A related acronym is NBICS which refers to the combined resources of nanotechnology, biotechnology, information technology, cognitive science, and synthetic biology. |
6 | This was the situation in 2017 as determined by a visit to the following website: https://su.org/faculty-speakers/ (accessed on 24 May 2017). |
7 | |
8 | |
9 | In his own words, “the prime intention of this book … is to see what Islam can bring to this ‘Transhumanist Table’.” (p. 22). On his view, “the transhumanist debate is both fascinating and extremely important and, in the future, it is destined to increase in importance with technological change. Islam, for its part, should be a part of this debate, and so here I want to reclaim the debate, to show that others can play the transhumanist game, that the doors to the arena should be open and should welcome contributions from the non-secular.” (p. 9). To what extent is there a tacit invocation of technological determinism at work here wherein Islam is understood as to be assimilated to a Western-originated Transhumanist language game? |
10 | Jackson expands on this line of argument as follows: “Islam has contributed [very little to the debate on Transhumanism] so far … and what there is would likely as not leave others at the table feeling that the chair could be better utilised. The problem is that when Muslims address issues that arise in transhumanism they do have a tendency to look to Qur’an, hadith, shari’a for answers and, therefore, see Islam as essentially prescriptive. If you cannot find guidance in the authoritative texts, then there can be no answer. Further, if you can find guidance in the authoritative texts, then that is the answer [emphasis added].” (p. 22). I suggest that what is crucial to note here is the way in which recourse to the Islamic tradition, its sources, and their prescriptiveness is construed as a ‘problem’. |
11 | In this connection, see (Mavani 2014; Mobayed 2017). |
12 | Illuminationism is a blend of philosophy and mysticism due to the Persian Islamicate philosopher Shahabuddin Yahya Suhrawardi (1155–1191 CE). In this scheme, creation assumes the form of a descending ontological order of emanation from a primordial immaterial light, successively lower levels of existence manifesting a diminished intensity of such illumination. |
13 | In this connection, it is significant to note Jackson’s conceding that “whilst Islamic authority can be found and utilised in a way that encourages Muslims to protect the planet, it may be more difficult to argue that Islam can justify the possible extinction or, at best, depreciation, of the current human species (i.e., Humanity 1.0) in its quest to achieve such environmental goals.” Yet he goes on to argue that “whilst difficult to argue, this is not the same as saying that it is impossible, provided one is careful in the articulation of terms, most especially when dealing with such generalist words as ‘transhumanist’ and ‘Islam’.” (p. 4). |
14 | For a recent articulation of what amounts to an assimilationist Muslim perspective on Transhumanism based upon rather objectivist and materially reductive reinterpretations of the human body and an adaptationist reading of the idea of balance (mizān) within Islamic tradition which fails to consider the external drivers of such adaptation as located in Western political hegemony (albeit under contestation), see (Hijazi 2019). |
15 | In addition, even if it is conceded that Transhumanism has religious undercurrents and underpinnings, to suggest that this allows for Islam to be put into conversation with Transhumanism turns about an understanding of Islam that renders it legible in the terms of such religious undercurrents and underpinnings—specifically, those due to strands of Jewish and Christian belief and practice. |
16 | The relationship of transcendence to ascension within a metaphysical/onto-theological hierarchy is significant since Ferrero (2022) maintains that Transhumanism results in a flattening collapse of such hierarchy; as she states, “what lies behind transhumanism is … a reductionism that dissolves the high into the low, the superior into the inferior, reality into materiality.” (p. 220). |
