Community & Events
Community Events
The Ḥikmah Center strives to bring people together around the common interests of reading and discussion of ideas. In order to bring students from different courses together and to incorporate the wider public, community events are held every other Saturday starting January 17th, 2026. These events are free and open to the male public, and the suggested reading for each event is optional. In-person events are held in Richardson, TX. Location details are forthcoming.
2026 Events
Saturday, January 17th,
Saturday, January 31st
Saturday, February 14th
Saturday, February 28th
Spring 2026 Course Descriptions
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Course Description
Anglophone Muslims owe a great debt to those who have translated the Qurʾān into English. Translators have fascilitated a relationship with the Qurʾān for so many Muslims and have paved the way for many to enter the faith. Nevertheless, no translation can replace the prestine, profound, and prescious Arabic of the Qurʾān. The longing to interact with the Qurʾān in the original Arabic is and will always remain a priority for Muslims for whom Arabic is a second language.
This course is intended for Muslims who know how to sound out the words of the Qurʾān while looking at the text but who do not understand the Qurʾān’s meaning. The course will, in shāʾ Allāh, introduce students to the rudiments of Arabic grammar, to common vocabulary of the Qurʾān, and to basic translation. Along with Arabic grammar, students will also be introduced to the basics of English grammar, which is necessary for precise translation and understanding.
Learning to read, understand, and translate the Qurʾān is a lifelong endeavor. The purpose of this course is to provide the most basic and fundamental concepts of Arabic language as a first step to a lasting relationship with the Qurʾān in its original language.
Course Objectives
Students, in shāʾ Allāh, will:
be familiar with the parts of speech and basic syntax of the English language,
be able to parse and English sentence,
be familiar with the parts of speech and basic syntax of Arabic,
know the most common vocabulary of the Qurʾān, and
be able to translate basic Arabic sentences from the Qurʾān.
Arabic Reading Prerequisite: see details below
Click here to download the syllabus!
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Course Description
The works of Plato offer an accessible and enjoyable way to begin thinking critically about one’s life. This course takes after Socrates’ famous saying, “The unexamined life is not worth living,” and gives participants an opportunity to reflect on such questions as, “Can someone learn to be a good person?” “What are beauty and love?” “How do we know what knowledge is?” “What is the soul?” and many, many more. Plato’s writings facilitate the exploration of these questions because they are written in the form of dialogues, with various philosophical positions being embodied by the characters of each dialogue. As we read the dialogues, we become aware of different ways of answering these fundamental questions and, by extension, different ways of approaching life.
The course uses the dialogues between Plato’s characters as a launching pad for a dialogue between students themselves. The method of this class is not a lecture but a seminar. It is an extension of the dialogue that Plato has started. After an opening question from the instructor (usually one that Plato himself is asking), students speak freely among themselves without raising their hands. Tte instructor guides the discussion through questioning and prompting students to challenge their own assumptions. There is no fixed course or conclusion to these conversations, and they often diverge and meander through other topics before returning to the original question. At best, these conversations lead to a collective realization among everyone in the group; at least, they enable students to have a deeper appreciation of the dimensions of the question.
In addition to offering students an opportunity to personally explore the fundamental questions of life, this course also familiarizes students with one of the most important philosophers of the Western and Islamic traditions (yes, both). There are few philosophers who have exercised such a decisive influence on the subsequent path of philosophy. From Stoics like Epictetus, to Christians like Aquinas, to Muslims like Fārābī, to Germans like Nietsche, Plato is and will remain an interlocutor in the philosophical conversation. Students who wish to pursue further studies in philosophy will greatly benefit from this familiarity with Plato.
Course Objectives
Students, in shāʾ Allāh, will:
have a deeper appreciation for their own views (or lack of view) on life’s most fundamental questions,
be conscious of the considerations that drive people to adopt various philosophical positions and understand the pros and cons of each position,
be able to engage in conversation about fundamental philosophical questions with compassion, sophistication, and control, and
be able to detect the philosophical perspectives underlying ideas and messages that are not explicitly philosophical.
