YOGYAKARTA — As debates over democracy and civic
freedoms intensify, UIN Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta convened a public discussion
on philosophy and critical thought, placing intellectual history at the center
of contemporary reflection.
The Sociology of Religion Program at the Faculty
of Ushuluddin and Islamic Thought, in collaboration with Suka Press, held a
book review of Dari Athena sampai Nusantara: Pengantar Filsafat Dunia tentang
Manusia, Nalar, Agama dan Kekuasaan by Al Makin on Thursday (Dec. 26, 2026)
at the campus convention hall.
The volume traces the trajectory of human thought
from ancient civilizations to modern Indonesia, mapping intellectual
developments from Egypt, Greece and Rome to Asia and the post–World War II
world. Written in accessible language, the book introduces major philosophical
traditions alongside Indonesian thinkers within a single historical continuum.
Speaking at the forum, Al Makin described the book
as both scholarly work and intellectual memoir. He recounts encounters with
leading figures and formative academic experiences, including attending
lectures by Jürgen Habermas and Jacques Derrida, living near the former
residence of Max Weber, and visiting sites associated with Karl Marx.
He said philosophy should be introduced earlier
in formal education, arguing that the capacity to reason belongs to all people,
beyond academic institutions.
Novelist and cultural commentator Okky Madasari
called the book significant for systematically situating global and Indonesian
thinkers within shared intellectual lineages. She noted that figures such as Socrates,
Cicero, Lao Tzu, John Locke and Habermas are presented alongside Indonesian
names including Tan Malaka, Daniel Dhakidae, Nurcholish Madjid, Abdurrahman
Wahid and Azyumardi Azra.
According to Okky, the book underscores that
intellectual traditions emerge from historical unease rather than abstraction,
and that knowledge production requires space for debate and dissent.
Philosopher Fakhrudin Faiz of UIN Sunan Kalijaga
described the work as encyclopedic in scope, noting that its breadth invites
further inquiry and continuation. He also pointed to shifting public
perceptions of philosophers — from revered sages to clerics, academics,
activists, and, increasingly, digital-era personalities.
The forum drew lecturers and students from across
faculties, reflecting sustained efforts by the university to expand public
engagement with critical scholarship as part of its academic programming.