SUFISM AND PSYCHIATRY

Abstract
The questions, “What is the purpose of living?” and “Why do I exist?” haunt modern Western civilization and the absence of an adequate answer to them has given rise to the “illness” of meaninglessness or anomie. Psychiatrists, themselves, are afflicted with this same illness, partly because the problem of the meaning of life is solved by a special type of perception rather than by logic — psychiatry is trapped by its commitment to rationalism. Sufism, on the other hand, is a tradition devoted to the development of the higher intuitive capacity needed to deal with this issue. By taking advantage of the special science of the Sufis, Western civilization may be able to extricate itself from its dilemma and contribute to the development of man's full capacities.