Abstract
Kaukua's book will appeal to two audiences: historians of Islamic philosophy and philosophers concerned with postmodern theories of the self.It begins with Avicenna's Gedankenexperiment, the flying man, "imagined created all at once and perfect … as though floating in air or a void," completely bereft of sensations. This image is the capstone of Avicenna's two-stage argument for the existence and nature of the soul. Considering the soul in relation to other things, we see it is not a body, but a form, first actuality of the body, its perfection and power, as Aristotle said. Then comes the flying man, acting as an ishârat directing us to the mâhîyya of the soul. Avicenna "will not hesitate in...