Click here to download the syllabus!
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Course Description
Abū Ḥāmid al-Ghazālī (d.505/1111) responded to many trends and factions in his day. He spoke out against the religious externalism of the scholarly class in Baghdad, he rejected the esoteric interpretations of the bāṭiniyyah that undermined the sacred law, and he attempted to demonstrate the shaky intellectual grounding of falsafah1, a brand of peripatetic philosophy that was expounded and popularized by Abū ʿAlī Ibn Sīnā (d. 427/1037). Ghazālī wrote two works on the philosophy of Ibn Sīnā and his followers. The first is the Intentions of the Philosophers, Maqāṣid al-Falāsifah, which is a summation of their thought. The second is the Incoherence of the Philosophers, Tahāfut al-Falāsifah, in which Ghazālī argues that, on twenty issues, the falāsifah have failed to meet their own standards of philosophical demonstration. He branded the falāsifah as disbelievers on account of three of these issues.
The Incoherence went on to influence later critiques of falsafah through the works of Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī and the later kalām tradition, which essentially fused the topics of philosophy with those of kalām, as al-Taftāzānī describes at the beginning of Sharḥ al-ʿAqāʾid. The continued engagement of Muslim thinkers with the philosophy of Ibn Sīnā after Ghazālī, the fact that Ghazālī took issue with only twenty of their doctrines, and the production of post-Ghazālian commentaries on Ibn Sīnā’s works refutes the common trope that Ghazālī closed the book on peripatetic philosophy in the Islamic world.
In this guided reading course, students will have the opportunity to directly engage with the arguments of both the falāsifah and Ghazālī through a close reading of the Incoherence. Although the course is mostly instructive, students will be asked to reiterate arguments on each side, analyze them into their logical forms, and offer their own assessments of the intellectual tension between Ghazālī and the falāsifah. They are encouraged to voice their own opinions and to connect the content of the Incoherence with modern philosophical doubts.
Course Objectives
Students, in shāʿ Allāh, will:
be aware of the main areas of disagreement between the falāsifah and Ghazālī’s Ash’arism,
be able to analyze the logical structure of the arguments and counterarguments of the falāsifah and Ghazālī,
develop their own arguments for and against the views of the falāsifah and Ghazālī, and
understand the extent to which the arguments of the Incoherence remain relevant for us today.
Arabic Comprehension Prerequisite: see details below
Click here to download the syllabus!
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Course Description
Formal logic is the science that prevents us from making mistakes in our reasoning. It protects us from using vague terms, false premises, and fallacious arguments and from falling victim to these mistakes when we hear them from others. When we are tricked by fallacies, we end up harboring false and inconsistent beliefs while thinking that we know what we do not know. In order to avoid this, students of logic study the principles of valid conception, assent, and reasoning. By applying these principles to their own ideas and those of others, they are able to filter out the distracting fallacies around them and pursue the truth with clarity and validity.
Moreover, Islamic scholarly texts adhere invariably to the rules of formal logic, and they are replete with the Arabic logic terminology that students will learn in this course. A study of formal logic in Arabic is, therefore, indispensable for accessing the texts of the Islamic scholarly tradition.
This course introduces students to the Arabic logic tradition (manṭiq) through a close reading the Mirqāt of Faḍl-i Imām al-Khayrabādī (d. 1827-8). Khayrabādī was a leading scholar of the rational sciences (al-ʿulūm al-ʿaqlīyah), and his Mirqāt represents the culmination of logic primers in the Avicennan tradition. Students will learn the main terms of the Arabic tradition of formal logic in its broad division into concepts (taṣawwurāt) and propositions (taṣdīqāt). The course is mostly instructive in its approach, but students will be asked to read, translate, and reiterate concepts. As always, student participation is highly encouraged.
