Yūsuf al-Baṣīr

d. ca. 1040

Abū Ya‘qūb Yūsuf ibn Ibrāhīm al-Baṣīr, in Hebrew, Joseph ben Abraham ha-Ro’eh, was a Karaite theologian who hailed from Iraq or Persia. Called al-Baṣīr (“the seer”) either because he was blind or as an honorific, he wrote in the fields of law and theology, the latter from the perspective of Basran kalām. Al-Baṣīr came under the influence of the Muslim theologian ‘Abd al-Jabbār (d. 1024/5) and maintained contact with Samuel ben Ḥofni Ga’on (d. 1034), whom he met in Baghdad. Around the year 1000, al-Baṣīr moved to Jerusalem, where there was a center of Karaite learning, and established himself as a teacher of the next generation of important Karaite scholars. The All-Encompassing Book and The Book of Distinction are both representative of the kalām-infused Karaite theology of his day.

Content by Yūsuf al-Baṣīr

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The Book of Distinction

Kitāb al-tamyīz (The Book of Distinction), Introduction
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Blessed be God, the God of Israel, the One and Only, the Eternal, who ceases neither to exist, nor to be worshiped, the Everlasting, the Enduring, the First without beginning, and the Last without…

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The All-Encompassing Book

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We define substance as “existing [or being]” in this sense: that it is found in a point of space. This means that one knows the difference between its being to the right or its being to the left, and…