Ibn Arabi (Muhyi al-Din ibn al-Arabi)
Wahdat al-wujud — the Unity of Being: all existence is a theophany of the one divine Real
Muhyi al-Din ibn al-Arabi, known as al-Shaykh al-Akbar (the Greatest Sheikh), was born in Murcia in al-Andalus and spent his later life in the eastern Islamic lands, dying in Damascus. He is the most influential theorist of Sufi metaphysics and one of the most prolific authors in Islamic intellectual history, credited with over 350 works. His two masterworks are al-Futuhat al-Makkiyya (The Meccan Revelations), a vast encyclopaedia of esoteric knowledge composed over decades, and Fusus al-Hikam (The Bezels of Wisdom, 1229), a concentrated metaphysical treatise presenting the wisdom embodied in twenty-seven prophets from Adam to Muhammad. The doctrine most associated with his school — wahdat al-wujud (the Unity of Being) — holds that all existence is a self-disclosure (tajalli) of the one divine Reality (al-Haqq), and that the multiplicity of the world is the differentiation of the divine names and attributes. This doctrine was contested by Ibn Taymiyya and the literalist tradition but became the dominant metaphysical framework of later Sufism, Persian poetry, and Ottoman intellectual culture.
Key works
Declared Influences
Sufism / Wahdat al-Wujud 40%
Neo-Platonism 25%
Islamic Philosophy / Falsafa 20%
Mysticism 10%
Advaita Vedanta 5%
Ibn Arabi is the founding theorist of wahdat al-wujud, the Unity of Being: all existence is the self-disclosure of the one divine Real. This doctrine became the dominant metaphysical framework of Sufi thought.
"There is nothing in existence (wujud) except God." (Fusus al-Hikam, chapter on Adam, paraphrasing)
The emanationist structure of Ibn Arabi's metaphysics — the One disclosing itself through successive levels of manifestation — is deeply Neoplatonist, mediated through the Arabic Plotinus (Theology of Aristotle) and the Ismaili tradition.
The hierarchy of divine self-disclosure (tajalli) from the Hidden Treasure through the divine names to the manifest world parallels the Plotinian procession from the One.
Ibn Arabi engaged with the falsafa tradition (Avicenna, the Aristotelian commentary tradition) even as he criticised the limitations of discursive reason. His metaphysical vocabulary draws on both Sufi and falsafa terminology.
The Fusus al-Hikam employs Avicennan categories of necessary and contingent existence alongside Sufi illuminative concepts.
Ibn Arabi's method is ultimately mystical — kashf (unveiling) rather than discursive reasoning. He claims that the Fusus was received in a vision from the Prophet Muhammad.
"I saw the Prophet in a vision... and he gave me this book and told me to take it out to the people." (Fusus al-Hikam, preface, paraphrasing)
A structural affinity noted by modern comparativists: wahdat al-wujud and Advaita Vedanta both hold that multiplicity is ultimately grounded in a single non-dual Reality, though the theological frameworks differ.
Comparativists (Izutsu, Shah-Kazemi) have documented extensive parallels between the Akbarian and Shankarite metaphysical systems.
Internal Tensions
Ibn Arabi's wahdat al-wujud was fiercely attacked by Ibn Taymiyya and the Hanbali tradition as tantamount to pantheism and the denial of the Creator-creature distinction. The Akbarian school responds that wahdat al-wujud is not pantheism but panentheism: God is not identical with the world but is the only true existent of which the world is a theophany. His claim to visionary authority sits uneasily with both rationalist philosophy and literalist jurisprudence. His enormous influence on Persian, Turkish, and South Asian Islam coexists with his contested status in Sunni orthodoxy.
I. Time
Both — the eternal divine self-knowledge and the temporal unfolding of creation. Time is emergent from the divine self-disclosure; at the deepest level, the "eternal now" of God's self-knowledge is non-directional. The cosmos is renewed at every instant (tajaddud al-khalq).
Attributes
II. Space
Infinite, emergent, non-local. Space is a theophany: the loci of manifestation (mazahir) are the sites where the divine names appear, but the underlying Reality is not spatially bounded.
Attributes
III. Matter
Emergent and variable: the material world is the densest level of divine self-disclosure, continuously renewed. "New creation at every breath" implies that matter is not independently conserved.
Attributes
IV. Observer
The Perfect Human (al-insan al-kamil) is the supreme observer — the mirror in which God contemplates His own names. Passive in the sense that knowledge comes through unveiling (kashf) rather than discursive effort. Singular: the divine Real is the ultimate observer.
Attributes
V. Energy
Infinite, emergent, reversible. The divine creative energy (fayd) flows continuously; the cosmos is sustained by perpetual divine self-disclosure, not by conserved material forces.
Attributes
VI. Information
Conserved in the divine knowledge ('ilm ilahi). The divine names constitute an infinite information-space whose self-disclosure is the cosmos. Personal identity is conserved in the divine knowing.
Attributes
Classified works
Works in the atlas that Ibn Arabi (Muhyi al-Din ibn al-Arabi) authored or that draw on this persona's writings, with full attribute fingerprints of their own.
Computed school proximity
The persona's attribute fingerprint scored against all 202 schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated influences above.
Philosophical neighbors
Other personas whose attribute fingerprint sits closest to Ibn Arabi (Muhyi al-Din ibn al-Arabi)'s — intellectual neighbors across traditions and eras.
How Ibn Arabi (Muhyi al-Din ibn al-Arabi) resolves each dilemma
53 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 35 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 4 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
6 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas · 4 distinctive
What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.
31 mainstream positions
Information · 4 dilemmas · 4 distinctive
Pattern, memory, and what is preserved or lost.
Films Referencing This Persona (4)
Either directly referenced in the film, or reading the film through one of this persona's top schools.
Experiments Engaging This Persona's Schools
Surface via influence-schools that respond to the experiment. Each entry shows the school through which the connection runs.