Muslim Spain has produced some of the brightest
intellectual luminaries of the Middle Ages. One of them was Ibn Rushd, better
known as Averroes in the West who is universally acknowledged as the greatest
philosopher of Islam and one of the greatest of all times. Being a versatile
genius, he influenced the course of thought both in the East and the West in
more than one domain of knowledge. According to George Sarton: `He was great
because of the tremendous stir he made in the minds of men for centuries. A
history of Averroism would include all the essential elements of a history of
thought from the end of the twelfth century to the end of the sixteenth, a
period of four centuries which would perhaps deserve as much as any other to be
called the Middle Ages, for it was the real transition between ancient and
modern methods.'
Abul Waleed Muhammad Ibn Ahmed Ibn Muhammad Ibn Rushd,
known as Averroes in the West was born in Cordova, the metropolis of Muslim
Spain in 1126. He came of an illustrious Muslim family of Cordova which held the
high office of the Grand Qazi for the last two generations, Ibn Rushd himself
occupying the same post in the third generation. His grandfather Abul Waleed
Muhammad Ibn Rushd (1058-1126) was an eminent Maliki theologian, who was the
Imam of the Grand Mosque of Cordova. His father also occupied the high office of
the Qazi. The young Ibn Rushd received his education in his native city which
was the highest seat of learning in the West. He was taught Tradition by Abul
Qasim, Abu Marwan Ibn Masarrat, Abu Jafar Ibn Aziz and Abu Abdullah Marzi. He
learnt `Fiqh' from Hafiz Abu Muhammad Ibn Rizq. Abu Jafar, a reputed scholar,
taught him medicine. Ibn Rushd, soon acquired great scholarship in literature,
law, philosophy and medicine. He was a contemporary of some of the outstanding
thinkers of Muslim Spain, including Ibn Zuhr, Ibn Baja and Ibn Tufail. Ibn
Rushd was a juris-consult of the first rank and was appointed Qazi of Seville in
1169-70. In 1182-83, he was invited by the Almohade Caliph Abu Yaqub (1163-84)
to Morocco and replaced Ibn Tufail as the Court Physician. In the beginning, he
was patronized and respected by the succeeding Almohode Caliph Yaqub Al-Mansur
(1184-99), but, when the pent-up Berber fanaticism burst forth, he fell victim
to religious fanatics who were jealous of his genius. The Caliph had to banish
him to Lucena, a Jewish colony near Cordova. His entire library consisting of
invaluable books except the scientific ones was reduced to ashes in 1194-95. In
1198, when the religious fanaticism subsided, Ibn Rushd was recalled to Morocco
by the Almohade Ruler Yaqub Al-Mansur, but he did not live long to enjoy the
favours of his patron and died on December 10th, 1198 at the age of 75.
Ibn Rushd was known for his humility and hospitality.
Being pensive by nature, he abhorred position and wealth. He passed most of his
time in study and, according to Ibn Al-Abar, during his long life there had
been only two nights when he could not study: one was the night of his marriage
and the other was the night of his death. He did not make any distinction in his
treatment towards friends and foes. He was a great lover of his native land.
Like Plato who in his "Republic" has highly praised Greece, Ibn Rushd has
claimed his native land, Spain, to be the rival of Greece. According to Ptolemy,
Greece possessed the best climate in the world, but Ibn Rushd claims the same
distinction for Cordova, the capital of Muslim Spain.
Averroes, who was considered Avicenna of the West, applied
himself to philosophy, mathematics, medicine, astronomy, logic and Islamic
jurisprudence. His works have been given to the world by Renan. `He was one of
the profoundest commentators', says Munk `of Aristotle's works'. According to
Ibn Al-Abar, his writings are spread over more than twenty thousand pages, the
most important works being on philosophy, medicine and Fiqh (Islamic
jurisprudence). He was an eminent legist of his time and worked as a Qazi for a
considerable period. His "Bidayat ul Mujtahid wa Nihayat ul Muqtasid" which
deals with the Maliki Fiqh, is, according to Abu Jafar Zahbi, the best book ever
written on this subject. Renan has given a detailed list of his writings in his
"Averroes" (3rd Ed, Pgs 58-79). The list totals 67 works of Ibn Rushd,
including 28 on philosophy, 5 on theology, 8 on law, 4 on grammar and 20 on
medicine. He was an astronomer of repute who wrote, "Kitab fi Harkat il Falak",
a treatise dealing with the motion of the sphere. He also summarized the
"Almagest" of Ptolemy which was translated into Hebrew by Jacob Anatoli in 1231.