Course Objectives
Students, in shāʿ Allāh, will:
be able to recall the terminology, concepts, and rules of logic as described in the Arabic-Islamic tradition,
be able to create their own definitions and syllogisms and to demonstrate their formal validity through the application of logical terminology and principles,
detect, identify, and refute formal and material fallacies,
understand the ways in which an argument that is valid formally may still remain inconclusive materially, and
understand the ways in which someone may still disagree with a formally valid argument and how someone may respond to this disagreement.
Arabic Comprehension Prerequisite: see details below
Click here to download the syllabus!
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Course Description
This course is a study of selected passages from the works of the Proof of Islam Abū Ḥāmid al-Ghazālī. Ghazālī is a deep, multifaceted, and intimately relatable scholar of Islam. We will read his autobiography, the Deliverance from Error, where we will learn about Ghazālī’s own struggle with skepticism, his encounter with various Muslim groups, and his journey from confusion to comfort. We will then explore Ghazālī’s understandings of kalām in the Moderation in Belief, his spirituality in sections of the Revival of the Religious Sciences, his metaphysics in the Niche of Lights, and much more.
Unlike lectures, seminar sessions begin with a question from the instructor, followed by a group discussion. The discussion sometimes stays close to the text. Students reiterate Ghazālī’s points in their own words and come to a common understanding of the text with the help of questions from the instructor and from each other. At other times, the conversation diverges into other related matters. Students are always encouraged to voice their own ideas and to make connections between Ghazālī’s thoughts, the modern world, and their own lives.
Course Objectives
Students, in shāʿ Allāh, will:
gain insights into the Islamic world view that benefit their spiritual connection to Islam and enrich their relationship with Allāh,
discover the joy of reading Islamic literature, and the joy of reading generally,
develop a relationship with Ghazālī, his books, his approach to life as a Muslim, and the inner dimensions of his spirituality, and
be familiar with some of the main ideas that characterize Ghazālī’s thought.
Click here to download the syllabus!
Spring 2026 Course Schedule
Other Information
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The Ḥikmah Center operates on a 14-week semester basis with fall, spring, and summer semesters.
As a general rule, students are encouraged to bring physical copies of the course texts and take notes with pen and paper. Group orders of the physical texts is a possibility.
Online office hours are offered to enrolled students once a week during the semester for all who wish to attend.
Students may enroll in as many or as few courses as they please.
In order to ensure that class discussions are private and candid, no class sessions are recorded by the instructor or students. Student who miss class are invited to attend the drop-in office hours or schedule an appointment with Brother Jonah to review.
Ḥikmah Center offerings are for brothers only.
In-person classes are held at the instructor’s residence near IANT in Richardson, TX. Details are provided for those who register.
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About
Jonah Rudolph is a philosopher and lifelong learner whose intellectual interests center on philosophy, logic, theology, and classical literature. His passion is helping people think well by asking them questions that challenge them to better understand their own thoughts. He has experience tutoring Arabic grammar, translation, and textual analysis through works like the Mawqif al-ʿAql of Musṭafā Ṣabrī and the Tafsīr al-Jalālayn, as well as tutoring students reading Plato’s dialogues.
Education
Jonah graduated from the Bayyinah Dream program, a one-year Classical Arabic intensive, in 2016. He then received his ijāzah in the Islamic Sciences from the Qalam Seminary, completing the ʿĀlimīyah program in 2020. He earned a BA degree in liberal arts and Islamic studies from Zaytuna College in 2024. During and after the completion of his formal education, he has placed himself under the tutelage of ʿAlāʿ al-Dīn al-Kāsānī (d. 587/1191), Plato (d. 347 BCE), Aristotle (d. 322 BCE), Abū Ḥāmid al-Ghazālī (d. 505/1111), and many others.
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In many ways, the Ḥikmah Center is an experiment in purposeful cultural craftsmanship. Each sphere of life has its own culture—the home, the school, the workplace, the coffeeshop. The Ḥikmah Center likewise has a unique culture. Discussants at the Ḥikmah center greet each other with, “What have you been reading recently?” rather than “Did you watch the game last night?” They speak about ideas rather than people or current events. And they seek to understand each other’s interior lives through reflection and compassion.