17 | Political theology can be—and has been—understood in various ways. For present purposes, one useful point of departure is provided by Reichel (2021) who invites us to think about how “the theological conceptualizes higher powers engendering, conditioning, and affecting our reality as a whole, while the political deals with rivalling claims and contestations of power within the creaturely realm, and devises norms, structures, and institutions to negotiate them [emphases added].” (p. 3). On her view, the political “is not the theological, and the theological is not the political. But clearly, the theological is political, and the political is theological.” (p. 4). Crucially, in the context of discussing German jurist and legal theorist Carl Schmitt’s formulation of political theology in terms of sovereignty, Reichel asserts the following: “since sovereignty invariably gestures toward ultimate dimensions, it not only prompted struggle between different conceptualizations of ‘superhuman power,’ but also struggle for supremacy between the respective ultimate authorities of the two participant fields [emphases added].” (p. 6). Although this struggle is framed in conceptual terms and within the context of a particular tradition, viz. Western Christianity, I suggest it invites thinking about theopolitical struggle otherwise—more specifically, in decolonial and critical race theoretical terms—and hence the relevance, if not appositeness, of shifting frame from theology to political theology. |
18 | According to Lloyd (2013), “race and religion are thoroughly entangled, perhaps starting with a shared point of origin in modernity, or in the colonial encounter [such that] religion and race is not just another token of the type ‘religion and,’ not just one approach to the study of religion among many. Rather, every study of religion would need to be a study of religion and race.” (p. 80). |
19 | According to Badmington (2003), “there is nothing more terrifying than a posthumanism that claims to be terminating ‘Man’ while actually extending ‘his’ term in office.” (p. 16). I suggest the same applies in respect of Transhumanism. |
20 | In addition, there is the matter of contracting religion into and onto belief as contrasted with, for example, embodied practice. A much larger concern relates to the historical function of religion as a category originating in Western colonial modernity by means of which to domesticate and assimilate ‘Other’-ed traditions. |
21 | Other derivative values include a commitment to ‘Peace’ which says nothing about a commitment to justice including compensation and reparations for the legacy effects of European colonialism in relation to the formation of the modern/colonial world system. |
22 | |
23 | Following Ahmed (2016), Jackson maintains that “by seeing Islam as prescriptive, as governed primarily by the law, we are seeing Islam as nothing more than law, denying the importance of the discursive tradition of theology, philosophy, poetry, and so on, as important sources of authority.” (p. 28). While Ahmed and Jackson are right to draw attention to the importance of that which is other than the nomic, they are wrong to presume some sort of oppositional dichotomy between the nomic and this other, rather than viewing them as a cluster of entangled formations. In short, this is a rather reductive framing of their relationship, suggesting that a commitment to the law entails a negation (‘denial’) of the Islamic(ate) discursive theological tradition which is demonstrably false. According to Jackson, “the fear that many Muslims have of breaking away from the shackles of prescribed law, given its authority from the Qur’an and—almost on an equal level—the hadith, prevents Islam from contributing anything dynamic and creative to the transhumanist table.” (p. 32). It is interesting to note here Jackson’s invocation of fear rather than reverence and/or deference in relation to The Qur’an, not to mention his rather reductive understanding of ‘The Law’ as shackling rather than enabling; for a rather different reading of the shari’a as engaged through fiqh with the latter seen as pluralistic, decentralised and empowering, see (Abou El Fadl 2001; Winkel 1997) among other works. |
24 | On this point, see (Winkel 1997; Chodkiewicz 1993). |
25 | According to Jackson, “there are other forms of Islam that, certainly prior to the mid-nineteenth century, were dominant in the Islamic world and, when these are considered in modern light, also show that secular transhumanists need not be so distrustful and suspicious [of religious tradition].” (p. 5). What is this modern light if not the lens of modernity, moreover a modernity that is genealogically entangled with European colonialism, and both with an accelerating technocentrism? For Jackson, “the very act of attempting to give Islam a specific and concrete definition, inevitably results in the objectification of the religion, which, in turn, results in a resistance to hermeneutical engagement with the primary religious source, the Qur’an in particular.” (p. 69). Granted, yet advocating the same sort of creative hermeneutic engagement that took place in the pre-colonial Islamicate in a post-colonial world marked by the persistence of colonial logics of domination and racialised capitalism is arguably to fail to appreciate radically changed conditions (from dominance/‘izza and autonomy to subjugation/zilla and heteronomy) as well as to fail to establish an order of priority in terms of existential threat. |
