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The epistemologies of Ghazzali, Kant and the alternative: Formalism in unification of knowledge applied to the concepts of markets and sustainability

Masudul Alam Choudhury (School of Business, University College of Cape Breton, Sydney, Canada)

International Journal of Social Economics

ISSN: 0306-8293

Article publication date: 1 July 1997

1088

Abstract

Studies Ghazzali’s and Kant’s metaphysical epistemologies in comparative perspectives to bring out their consequences on the central issue of unification of knowledge. Addresses the problem posed by either of these epistemologies towards unifying knowledge. Shows the central issue of reality as a universal is to be premissed in unification, which is in turn explained to be the direct function of interaction and creative evolution from lower to higher levels of certainty. Shows the unification epistemology to be uniquely premissed in the Qur’anic roots of Oneness of God. Explains this concept substantively in analytical terms. Thus the concept of unification of knowledge means the circular continuity by evolution of the interactions and integration that occur by linkages between the purely a priori and the purely a posteriori domains. This is also meant to convey the phenomenon of epistemic‐ontic continuity of the process towards comprehension and the resulting materiality of forms that subsequently reinforce newer levels of comprehensions. Unification takes place in the plane of such interlinkages, complementarity and convergence or integration. Invokes the problem of unification of knowledge in the contrasting modes of all the three cases, namely Ghazzali, Kant and the unification epistemology, to address the issues of moral market transformation taken up in the midst of human sustainability. Discusses some contemporary issues relating to globalization, economic interlinkages and evolution for world development, in light of the topic of moral market transformation and sustainability. Studies both of these analytically in the unification epistemology paradigm in contrast to the consequences implicative of Ghazzali’s and Kant’s epistemologies.

Keywords

Citation

Alam Choudhury, M. (1997), "The epistemologies of Ghazzali, Kant and the alternative: Formalism in unification of knowledge applied to the concepts of markets and sustainability", International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 24 No. 7/8/9, pp. 918-940. https://doi.org/10.1108/03068299710178946

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1997, MCB UP Limited

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