The Ḥikmah Center uses the title “brother” for all participants, including the instructor. This is because dialectic requires all ideas to be subject to the same level of examination. Ideas receive no special treatment because they happen to be the instructor’s. In order to represent this equality, titles like ustādh, shaykh, and muftī are not used, and all simply refer to each other as “brother.” This also serves to highlight the view that intellectual and moral excellence are not handed down from teacher to student but developed through the hard work of the student.
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Attending courses at the Ḥikmah Center is more like attending a martial arts class than a movie. The movie-goer reclines and relaxes as the stimulus of the cinema washes over his senses. When courses are like movies, they become performances that students passively enjoy. In contrast, no student of martial arts expects to learn simply by watching the instructor perform the maneuvers. After a demonstration, students must get up, move, grapple, and eventually compete. The Ḥikmah Center’s pedagogy invariably focuses on student participation. Students spend as much time (preferably more time) speaking, conversing, and answering questions as they do listening to the instructor.
The martial arts analogy also applies to the Ḥikmah Center’s view on credentials and certification. The skill of a martial artist comes not from his belt but from his long years of training, for which the belt is only an approximate sign. In addition, no martial artist believes that he has completed his training, that he can relax, and that he will never lose his skill through lack of practice. Martial arts require consistent training. Likewise, the Ḥikmah Center offers no final certification; there is no “end” to the intellectual journey. Ḥikmah Center discussants continue to come and converse, sharpen their dialectical and philosophical fluency, and enjoy the company of the Ḥikmah Center’s intellectual community.
Lastly, the pedagogy of the Ḥikmah Center also resembles that of martial arts insofar as the martial artist’s worth is determined by his own skill. A pedigree of masters back to the founder of the art proves nothing if someone is a punching bag in the ring. Similarly, the Ḥikmah Center does not assign importance to scholastic pedigrees or religious chains of transmission in the absence of intellectual expertise and moral excellence as shown through dialectic and philosophical living.
The martial arts analogy does not apply, very importantly, when it comes to the spirit of competition. Only one fighter comes out of the ring a winner. Dialectic, on the other hand, is not about proving oneself better than anyone else. And philosophy, the third pillar, demands humility and eschews arrogance. The Ḥikmah Center is an inherently cooperative intellectual community.
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In order to avoid untethered institutional growth, protect the small and intimate spirit of the Ḥikmah Center, and preserve the quality of education, the Ḥikmah Center observes the following limitations.
Class sizes are limited to no more than 20 students.
The Ḥikmah Center is to have no fundraising dinners, widespread advertising, or social media presence.
The Ḥikmah Center is to provide no certification, diploma, or other qualification which may threaten students’ sincere intention to better themselves or which may, by its public recognition, undermine the instructor’s duty to educate his students.
The Ḥikmah Center is to bestow no titles, such as ustādh, shaykh, or muftī, which serve to communicate one’s learning to others but which may become ends in themselves and undermine dialectic by creating authority.
Testimonials (Fall 2025)
The Hikmah center is unlike any other educational center I’ve experienced. I wasn’t just fed information; rather, I was expected to engage and interact with the material. Because of this, I came out of class not only being able to articulate the arguments of the author, but developed my own thoughts and opinions on his arguments. Brother Jonah creates a safe environment for students to engage with the material and enhance their own understanding no matter what level they may be at.
- Sameer, student in “A Guided Reading of the Incoherence of the Philosophers”
Al-ḥamdu li-llāh, I took the seminar on the works of Ghazālī. The selections of readings we did each week were beautifully organized, and the classes built upon each other. I learned a lot about the points that Imām Ghazālī was trying to get across to his readers, and we were all able to discuss our different perspectives. The self-discipline I gained from keeping up with weekly reading helped me build discipline in other good habits. Spending time with Brother Jonah and other readers at the Ḥikmah Center (not to mention Ghazālī) helped me in my character and spirituality. Taking the course helped me to reflect on all aspects of life and to connect it with the dīn.
- Rayyan, student in “Seminar on the works of Ghazālī”