26 | According to Jackson, “while modernists such as Mawdudi may believe that they are asserting Islamic identity independent of western rational thought, they are, in reality, doing the exact opposite: they are rationalising a religion and submerging its more explorative, individual, subjective, mystical, and existential aspects.” (p. 77). This is because, “the Islamic modernists looked to treat Islam as one fixed ideological identity so as to be more robust in challenging antithetical ideologies, and, therefore, refuting the existing rich Islamic tradition of jurisprudence, philosophy, and the spiritual/mystical aspect, to be replaced with a more direct exegesis of the primary religious sources.” (pp. 70–71). It is ironic to note positive reference being made to jurisprudence here given Jackson’s earlier appeal to Shahab Ahmed as a resource for getting beyond the structures of Islamic ‘legalism’. |
27 | In an earlier work, Jackson (2007) explores the relationship between Nietzsche and Islam, including the influence of Nietzschean thinking on Iqbal. While repeated attempts have been made by proponents of Transhumanism at assimilating Nietzsche to this movement given a shared commitment to eugenics and ostensible similarities between the figure of the Overman/Superman and that of the Trans-/Post-human, it is highly questionable whether Iqbal would endorse the technocentric orientation of the transhumanist project. |
28 | It should be noted that fanā/annihilation (and its complement baqā/subsistence) in Sufism are not construed in technological terms which raises the question as to the basis for Jackson’s asserting the analogy. In short, to what extent is Sufism—and the Islamicate more broadly—being assimilated to Transhumanism? |
29 | |
30 | This reduction and ‘bracketing’ of Bergsonian and Whiteheadian currents informing Iqbal’s project is significant insofar as commentators have pointed to certain similarities between Whiteheadian process metaphysics—which is both atomistic and occasionalist—and earlier precedents within pre-modern/pre-colonial Islamicate metaphysics including the atomistic occasionalism of al-Bāqillānī, al-Ghazālī (Bakar 1991), and its later development by ibn al-‘Arabi (Alpyagil 2012). Regarding the latter, in his classic work, The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam (1971), Iqbal (1971) insists that Ash’ariyy ‘atomism’—which was later developed by ibn al-‘Arabi into a theo-cosmology based on creative pulsating cycles of Divine Breath (exhalation and inhalation)—is authentically Islamic in the sense of being an ‘indigenous’ contribution of Islamicate thought, yet one that has tended to be assimilated to Buddhism (pp. 67–68). |
31 | For Jackson, “this is all-important in respect of the transhumanist debate because Iqbal’s Perfect Being (importantly it is a trope that can be found in other Islamic thought, notably that of Rumi’s Mard-e-Haqq) and Nietzsche’s Übermensch (which greatly influenced Iqbal’s thought) are paradigms of human transformation towards a ‘better human’ … In the case of both Nietzsche and Iqbal, the self is seen in this fluctuating, fluid, and changing manner. There is an existential quality to the extent that the Self is always in a process of becoming, for to ‘be’ is to cease to be creative and cease to challenge and create.” (p. 7). Agreed, yet what has this to do with technological transformation of the human via convergent GRIN/NBICS technologies? |
32 | In short, what if this is a dangerous and violent misreading of Iqbal (and Nietzsche) which completely fails to foreground the technocentrism of Transhumanism and the non-technological nature of the Iqbalian worldview? |
33 | According to Jackson, “the human will become the cyborg and, in time, the posthuman. There may well be some humans who are ‘left behind’ or, indeed, prefer to reject this intentional evolution in the same way people today would rather live ‘off-grid’, but I suspect these numbers will be small because they will be effectively signing their death warrant, whether due to death by natural old age, or because the earth’s environment has been altered so much that it is impossible for humans to survive, or that their offspring would prefer to live, quite possibly, forever. This may all seem science fiction, but much of this genre in the past has now become a reality, and we would be intellectually blind to not seriously consider the implications of these technological advances for future generations.” (pp. 174–75). |
