Frank Griffel
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Frank Griffel is a German scholar of Islamic studies. He is the Professor in the Study of Abrahamic Religions at the Faculty of Theology and Religion at
Oxford University The University of Oxford is a collegiate research university in Oxford, England. There is evidence of teaching as early as 1096, making it the oldest university in the English-speaking world and the second-oldest continuously operating u ...
and Fellow at
Lady Margaret Hall Lady Margaret Hall (LMH) is a constituent college of the University of Oxford in England, located on a bank of the River Cherwell at Norham Gardens in north Oxford and adjacent to the University Parks. The college is more formally known under ...
. Until 2024 he was the Louis M. Rabinowitz Professor of Religious Studies at
Yale University Yale University is a Private university, private Ivy League research university in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. Founded in 1701, Yale is the List of Colonial Colleges, third-oldest institution of higher education in the United Stat ...
, where he is still an emeritus professor.


Biography

Griffel earned his PhD in 1999 from the
Free University of Berlin The Free University of Berlin (, often abbreviated as FU Berlin or simply FU) is a public university, public research university in Berlin, Germany. It was founded in West Berlin in 1948 with American support during the early Cold War period a ...
, Germany, after studying philosophy,
Arabic literature Arabic literature ( / ALA-LC: ''al-Adab al-‘Arabī'') is the writing, both as prose and poetry, produced by writers in the Arabic language. The Arabic word used for literature is ''Adab (Islam), Adab'', which comes from a meaning of etiquett ...
, and
Islamic studies Islamic studies is the academic study of Islam, which is analogous to related fields such as Jewish studies and Quranic studies. Islamic studies seeks to understand the past and the potential future of the Islamic world. In this multidiscipli ...
at universities in
Göttingen Göttingen (, ; ; ) is a college town, university city in Lower Saxony, central Germany, the Capital (political), capital of Göttingen (district), the eponymous district. The River Leine runs through it. According to the 2022 German census, t ...
,
Damascus Damascus ( , ; ) is the capital and List of largest cities in the Levant region by population, largest city of Syria. It is the oldest capital in the world and, according to some, the fourth Holiest sites in Islam, holiest city in Islam. Kno ...
, and
Berlin Berlin ( ; ) is the Capital of Germany, capital and largest city of Germany, by both area and List of cities in Germany by population, population. With 3.7 million inhabitants, it has the List of cities in the European Union by population withi ...
. From 1999 to 2000, he was a research fellow at the Orient Institute of the
Deutsche Morgenländische Gesellschaft The (, ''German Oriental Society''), abbreviated DMG, is a scholarly organization dedicated to Oriental studies, that is, to the study of the languages and cultures of the Near East and the Far East, the broader Orient, Asia, Oceania, and Afric ...
(''German Oriental Society'') in Beirut, Lebanon. He joined
Yale University Yale University is a Private university, private Ivy League research university in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. Founded in 1701, Yale is the List of Colonial Colleges, third-oldest institution of higher education in the United Stat ...
in 2000 as an assistant professor, where he taught Islamic intellectual history, ancient and modern theology and philosophy, and how Islamic intellectuals respond to Western modernity. In 2008, he was promoted to full professor at Yale, and in 2021 named Louis M. Rabinowitz Professor of Religious Studies. At Yale, he chaired the Religious Studies Department 2020–2024 and was chair of the Council of Middle Eastern Studies (CMES) 2011–2017. In 2003–04 he was a member of the
Institute for Advanced Study The Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) is an independent center for theoretical research and intellectual inquiry located in Princeton, New Jersey. It has served as the academic home of internationally preeminent scholars, including Albert Ein ...
at Princeton. He was visiting professor at
LMU Munich The Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (simply University of Munich, LMU or LMU Munich; ) is a public university, public research university in Munich, Bavaria, Germany. Originally established as the University of Ingolstadt in 1472 by Duke ...
and Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Germany. In 2024 he was appointed the third Professor of the Study of the Abrahamic Religions at Oxford.


