Editorial
Psychology is the study of human behavior in its observable and unobservable dimensions. It is important to study psychology in order to understand human actions and their relations to various aspects of human life. From an Islamic standpoint, human behavior is distinctive from other animate and in...
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Formato: | article |
Lenguaje: | EN |
Publicado: |
International Institute of Islamic Thought
1998
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Acceso en línea: | https://doaj.org/article/6693d882ae3344ae8bbf89ed42571867 |
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Sumario: | Psychology is the study of human behavior in its observable and unobservable
dimensions. It is important to study psychology in order to understand
human actions and their relations to various aspects of human life.
From an Islamic standpoint, human behavior is distinctive from other
animate and inanimate beings, because it is based on a conscious response
to divine commandments. Human behavior in this sense is subject of revelation.
Revelation addresses humans to behave intentionally towards the
realization of Allah’s commandments in their lives. Revelation, human
behavior and human life are the three main components of the religious
phenomenon which is an intrinsic reality in human psyche and social reality
of all nations in human history.
Psychology is an old science. It is a response to Man’s existential anxiety
which is as old as human consciousness. Man has been indulging in psychological
analysis since he started trying to understand himself, his behavior,
his emotions, his thinking and learning process, etc. In the West, psychology
was a part of philosophy. But since the early twentieth century
when it became the last field to breakaway from philosophy, it has become
a separate discipline, enjoying the status of science. In the Islamic history
of knowledge, education of the self and of others was based on well developed
psychological principles such as motivation (internal and external),
gradual change, and individual differences. The study of human behavior
was also the subject of many Muslim scholars in their attempts to elevate
the personality of individual Muslims from Islam to Iman and to Ihsan; and
to avoid the various sicknesses of the heart. This subject was also of a major
concern to the Sufis. Al Ghazali for example developed the science of
behavior “Ilm al-Suluk”. His book Al-Ihia has long chapters on various
psychological phenomena using a systematic methodology. A1 Ghazali
would typically choose a particular psychological problem, study it,
describe it, analyze it, compare it with other problems, advance a diagnosis
and then prescribe ways to deal with the problem ...
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