Algorithmic Predestination and Divine Knowledge (`Ilm Allah): Causality, Human Agency, and the Closed System of Code
Xülasə
This article examines the growing influence of predictive algorithms on human cognition and behavior as a contemporary theological problem that has yet to be systematically addressed within classical Islamic intellectual frameworks.While existing scholarship on algorithmic governance largely remains confined to ethical, sociological, or secular philosophical analyses, it rarely engages Islamic theological debates on divine causality, knowledge, and human agency.Addressing this gap, the study retrieves and re-examines foundational discussions between the Ash`ari doctrine of divine determinism-articulated through the theory of kasb (acquisition)-and the Mu`tazili rationalist defense of inherent human free will (ikhtiyar), situating them within the context of algorithmic causality.The article argues that predictive algorithms, as human-made, immanent, and data-driven systems, function as a powerful yet theologically flawed analogue for deterministic worldviews.By juxtaposing the ontology of algorithmic causation with the classical attributes (sifat) of God-particularly His eternal (qadim), non-causal, and allencompassing Knowledge (`ilm)-the analysis demonstrates the categorical inadequacy of algorithmic determinism to account for divine action.The study's central contribution lies in conceptualizing algorithmic prediction as a form of "false qadar," which does not illuminate divine predestination but instead exposes its radical transcendence.