Hadi Sabzavari
Hadi Sabzavari | |
|---|---|
A picture of Molla Hadi which represents the actual oldest picture of an Islamic philosopher | |
| Born | 1797 |
| Died | 1873 |
| Other names | Sharaf al-Mulk, Hujjat al-Haq, Sheikh al-Rayees |
| Academic background | |
| Influences | The Quran, Mulla Sadra, Nasir al-Din al-Tusi, Ibn Arabi, Avicenna, Shahab al-Din Suhrawardi, Rumi |
| Academic work | |
| Era | 19th century |
| School or tradition | Shia Islam, Transcendent theosophy |
| Main interests | philosophy, theology, kalam, logic, Persian literature, science |
| Notable works | Asrar al-hikam ("The Secrets of Wisdom"), Sharh-i manzumah ("A Treatise on Logic in Verse"), |
| Influenced | 20th century Islamic philosophy, Henry Corbin, Hossein Nasr |
Hadi Sabzavari (Persian: ملا هادی سبزواری) or Hajj Molla Hadi Sabzavari (1797–1873 CE / 1212 - 1289 AH) was an Iranian Shia cleric, philosopher, mystic theologian and poet.