Philosophy in the Islamic World
Author:
Peter Adamson
Publisher: Oxford
University Press
ISBN: 9780198818618
Year: 2018
Pages: 511pp
Weight: 0. 826kg
Price: RM65.00
The latest in the series based on the popular History of
Philosophy podcast, this volume presents the first full history of philosophy
in the Islamic world for a broad readership. It takes an approach unprecedented
among introductions to this subject, by providing full coverage of Jewish and
Christian thinkers as well as Muslims, and by taking the story of philosophy
from its beginnings in the world of early Islam all the way through to the
twentieth century. Major figures like Avicenna, Averroes, and Maimonides are
covered in great detail, but the book also looks at less familiar thinkers, including
women philosophers. Attention is also given to the philosophical relevance of
Islamic theology (kalam) and mysticism—the Sufi tradition within Islam, and
Kabbalah among Jews—and to science, with chapters on disciplines like optics
and astronomy. The book is divided into three sections, with the first looking
at the first blossoming of Islamic theology and responses to the Greek
philosophical tradition in the world of Arabic learning. This 'formative
period' culminates with the work of Avicenna, the pivotal figure to whom most
later thinkers feel they must respond. The second part of the book discusses
philosophy in Muslim Spain (Andalusia), where Jewish philosophers come to the
fore, though this is also the setting for such thinkers as Averroes and Ibn
Arabi. Finally, a third section looks in unusual detail at later developments,
touching on philosophy in the Ottoman, Mughal, and Safavid empires and showing
how thinkers in the nineteenth to the twentieth century were still concerned to
respond to the ideas that had animated philosophy in the Islamic world for
centuries, while also responding to political and intellectual challenges from
the European colonial powers.