Abstrakt: |
One of the significant issues concerning the Day of Judgment is the various positions mentioned in the verses and traditions, and theologians and philosophers are seeking a correct understanding of it with their own foundations. In the meantime, most theologians have introduced a materialistic account of the measure and state that there are measures about human practices in the Day of Judgment, weighed as light or darkness, or the scriptures in which practices are recorded. This study, while criticizing the views of theologians, does not reflect on the measure as a means for measuring human practices by extracting the philosophical principles of Mulla Sadra and dividing the measure into two types of the measure of science. In this justification, there is nothing beyond human nature. By performing good deeds, a person will gain an existential elevation and tend to ascend, and by doing evil deeds, he will degrade and tend to descend. The desire of the soul in one direction is construed as the measure, and the heaviness and lightness of the measure is also interpreted as the tendency to ascend or descend. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |