Isaac Albalag () was a Jewish philosopher and translator of the second half of the 13th century.
Albalag did not confine himself therein to the work of a translator but often corrected the views of other philosophers as formulated by Al-Ghazali, who intended to refute them himself in his later work entitled Tahafut al-Falasifa ( Incoherence of the Philosophers). Albalag remarked that Al-Ghazali did not refute the philosophers but rather his errors, into which he had fallen by obtaining information not from Aristotle himself, but from his commentators, such as Ibn Sina (Avicenna) and others. According to Albalag, this charge also applies to Maimonides when attempting to refute Aristotle, as, for instance, on the eternity of the world.
In the composition of his work, Albalag made it his main object to counteract the widespread popular prejudice that philosophy was undermining the foundation of religion. Religion and philosophy would, for Albalag, agree on the fundamental principles of all positive religion — which are: "the belief in reward and punishment, in immortality, in the existence of a just God, and Divine Providence" (which does not take into account any of previous materialistic philosophies, such as those of Diogenes or Democritus..).
Religions, as well as philosophy, follow the same aim; namely, to render mankind happy. It is, no doubt, quite true that philosophy, which addresses itself to the individual, differs in its mode of establishing those truths from religion, which appeals to the great masses. Philosophy demonstrates; religion only teaches.
In cases where an adjustment is absolutely impossible, Albalag brings forward a very strange solution; namely, that the teaching of the philosopher is true from the speculative standpoint, and at the same time the utterance of Scripture is true from a higher, supernatural point of view — the philosophical mode of knowledge being altogether different from the prophetic. And as the philosopher is only intelligible to his compeers, so the prophet can be understood only by prophets. This view resembles the theory of double truth (the theology and the philosophical), originated and chiefly developed in the 13th century at the University of Paris (Friedrich Albert Lange, Gesch. des Materialismus, 3d ed., i. 181).
Doctrinal assertions
Influences
Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography:
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