鸟大大影院

Cyclical Time and Ismaili Gnosis comprises three of Henry Corbin鈥檚 (1903鈥1978) lectures on fundamental themes of classical Ismaili thought. The Ismaili tradition, a branch of Shi士i Islam, derives its identity from a unique conception of Prophethood and the Imamate, seen as manifestations on Earth of 鈥榚vents in Heaven鈥.

Thus, the notion of cyclical time in Ismaili hiero-history constitutes the main focus of the first lecture. This evokes the parallel of analogous themes in certain religions of pre-Islamic Iran, as well as in an early Christianity 鈥榯hat had long returned to the paradise of the archetypes鈥.

In the second lecture, which is a key study of Ismaili gnosis as a whole, Professor Corbin鈥檚 penetrating analysis of its docetistic background points to the dynamics of the doctrine of the Imams. The underlying concept of divine epiphany is entirely different from a doctrine of incarnation in historical time. At any one time, the Imam can be the symbol of the self, so that 鈥榟e who knows himself, knows his Lord鈥, is born spiritually and becomes part of a cosmic process of resurrection.

Against this gnostic background, the third lecture examines the possibility of concrete historical contacts between the gnostic movements of late Antiquity and early Ismailism. The author鈥檚 comparison of dominant themes in all forms of gnosticism leads to the conclusion that we are here in the presence of a 鈥榳orld religion鈥 (Weltreligion).

Editorial Note

1. Cyclical Time in Mazdaism and Ismailism
Translated by Ralph Manheim
1. Cyclical Time in Mazdaism
The Ages of the World in Zorastrian Mazdaism
The Absolute Time of Zervanism
Dramaturgical Alterations
Time as a Personal Archetype
2. Cyclical Time in Ismailism
Absolute Time and Limited Time in the Ismaili Cosmology
The Periods and Cycles of Mythohistory
Resurrection as the Horizon of the Time of 鈥淐ombat for the Angel鈥

2. Divine Epiphany and Spiritual Birth on Ismailian Gnosis
Translated by Ralph Manheim
1. The Metamorphoses of Theophanic Visions
2. Ebionite and Ismailian Adamology
3. Hierarchies and Cycles: The Fundamental Angeleology of Ismailism
4. Imamology and Docetism
5. The Eternal Imam
6. The 鈥楺uest of the Imam鈥

3. From the Gnosis of Antiquity to Ismaili Gnosis
Translated by James W. Morris

Subject Index
Index of Authors and Titles

After long periods spent in Turkey, Syria, the Lebanon, Egypt and above all in Iran, from 1954 until 1974, Henry Corbin held the position of 鈥榙irecteur d鈥櫭﹖udes鈥 at the 脡cole Pratique des Hautes 脡tudes (Ve section), being the successor of Louis Massignon. In Tehran, during these same years, he organized the Department of Iranology of the Franco-Iranian Institute. There, he established and directed the 鈥楤iblioth猫que Iranienne鈥, an important collection of editions of original Persian and Arabic texts together with analytical studies.

Henry Corbin died on 7 October 1978 at the age of 75. His many publications illustrate a life spent in studies in comparative philosophy and Islamic concepts.