"Man, in the traditional sense of the term corresponding to insan in Arabic or homo in Greek and not solely the male, is seen in Islam not as a sinful being to whom the message of Heaven is sent to heal the wound of the original sin, but as a being who still carries his primordial nature (al-fitrah) within himself, although he has forgotten that nature now buried deep under layers of negligence. As the Quran states: â[God] created man in the best of stature (ahsan altaqwim)â (95:4) with an intelligence capable of knowing the One. The message of Islam is addressed to that primordial nature. It is a call for recollection, for the remembrance of a knowledge kneaded into the very substance of our being even before our coming into this world. In a famous verse that defines the relationship between human beings and God, the Quran, in referring to the precosmic existence of man, states, ââAm I not your Lord?â They said: âYes, we bear witnessââ (7:172). The âtheyâ refers to all the children of Adam, male and female, and the âyesâ confirms the affirmation of Godâs Oneness by us in our pre-eternal ontological reality. Men and women still bear the echo of this âyesâ deep down within their souls, and the call of Islam is precisely to this primordial nature, which uttered the âyesâ even before the creation of the heavens and the earth. The call of Islam therefore concerns, above all, the remembrance of a knowledge deeply embedded in our being, the confirmation of a knowledge that saves, hence the soteriological function of knowledge in Islam."
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The Essential Seyyed Hossein Nasr, (2007), p.45
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Seyyed_Hossein_Nasr
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Seyyed Hossein Nasr
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