He is credited with the discovery of sunspots.
Muslim rulers had the reputation of being the greatest
patrons of learning in the world. Writing in his well-known book "The Making of
Humanity" Robert Briffault admits: `The incorruptible treasures and delights of
intellectual culture were accounted by the princes of Baghdad, Shiraz and
Cordova, the truest and proudest pomps of their courts. But it was not a mere
appendage of their princely vanity that the wonderful growth of Islamic science
and learning was fostered by their patronage. They pursued culture with the
personal ardour of an over mastering craving. Never before and never since, on
such a scale, has the spectacle been witnessed of the ruling classes throughout
the length and breadth of a vast empire given over entirely to a frenzied
passion for the acquirement of knowledge. Learning became with them the chief
business of life. The Khalifa and the Amirs hurried from their Diwans to closet
themselves in their libraries and observatories ... Caravans laden with
manuscripts and Botanic specimens plied from Bukhara to Tigris, from Egypt to
Andulusia; embassies were sent to Constantinople and to India for the purpose of
obtaining books and teachers; a collection of Greek authors or a distinguished
mathematician was as eagerly demanded as the ransom of an Empire.' The Umayyad
Caliph of Spain, Al-Hakam had founded a magnificent library containing about
half a million books. He had accumulated a rare collection of books on Eastern
philosophy and was instrumental in creating a taste for philosophy in Spain
which in later years produced some of the greatest Muslim philosophers in the
West, including Ibn Rushd. About two centuries later, another Muslim ruler of
the West, Abdul Momin, who was himself a great scholar had drawn to his court a
galaxy of talented thinkers, including Ibn Tufail and Ibn Rushd. The learned
Averroes owed his knowledge in philosophy to Abu Jafar Haroon, a well-known
rationalist of Andulusia. But the philosophy of Ibn Baja reached its climax in
Averroes who surpassed his teacher and rose to be the greatest commentator and
exponent of Aristotelian philosophy in the world. Together with Ibn Massara and
Ibn Arabi, Ibn Rushd forms the trio of the greatest Arabian thinkers of Spain.
The first two were essentially mystic, while the third (Averroes) was a
rationalist.
His chief philosophical work is "Tahafut ul Tahafut" (The
Refutation of the Refutation), which was written in refutation of Al Ghazali's
work, "Tahafut ul Falasifa" (The Refutation of Philosophy). This work of
Averroes evoked severe criticism and stirred bitter reaction throughout the
Muslim world. A strong refutation of Ibn Rushd's arguments in "Tahafut al-Tahafut"
was made by a Turk, Mustafa Ibn Yousuf Al Bursawi, commonly known as Khwaja
Zada (d:1487-88) who wrote a third refutation. This indicated once more the
weakness of human understanding and the strength of faith. But, contrary to
Muslim reactions, the philosophical writings of Averroes produced a great impact
on Christian Europe and he still continues to be the most popular Muslim
philosopher in the West. Alfred Gillaume in his article on philosophy and
theology in his "Legacy of Islam", writes that Ibn Rushd `belongs to Europe and
European thought rather than to the East ... Averroism continued to be a living
factor in European thought until the birth of modern experimental science. Latin
is said to have preserved more than one of Ibn Rushd's works which Arabic had
lost.' His "Tahafut ul Tahafut" is essentially a reply to Al Ghazali's attack on
rationalism. His fame as a philosopher, specially in the West, both in Christian
and Jewish circles is based on his three commentaries of Aristotle's works known
as the "Jami" (Summary), the "Talkhis" (Resume) and a long "Tafsir or Sharah"
(Commentary). These commentaries were translated into Hebrew by Samuel Ibn
Tibbon in the first half of the thirteenth century, by Jacob Anatoli in 1232 and
by Michael Scott and Hermann, the German, into Latin. These translations were
later revised in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Among his other
philosophical treatises are "Kitab Fasl ul Maqal" and the "Kitab Kashf ul
Manahij", which were edited by M.J. Muller and published in Munich in 1859.