34 | See (Grove 2019) for an extended historical and geographical argument as to why the Anthropocene should be understood as the Eurocene on account of the ecological violence perpetrated by European imperialism, colonialism, and racial capitalism. |
35 | Jackson maintains that “if God possesses the attributes of immortality, perfection, and so on, then so can the human.” (p. 163) However, I would suggest that this is a distorted understanding of Sufism insofar as those Sufis who embrace the notion of insān al-Kamil understand the latter as necessarily marked by finitude. In short, it refers to perfection of the human as human, all too human, not as Transhuman, and certainly not on strict ontological parity with The Divine. Ironically, Jackson appears to concede this in appealing to Iqbal’s notion of khudi when he states that “to transcend our ‘selves’ is what it means to be human, but it is a constrained transcendence to the extent that it brings out what is best in our nature, like the perfume of the musk [emphasis added].” (p. 169). |
36 | |
37 | Briefly, in relation to the difference between rationality and the intellect, it is not merely a matter of naming—that is, of different signifiers—but rather of different meanings—that is, signifieds—where rationality operates in the context of ‘Man’ along mathematical lines, occupying what might be described as the ‘God-spot’ under a collapse of the onto-theological ‘Great Chain of Being’ in contrast to the intellect which assumes the chain as intact. As Ferrero (2022) states, “Man … has the function of a mediator between Heaven and Earth. As evident from his vertical position, he is naturally turned toward Heaven. The person must turn toward Heaven in order to contemplate eternal realities and know how to translate them into the life of this world. Man accomplishes this goal through the universal intellect superior to reason, the Spiritus.” (pp. 220–21). Following Gordon (2013), along with Mahendran (2011), the latter of whom points to the relation between (de)racing and computation, it might be argued that the Transhuman Cartesian theomimetic moment is entangled with the emergence of a theodicean grammar of race, the work of anthropic gods (Goldberg 1993) and ‘second creators’ (Jackson 2005). |
38 | Regarding the ‘god-like’ character of the human, Jackson maintains that “in terms of transhumanism and the issues Islam must face here, [Syed Hussain] Nasr’s notion of the ‘theomorphic being’, for example, is worthy of some consideration.” (p. 112). Yet to what extent does this involve a conflation of the technological superman/‘god-like’ being associated with Transhumanism and the theomorphic being of the human in Sufism? According to Jackson, “undoubtedly, visions of the Perfect Human have been presented in religion and philosophy for thousands of years, but the important objection raised by some transhumanists is that this is not transhumanism as understood in the modern, technological sense of the term, but has more to do with, for example, spiritual growth.” (p. 150). Yet he insists that even “the more ‘spiritual’ understanding of Islamic cosmology, teleology, and eschatology brings us much more within the same working arena as much of the transhumanist philosophy” (p. 152), attempting to make the case by conflating the meaning of ‘spiritual’ in Akbarian, Sadrian, and other Sufi philosophical cosmologies with the ‘informational’ sense of ‘spiritual’ associated with the Singularitarian metaphysics of figures such as Ray Kurzweil. Put simply, I suggest that a single signifier is being used in hinge fashion to forge a link between two very different orientations with a view to assimilating one orientation as a ‘regional dialect’ within the ‘language game’ established by the other. |
39 | On this point, see (Ali 2019a). |
40 | As argued in an earlier work (Ali 2019a), a variant of the clash thesis is sustainable once re-interpreted in terms of sedimented historical ontology rather than cosmology. |
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Ali, S.M. Muslim, Not Supermuslim: A Critique of Islamicate Transhumanism. Religions 2024, 15, 975. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080975
Ali SM. Muslim, Not Supermuslim: A Critique of Islamicate Transhumanism. Religions. 2024; 15(8):975. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080975
Chicago/Turabian StyleAli, Syed Mustafa. 2024. "Muslim, Not Supermuslim: A Critique of Islamicate Transhumanism" Religions 15, no. 8: 975. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080975
APA StyleAli, S. M. (2024). Muslim, Not Supermuslim: A Critique of Islamicate Transhumanism. Religions, 15(8), 975. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080975