Political thought in medieval Islam : an introductory outline
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Political thought in medieval Islam : an introductory outline
Cambridge University Press, 1958
- : pbk
- : hardback
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Note
Bibliographical notes: p. 234-306
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Muhammad founded a World-State as well as a faith; as Islam spread from its first centres, Muslim political thinkers had to apply the divinely revealed law of the Prophet to new circumstances. They had to relate new realities of power and authority to the ideal constitution which he had laid down and which his immediate successors had elaborated. Against this background Dr Rosenthal discusses the later Muslim philosophers who were influenced by the political thought of Plato and Aristotle. He shows how Greek thought modified the Islamic and yet was always subordinated to Muslim categories of thought and political needs. Dr Rosenthal thus surveys the chief traditions of Islamic political thought from the eighth to the end of the fifteenth centuries. He emphasises the basic unity given by the shared faith of the writers, without diminishing the individuality of each. Orientalists will welcome the book; so will historians of the medieval West, for it shows them the religious, political and intellectual positions underlying the expansion of Islam.
Table of Contents
- Part I. Constitutional Law and Muslim History: 1. The quest for happiness
- 2. The Caliphate: theory and function
- 3. Government
- 4. The theory of the power-state
- Part II. The Platonic Legacy: 5. Political philosophy in Islam
- 6. Al Farabi: the foundation
- 7. Ibn Sina: the synthesis
- 8. Ibn Bajja: individualist deviation
- 9. Ibn Rushd: the consummation
- 10. Al-Dawwani: application and integration
- Appendix
- Notes
- Glossary
- Index.
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