On al-Ghazālī (d. 1111)

Griffel’s first monograph study, which is based on his dissertation, is a history of the judgement of
apostasy Apostasy (; ) is the formal religious disaffiliation, disaffiliation from, abandonment of, or renunciation of a religion by a person. It can also be defined within the broader context of embracing an opinion that is contrary to one's previous re ...
(''irtidād'') in Islamic law up to al-Ghazālī. In a famous
fatwa A fatwa (; ; ; ) is a legal ruling on a point of Islamic law (sharia) given by a qualified Islamic jurist ('' faqih'') in response to a question posed by a private individual, judge or government. A jurist issuing fatwas is called a ''mufti'', ...
at the end of his book ''Tahāfut al-falāsifa'', al-Ghazālī declared that all Muslims who teach three positions that stem from the philosophical system of Ibn Sīnā (
Avicenna Ibn Sina ( – 22 June 1037), commonly known in the West as Avicenna ( ), was a preeminent philosopher and physician of the Muslim world, flourishing during the Islamic Golden Age, serving in the courts of various Iranian peoples, Iranian ...
) were apostates from Islam who can be killed. In his ''Apostasie und Toleranz im Islam'' (in German), Griffel studies the legal and theological preconditions and assumptions (“''Voraussetzungen''”) of this ''fatwā'' and adds a part where he looks at the reactions to this it in subsequent philosophical literature from the Islamic west ( Ibn Bājja, Ibn Ṭufayl and Ibn Rushd/
Averroes Ibn Rushd (14 April 112611 December 1198), archaically Latinization of names, Latinized as Averroes, was an Arab Muslim polymath and Faqīh, jurist from Al-Andalus who wrote about many subjects, including philosophy, theology, medicine, astron ...
). Griffel’s second monograph ''Al-Ghazālī’s Philosophical Theology'' (2009) was triggered by the dispute between Michael E. Marmura and Richard M. Frank (1927–2009) on al-Ghazālī’s cosmology. Up to the mid-1980s, al-Ghazālī was considered a mainstream Ashʿarite theologian with some odd and idiosyncratic teachings. In several books and articles, published between 1987 and 1994, Frank argued that al-Ghazālī was in reality a follower of Ibn Sīnā’s Aristotelian cosmology who hid his opposition to Ashʿarite theology behind a smokescreen of confusing statements that seemed to support Ashʿarism. Marmura rejected Frank’s findings and, although admitting that he expressed himself sometimes in confusing language, maintained that al-Ghazālī was a faithful Ashʿarite theologian, who taught an occasionalist cosmology in all of his works. Griffel describes ''Al-Ghazālī’s Philosophical Theology'', “as a fitting example of what G.W. Hegel called a dialectical progression. While Frank’s and Marmura’s works are the thesis and the anti-thesis (or the other way round), this book wishes to be considered a synthesis.” For Griffel, al-Ghazālī was both an occasionalist and a follower of Ibn Sīnā in his cosmology of secondary causation. In some books he teaches an occasionalist
cosmology Cosmology () is a branch of physics and metaphysics dealing with the nature of the universe, the cosmos. The term ''cosmology'' was first used in English in 1656 in Thomas Blount's ''Glossographia'', with the meaning of "a speaking of the wo ...
, in others secondary causality, following the Aristotelian model. Early on in his oeuvre (in the 17th discussion of his ''Tahāfut al-falāsifa''), al-Ghazālī decided that both cosmologies offer equally convincing explanations of how God creates. Neither revelation nor reason offers insights into how God interacts with His creation, either by means of occasionalist direct creation or through secondary causes.


On the History of Philosophy in Islam

''The Formation of Post-Classical Philosophy in Islam'' (2021) is a detailed study of the conditions for and the content of philosophical activity in the Islamic east during the 12th century, the century after al-Ghazālī’s death. Griffel stresses that in Islam there was no decline of the rational sciences and of philosophy after al-Ghazālī. The history of philosophy in Islam, however, followed different patterns and different strategies than philosophy in the West. Philosophy in Islam developed more gradually than in Europe, where fundamental conceptions were periodically revised and sometimes discarded in “scientific revolutions.” In pre-modern Islam there was a tendency toward syncretism. Different elements subsisted side by side, to the extent that during Islam’s post-classical period (after 1150) expressions of Islamic theology (''kalām''), of Aristotelian philosophy (''falsafa'' or ''ḥikma''), and Sufism would appear within one and the same thinker. Griffel interprets this as a particular kind of reaction to a philosophical impasse that in the West led to Immanuel Kant’s “antinomies of pure reason.”


On the meaning of “Salafi”

