ভূমিকা
Shiavault - a Vault of Shia Islamic Books Islamic Correspondence Course (book 1) Lesson 4 : More About God 1. The Eternal Need for God Examine the following examples, and then you will realize the extent to which the creatures of this world show the presence of a Creator. How do those who construct airplanes work together to produce a plane?
These specialized engineers assemble the body sections in a specific manner according to exact equations so that the plane may fly, carrying passengers and cargo. Of.course, the work of the construction engineers is to assemble the basic material according to their plans, in such a way that when their work is finished their activity ends. As for the engines, the electronic control systems, the interior setting and decor, etc., these do not depend upon the body constructors.
If we want to build a house and we are in possession of all the raw materials, is that sufficient? Surely, we need a builder and his workmen, not in order to produce the raw materials, but so as to put them together according to their craft. It is clear that we do not need the workmen for producing the materials used in the building, but that we need them only in so far as the use of these materials is concerned. In this way a house can be built from these materials.
A person who has never seen the Eiffel Tower can nevertheless construct it in his imagination in no time at all, merely from having heard about it. He can even construct it higher than it is, and imagine people climbing it. The existence of the Tower in the imagination is, as the previous two examples suggest, the work of the one who has imagined it.
The basic materials of the plan and the house were not produced by their constructors, but all the materials for the imagined Tower were made by the one who imagined it, not obtained from some place or another. That is why their size is not dependent on the quality of raw material available, and it can be made larger according to the wish of the one who imagines it. We can see that imaginary forms derive their existence from ourselves.
They remain in our minds as long as we want them to, and when we forget about them they become nothing again, and have no further existence in our imagination. From this last example, we can conclude that anything whose existence depends on the existence of something else can not be independent, and at every moment has need of the other.