Select schools to compare:

Clear all
Attribute #47 Sufism / Wahdat al-Wujud
Ibn Arabi, Rumi, Al-Qunawi
Time · Extent Infinite
Time · Ontological Status Emergent
Time · Grain Continuous
Time · Freedom Deterministic
Time · Traversability Linear
Time · Dimensionality One
Time · Direction Uni-directional
Space · Extent Finite
Space · Ontological Status Emergent
Space · Curvature Undefined
Space · Dimensionality Three
Space · Locality Non-local
Matter · Extent Finite
Matter · Ontological Status Emergent
Matter · Conservation Non-conserved
Matter · Dimensionality Three
Matter · Locality Non-local
Observer · Time Instance Multiple
Observer · Space Instance Multiple
Observer · Knowledge Extent Total
Observer · Knowledge Retainment Total
Observer · Physicality Both
Observer · Agency Passive
Observer · Number Singular
Energy · Extent Finite
Energy · Ontological Status Emergent
Energy · Conservation Non-conserved
Energy · Dispersibility Irreversible
Information · Ontological Status Emergent
Information · Conservation Conserved
Information · Granularity Continuous
Observer Analysis (Full Text)
Sufism / Wahdat al-Wujud At the deepest level, there is only one true observer — God, the sole reality (al-Haqq), whose Being is the substance of everything that appears to exist. The individual observer is a mirror reflecting the divine light, not an independent entity. Through mystical practice and annihilation of the ego (fana), the Sufi realizes that the apparent multiplicity of observers is an illusion; all seeing is God's seeing, all knowing is God's knowing. The observer transcends ordinary spatial and temporal limits — mystic experience dissolves the boundaries of here and now. Total knowledge is accessible because the mystic participates in divine omniscience, and this realized knowledge is permanently retained as spiritual transformation. The observer is both embodied and more than embodied — the body is a vessel for divine self-disclosure.