Rumi's concept of fana (self-dissolution) offers atheism a path to transcendent experience without supernatural claims.
In Sufi practice, fana represents the dissolution of ego-boundaries in union with the divine. Rumi describes this annihilation not as death but as radical liberation—the self unmade and remade in relationship. Atheist philosophy can reclaim this without mysticism: secular transcendence emerges through genuine connection, intellectual humility, and ego-dissolution before beauty, nature, or collective human struggle. When we abandon defensive certainty and surrender to mystery—not supernatural mystery but the profound unknowability of consciousness, cosmos, and other minds—we access something transcendent. This isn't faith but radical presence. Applied to atheism, fana becomes a practice of intellectual honesty: dissolving the ego's need for ultimate answers, embracing groundlessness as freedom rather than loss. The self expands through connection rather than contracting into dogma. This reframes atheism from negation to affirmation of boundless human potential.
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