Regarding predestination, Ibn Rushd maintained that man
was `neither the absolute master of his destiny nor bound by fixed immutable
decrees, but, that the truth lay in the middle, ie al amr bain al amrain.'
`Human actions depend partly on free-will and partly on outside causes. These
causes spring from general laws of nature, God alone knows their sequence.'
According to him, man should make utmost efforts to attain perfection which
implies complete identification with the active universal intellect. This human
perfection can only be attained through study, speculation and negation of
desires specially those relating to the senses.
Ibn Rushd considered the Khilafat-i-Rashidah (The Pious
Caliphate) as the model Republic in which the dreams of Plato were realized. He
claimed women to be equal to men in all respects and possessing equal capacities
to shine in war and peace. He has cited women warriors among Greeks, Arabs and
Africans.
Ibn Rushd was the most learned commentator of Aristotelian
works and was more Aristotelian than Ibn Sina. He corrected some of the
misconceptions of Ibn Sina about the rational philosophy of Aristotle. A number
of his invaluable works perished when the Christian conquerors set fire to the
intellectual treasures of the Moors (Spanish Muslims) amassed after centuries of
intellectual activity. More than eighty thousand rare manuscripts were reduced
to ashes in Grenada alone. Muslim thinkers like Ibn Sina and Ibn Rushd
formulated their ideas with logical precision and in the latter Arabic
philosophy reached its apogee. It is all the more creditable for the learned
Averroes that he compiled his varied and invaluable works in such a distracted
state of mind and disturbed conditions.
In the beginning, philosophy was considered to be an
irreligious subject in Muslim Spain where the society was formulated on true
Islamic lines. Ishaq Ibn Umran, a physician of Baghdad was first to introduce
philosophy in Spain, which flourished thereafter, specially during the reigns of
Al Hakam and Yousuf Ibn Momin. The ideas of Ibn Rushd, were incompatible with
the religious sentiments of the orthodox Muslims and he was accused of being an
atheist. But, according to Phillip K. Hitti: `He was a rationalist and claimed
the right to submit everything save the revealed dogmas of faith to the
judgement of reason, but he was not a free thinker or unbeliever.' George Sarton
also holds similar views: `Ibn Rushd was not by any means less honest and
sincere, nor was he necessarily less pious, than the other schoolmen, but he was
more intelligent, and his deeper vision enabled him to reconcile statements
which seemed irreconcilable to others.' Ibn Rushd, being a rationalist wanted
to explain religion in the light of reason. His contemporary Abdul Kabir, a
highly religious person, describes him as a person anxious to establish harmony
between religion and philosophy. In his well-known book "Averroes and Averroism",
Renan writes: `There is nothing to prevent our supposing that Ibn Rushd was a
sincere believer in Islamism, especially when we consider how little irrational
the supernatural element in the essential dogmas of this religion is, and how
closely this religion approaches the purest Deism.'
Ibn Rushd, a versatile genius, is the author of about
twenty medical treatises including his encyclopaedic work "Kitab ul Kulliyat fit
Tibb" (General Rules of Medicine), better known as "Colliget" in Latin. This
book written before 1162 comprises seven volumes, and gives elaborate treatment
to physiology, general pathology, diagnosis, materia medica, hygiene and general
theraeutics. He considered that none suffers twice from smallpox. He also fully
understood the function of the retina. But his "Colliget" stands no comparison
to "Continents" of Rhazes and "Canon" of Avicenna. Actually his fame as a
physician was eclipsed by his fame as a philosopher. His "Kulliyat" was first
translated into Latin by the Jew Bonacosa in the latter half of the thirteenth
century. It was again translated into Latin by Syphorien Champier in about 1537.
