Mohammad Fadel is Professor of Law at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law, where he has taught since 2006. He earned his PhD from the University of Chicago, writing a dissertation on legal process in medieval Islamic law, and received his JD from the University of Virginia School of Law. Prior to entering academia, Professor Fadel was admitted to the New York Bar and practiced corporate law at Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, where he worked on corporate finance transactions and securities-related regulatory investigations. He also served as a law clerk to Paul V. Niemeyer and Anthony A. Alaimo. Professor Fadel’s scholarship focuses on Islamic legal history, Islamic law, and the relationship between Islam and liberalism. He has published widely on these subjects and is recognized as a leading scholar at the intersection of Islamic law, legal theory, and contemporary political thought.

Seyyed Hossein Nasr is one of the world’s foremost authorities on Islamic intellectual and spiritual history. The first non-Western philosopher to give the Gifford Lectures, he has devoted sixty years to the recovery and transmission of the Islamic intellectual tradition. At Tokat, he teaches what cannot be found in any other living classroom.
Seyyed Hossein Nasr was born in Tehran in 1933 and educated in the United States, completing a doctorate in the history of science and learning at Harvard in 1958. He returned to Iran to teach at the University of Tehran and became president of the Iranian Academy of Philosophy before leaving the country in 1979.
Nasr’s scholarship spans Islamic philosophy, cosmology, and the history of science — but at its centre is a sustained argument that the Islamic intellectual tradition offers a coherent and living alternative to the dominant assumptions of modern Western thought.
He has written more than fifty books — among them Ideals and Realities of Islam, Knowledge and the Sacred, and Islamic Philosophy from its Origin to the Present. He is one of the few living scholars whose work belongs simultaneously to philosophy, religious studies, and the history of science.
At Tokat, Professor Nasr teaches what cannot be transmitted through books alone: the questions, the method of approach, and the felt sense of what Islamic metaphysics is asking.
An eight-week inquiry into being, knowledge, and existence as understood through the Islamic intellectual tradition — from Ibn Sina and Mulla Sadra to the living present. Not a survey. A sustained encounter with the deepest questions the tradition has asked.
An eight-week inquiry into being, knowledge, and existence as understood through the Islamic intellectual tradition. Not a survey. A sustained encounter with the deepest questions the tradition has asked.
An eight-week inquiry into being, knowledge, and existence as understood through the Islamic intellectual tradition. Not a survey. A sustained encounter with the deepest questions the tradition has asked.
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Become an AssociateThis archive is available to Associate members. Scholar Notes, Deep Dives, and the full lecture library — included at $99 / year.
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