
What Happens When a Genius Doubts Everything?
Al-Ghazali held the most prestigious teaching position in the Islamic world when, in 1095, his voice failed him and his body rejected food. Having mastered theology, law, and philosophy, he confronted a devastating question: did he actually know anything, or had he spent his life performing knowledge for the sake of fame? This three-hour exploration follows his journey from orphan in Persia to the summit of medieval Baghdad, through his systematic dismantling of the rationalist tradition in The Incoherence of the Philosophers, his complete psychological collapse, and eleven years of wandering through Damascus, Jerusalem, and Mecca as a humble seeker. His critique of causality anticipated David Hume by six centuries, and his Revival of the Religious Sciences transformed how millions practice their faith. Al-Ghazali asked whether reason alone could lead to truth, and his answer changed two civilizations.



