Afzal ad-Din Maragi Kashani also known as Baba Afzal was a Persianpoet and philosopher. Several dates have been suggested for his death, with the best estimate being around 1213/1214.
Life
The information on his life is scanty and few. His writing portray a disdain for officials of his time and he is said to have once been imprisoned by the local governor on trumped-up charges of practicing sorcery. His tomb located in the village Maraq, forty-two km northwest of Kashan, is still a place of pilgrimage. The best summary of Persian of what is known about Baba Afza's life and work, is written in the WorldEncyclopedia of Islam by the late ProfessorAbbas Zaryab Khoei.
Works
His most universally recognized contribution to Iranian culture lies in the field of literature. In poetry he has been considered one of the two or three greatest masters of the robāʿī, while in philosophical prose only Suhrawardi stands on the same level. Similar to Avicenna, Baba Afzal employs a great deal of Persian vocabulary where others would have used Arabic, but unlike Avicenna he chooses only attractive and mellifluous terms. His works from the viewpoint of literary tradition is a delight to read nor does he neglect to employ the corresponding Arabic terms where clarity demands them. His influence on later thinkers has not been investigated however his works which are clearly and beautifully written were probably a source of inspirtation for philosophical writings in both Arabic and Persian. For his part, he follows the philosophical and logical terminology of Avicenna while most his works evoke a visionary aura in spite of their philosophical and logical exactitude. Besides his poetry, 54 works of prose in varying length have survived.
Poetry
Around 500 quatrains are ascribed to him. Some of the themes include warnings about the futility of involvement with the things of the corporeal world, the correspondence between microcosm and macrocosm, and self-knowledge as the goal of human existence. Some of his quatrains are also recorded in the book Nozhat al-Majales. He is considered by some to be the greatest poet among the outstanding philosophers of Islam. The themes of these quatrains include warnings about the futility of involvement with the things of the corporeal world, the correspondence between microcosm and macrocosm, and autology as the goal of human existence.
ʿArż-nāma
This is considered his magnum opus. It is the longest and most complete exposition of his philosophy that brings together all topics related to the perfection of the soul. It is divided into four “displays” arranged in an ascending order according to the four kinds of things in the universe: corporeal bodies, which are acted upon ; agents or souls, which do the acting ; concepts or known things ; and knowers.
Javedan-nama
This comprehensive work is his most specifically Islamic treatment of his favorite themes; it is the only work of certain ascription to him outside the letters that quotes and comments on Quran and Hadith.
Other works
Madarej al-Kamal
Rahanjām-nāma - In three discourses this work explains self-knowledge as the road to human perfection.
Resāla dar ʿelm o noṭq
Sāz o pīrāya-ye šāhān-e pormāya
Mabādī-e mawjūdāt-e nafsānī
Āyāt al-ṣaṇʿa fi’l-kašf ʿan maṭāleb elāhīya sabʿa - Brief discussion in Arabic of the intellect, soul and the body.
Philosophy
He wrote during a period when several figures were bridging the gaps between philosophy and sufism. His major concern is to explain the salvific power of true knowledge, i.e., self-knowledge, or knowledge of the Self. His philosophy is an autology. That is: "To know oneself is to know the everlasting reality that is consciousness, and to know it is to be it.". His ontology is interconnected simultaneously with his epistemology, because according to him, full actualization of the potentialities of the universe can only take place through the self-awareness of human beings. This ontology can only be realized by the training of the human soul, or education in the widest sense of the term. His view of the structure of the reality is succinctly explained in the beginning of his work Rahanjām-nāma.
Sample Poetry
A quatrain: Suppose you run the world as you like, then what?