In 2015–16, Griffel engaged in a debate with Henri Lauzière about the proper understanding of the label “salafi.” Intellectual historians of Islam use this term to describe two groups of thinkers and activists. First, a group of reformers, active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, whose most influential members were
Jamal al-Din al-Afghani Sayyid Jamāl al-Dīn al-Afghānī (Pashto/), also known as Jamāl ad-Dīn Asadābādī () and commonly known as Al-Afghani (1838/1839 – 9 March 1897), was an Iranian political activist and Islamic ideologist who travelled throughout the Mus ...
,
Muhammad Abduh Muḥammad ʿAbduh (also spelled Mohammed Abduh; ; 1849 – 11 July 1905) was an Egyptian Islamic scholar, judge, and Grand Mufti of Egypt. He was a central figure of the Arab Nahḍa and Islamic Modernism in the late 19th and early 20th ce ...
and
Rashid Rida Sayyid Muhammad Rashīd Rida Al-Hussaini (; 1865 – 22 August 1935) was an Ulama, Islamic scholar, Islah, reformer, theologian and Islamic revival, revivalist. An early Salafi movement, Salafist, Rida called for the revival of hadith studies and ...
. Then, second, a group of contemporary Sunni activists who often reject any affiliation with the four schools of law (referred to as an attitude of “''lā madhhabiyya''”) and who try to establish norms of correct Islamic behavior and action by direct recourse to the sources on the Prophet Muhammad’s life, most importantly by an independent study of the
hadith Hadith is the Arabic word for a 'report' or an 'account f an event and refers to the Islamic oral tradition of anecdotes containing the purported words, actions, and the silent approvals of the Islamic prophet Muhammad or his immediate circle ...
corpus. In a 2010 article and in his subsequent 2016-book, Lauzière argues that the conflation of these two groups in one (analytical) label is a mistake, for which the French scholar of Islamic studies
Louis Massignon Louis Massignon (25 July 1883 – 31 October 1962) was a French Catholic scholar of Islam and a pioneer of Catholic-Muslim mutual understanding. He was an influential figure in the twentieth century with regard to the Catholic Church's relatio ...
is responsible. Starting in 1919 he identified al-Afghānī and ʿAbduh as leaders of the ''salafiyya.'' These two, however, never used that word and have no connection to the contemporary movement of Salafiyya, whose members reject any affiliation with them. To this, Griffel responded in 2015 that the modern usage of the Arabic word ''“salafiyya”'' indeed only starts in the first decade of the 20th century among a group of ʿAbduh’s students and that neither al-Afghānī nor ʿAbduh themselves used the term. Still, Massignon was right, Griffel argues, because both employ a strategy of reforming Islam where they aim to go back in history to an age of ''“al-salaf al-ṣāliḥ”'' (“the pious forefathers”) that was unaffected by the intellectual decline they identified with the Islamic era that immediately preceded colonial defeat. For early Salafis such as ʿAbduh, that era could include any Muslim thinker from before ca. 1200 CE. The contemporary movement that today claims the label ''“salafiyya”'' grew out of a group of Rashid Rida’s students in the 1930s. For them, ''“al-salaf al-ṣāliḥ”'' is a much smaller group, mostly limited to the Prophet Muḥammad’s companions. Both the modernizers of the late 19th century and the contemporary Salafis, however, employ the same intellectual and political strategy. They wish to go back to sources that pre-date Islam’s post-classical era, which is associated with the onset of Western hegemony. Lauzière responded to Griffel’s article, to which Griffel also wrote a response, arguing that the modern Salafis’ rejection of any kind of affiliation with ʿAbduh and his movement is not a decisive criterium and that “the historian’s task is to develop analytical criteria of what we mean by ords such as “salafī”and what kind of activism falls under than umbrella.”


Recognition

Griffel was a
Carnegie Scholar The Carnegie Corporation of New York is a philanthropic fund established by Andrew Carnegie in 1911 to support education programs across the United States, and later the world. Since its founding, the Carnegie Corporation has endowed or othe ...
in 2007 and received a Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel-Research Award of the
Humboldt Foundation The Alexander von Humboldt Foundation () is a foundation that promotes international academic cooperation between scientists and scholars from Germany and abroad. Established by the government of the Federal Republic of Germany, it is funded by t ...
in 2015. In 2021, he received the annual award of the German “Wissenschaftliche Gesellschaft für Islamische Theologie” (WGIT). His ''Al-Ghazālī’s Philosophical Theology'' received the World Prize for the Book of the Year of the Islamic Republic Iran in 2011, and his ''Formation of Post-Classical Philosophy in Islam'' the
Sheikh Zayed Book Award The Sheikh Zayed Book Award is a literary award presented yearly to writers, intellectuals, publishers whose writings and scholarly publications contributed to Arab cultural, literary and social life. The award has been described as “the Arab ...
in 2024 in the category “Arab Culture in Other Languages.”


Selected works

* ''Apostasie und Toleranz im Islam. Die Entwicklung zu al-Ġazālīs Urteil gegen die Philosophie und die Reaktionen der Philosophen''. Leiden: Brill, 2000. * ''Al-Ghazali's Philosophical Theology'', New York: Oxford University Press, 2009. * ''The Formation of Post-Classical Philosophy in Islam''. New York: Oxford University Press, 2021.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Griffel, Frank Yale University faculty Free University of Berlin alumni Living people Year of birth missing (living people)