It was twice translated into Hebrew. `In Spain, the philosophical bias
predominated among medical men', remarks Max Meyerhof. `The prototypes of this
combination are the two Muslims, Ibn Zuhr (Avenzoar) and Ibn Rushd
(Averroes).'
Muslim Spain has produced some talented musicians both
theorists and practical musicians. Ibn Bajja (d:1138) known as Avempace, who as
a musical theorist, occupies the same place in the West which Farabi occupies in
the East. Ibn Rushd has also made invaluable contribution to musical theory by
writing a commentary on Aristotle's "De Anima" dealing perspicuously with the
theory of sound. This was translated into Latin by Michael Scot (d: 1232).
A number of his biographies have appeared in different
languages but the most elaborate account of his life and works is found in
"Averroes et j' averrosime" written by Ernest Renan published in Paris in 1852.
`This admirable work', says George Sarton, `has justly become a classic; it is a
penetrating study which every student of mediaeval philosophy ought to read, but
it must be used with caution.' About the autocratic rule, Ibn Rushd has said:
`The tyrant is he who governs for himself and not for his people.'
It has been customary with the Western writers to minimize
the intellectual attainments of Muslim thinkers, but now the less partial
researches have lifted this veil and their achievements stand in all their
glory. Alfred Guillaume says: `We may be sure that those who accuse the Muslim
scholars of lack of originality and of intellectual decadence have never read
Averroes or looked into Algazel but have adopted second hand judgements. The
presence of doctrines of Islamic origin in the very citadel of Western
Christianity, the `Summa' of Aquinas, is a sufficient refutation of the charge
of lack of originality and sterility.'
The works of Ibn Rushd which were very popular in the West
were translated into several European languages including Latin, Hebrew, German
and English. It was through his commentaries that the West learned about
Aristotle and other Greek thinkers. The Latin "Editio Princeps" of Aristotle
with Averroes' commentaries was published for about fifty times in Venice alone.
Andrea Alpago of Belluno in Italy (d:1520) translated into Latin, Avicenna's
"Canon" and the minor works of Averroes. The Italian emperor Frederik, the
Great, who, on account of being a great patron of Muslim culture, was accused by
the Bishops to have embraced Islam, was instrumental in getting translated a
number of Arabic books, including those of Averroes.
Thus, the works of Averroes which were not so popular in
Islamic countries wielded considerable influence in the Western thought, both
Christian and Jewish.`He deeply influenced Jewish philosophy through many
translations and disciples', writes George Sarton, in his monumental work "An
Introduction to the Study of Science". `Jewish Averroism reached its zenith
under Levi ben Gershon in the first half of the fourteenth century, and it
continued to prosper until the end of the fifteenth century. The Christian
schoolmen were influenced by the Jewish, and in various ways.' According to
Phillip K. Hitti: `The last of the great Arabic writing philosophers, Ibn Rushd
belonged more to Christian Europe than to Muslim Asia or Africa. To the West, he
became the commentator as Aristotle was `The Teacher'. From the end of the
twelfth to the end of the sixteenth century, Averroism remained the dominant
school of thought, and that, in spite of the orthodox reaction, it created first
among the Muslims in Spain, then among the Talmudists and finally among the
Christian clergy ... After being purged of objectionable matter by
ecclesiastical authorities, his writings became prescribed studies in the
University of Paris and other institutions of higher learning. With all its
excellence and other misconceptions collected under its name, the intellectual
movement initiated by Ibn Rushd continued to be a living factor in European
thought until the birth of modern experimental science'. Writing in the Chapter
`Crusades' of the book "The Legacy of Islam" Ernest Barker admits: `The
philosophy of Cordova and its great teacher Ibn Rushd (Averroes) penetrated to
the University of Paris.'
(Extracted from "The Hundred Great
Muslims") |