L’éternité du mouvement chez Ibn Bâjja (Avempace) : de la définition générique à la définition numérique. Le commentaire aux chapitres 1 et 2 du livre VIII de la Physique
By: Farah Cherif Zahar
Title L’éternité du mouvement chez Ibn Bâjja (Avempace) : de la définition générique à la définition numérique. Le commentaire aux chapitres 1 et 2 du livre VIII de la Physique
Type Article
Language French
Journal Les Études Philosophiques
Volume 117
Issue 2
Pages 161–216
Categories Ibn Bāǧǧa, Commentary, Physics, al-Fārābī
Author(s) Farah Cherif Zahar
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)
This article examines Ibn Bāǧǧa’s (Avempace) interpretation of the first two chapters of the eighth book of Aristotle’s Physics and what he has in mind when he describes Aristotle’s proof as a demonstration of the eternity of motion “in genus.” His approach in the second appendix to book eight differs from the one he develops in the main commentary. In the former text, Ibn Bāǧǧa works on the distinction between essential and accidental successions, which leads him to realize that the accidental and thus possible successions— horizontal approach—are not sufficient to guarantee the eternity of movement and then to adopt a vertical approach that goes back to the numerical identity of the circular continuous motion. We show to what extent Ibn Bāǧǧa’s interpretation is indebted to Al-Fārābī’s lost treatise On Changing Beings and also aim to highlight the role of this reading in the evolution of Averroes’ interpretation.

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The Pursuit of Happiness in Medieval Jewish and Islamic Thought. Studies Dedicated to Steven Harvey
By: Yehuda Halper (Ed.)
Title The Pursuit of Happiness in Medieval Jewish and Islamic Thought. Studies Dedicated to Steven Harvey
Type Edited Book
Language English
Publication Place Turnhout
Publisher Brepols
Series Philosophy in the Abrahamic Tradition of the Middle Ages
Volume 1
Categories Plotin, al-Fārābī, Maimonides, Thomas, Spinoza
Author(s) Yehuda Halper
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)
The articles in this volume explore the teachings on happiness by a range of thinkers from antiquity through Spinoza, most of whom held human happiness to comprise intellectual knowledge of that which is Good in itself, namely God. These thinkers were from Greek pagan, Muslim, Jewish, and Christian backgrounds and wrote their works in Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, and Latin. Still, they shared similar philosophical views of what constitutes the Highest Good, and of the intellectual activities to be undertaken in pursuit of that Good. Yet, they differed, often greatly, in the role they assigned to deeds and practical activities in the pursuit of this happiness. These differences were, at times, not only along religious lines, but also along political and ethical lines. Other differences treated the relationship between the body and intellectual happiness and the various ways in which bodily health and well-being can contribute to intellectual health and true happiness.

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Prophecy Between Poetics and Politics from Al-Farabi to Leo Strauss
By: Peter Makhlouf
Title Prophecy Between Poetics and Politics from Al-Farabi to Leo Strauss
Type Article
Language English
Journal International Journal of the Classical Tradition
Pages 1-29
Categories al-Fārābī, Avicenna, Maimonides, Aristotle, Poetics, Rhetoric, Politics, Tradition and Reception
Author(s) Peter Makhlouf
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)
Judaeo-Arabic prophetology, as developed in the wake of Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy, was highly attentive to the kind of representational modes produced by divine revelation and their political use—but also their political precarity. By drawing on another corpus, less often discussed in this context, the Arabic commentaries on Aristotle's Poetics and Rhetoric, this study proposes to undertake a close analysis of how the medieval thinkers in question (Al-Farabi, Avicenna, Averroes, and Maimonides) understood the poetics of prophecy to function. What emerges is an account of how the political theo-logic of poetics and rhetoric—as developed with respect to terms such as imitation, imagination and visualization—came to play a central role in the theory of prophecy, and how that theory of prophecy in turn gave rise to an understanding of what Leo Strauss once termed the ‘literary character’ of these philosophers' ‘art of writing’.

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Topique et syllogistique. La tradition arabe (Al-Fārābī et Averroès), 2010
By: Ahmad Hasnawi
Title Topique et syllogistique. La tradition arabe (Al-Fārābī et Averroès)
Type Book Section
Language French
Date 2010
Published in Les lieux de l'argumentation. Histoire du syllogisme topique d'Aristote à Leibniz
Pages 191–226
Categories al-Fārābī, Logic, Tradition and Reception
Author(s) Ahmad Hasnawi
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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Wonder in Aristotelian Arabic Poetics, 2020
By: Lara Harb
Title Wonder in Aristotelian Arabic Poetics
Type Book Section
Language English
Date 2020
Published in Arabic Poetics: Aesthetic Experience in Classical Arabic Literature
Pages 75–134
Categories al-Fārābī, Avicenna, Poetics
Author(s) Lara Harb
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)
Chapter 2 demonstrates that a similar shift took place in the reception of Aristotle’s Poetics in Arabic. Arabic philosophy was faced with the problem of making sense of the poetic as a type of syllogism, since it inherited a classification of Aristotle’s treatise as part of his books on logic (the Organon). While initial attempts in late antiquity distinguished the poetic from other types of syllogism based on its falsehood, Arabic philosophy, especially with Avicenna (d. 1037), decoupled the poetic from truth and falsehood and distinguished the kind of conclusion that one attains through the poetic syllogism as “make-believe” (takhyīl). This new solution shifted the assessment of the poetic from a statement’s truth and falsehood to its ability to conjure a make-believe image. This process was also expected to allow for an experience of discovery and wonder in the listener according to the philosophers. While Aristotle discussed wonder as resulting from manipulations of a tragic plot, Arabic philosophy developed a theory of wonder resulting from the verbal arts, especially simile and metaphor. The chapter follows the development of these ideas in the works of Averroes (d. 1198), al-Qarṭājannī (d. 1285), and al-Sijilmāsi (d. c. 1330).

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منطق ارسطو بين الفارابي و ابن رشد, 1992
By: Māǧid Faḫrī
Title منطق ارسطو بين الفارابي و ابن رشد
Transcription Manṭiq Arisṭū bain al-Fārābī wa-Ibn Rušd
Translation Aristotle's logic between Alfarabi and Averroes
Type Article
Language Arabic
Date 1992
Journal Al-Abḥāṯ
Volume 40
Pages 107–128
Categories Logic, al-Fārābī, Aristotle
Author(s) Māǧid Faḫrī
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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