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The great leaders were so many - Ibn Yunus, Ibn al-Haitham, Al-Biruni, Ibn Sina, Ali ibn Isa, al-Karkhi, Ibn Gabirol (all Muslim except the last, who was Jewish) - that, for a moment at least, the historian is bewildered. Yet, however distinguished all of those men, and many others who will be named presently, two stand out head and shoulders above the others: al-Biruni and Ibn Sina (Avicenna). It was chiefly because all of them that this period was one of such excellence and distinction. These two men, who by the way, knew one another, were extremely different. Al-Biruni represents the more adventurous and critical spirit, Ibn Sina the synthetic spirit, al-Biruni was more of a discoverer, and in that respect he came nearer to the modern scientific ideal; Ibn Sina was essentially an organizer, an encyclopedist, a philosopher. Both, even the latter, were primarily men of science, and it would be difficult to choose between them but the accidental fact that al-Biruni's life covered more fully the present period and thus may be said to represent it more completely. Ibn Sina was only 20 at the beginning of the century, and his life was ultimately cut short in 1037. Al-Biruni's first important work appeared about 1000 and he lived until 1048. Thus his time of activity and the first half of the eleventh century are not identical periods, and we are fully justified (more fully so than in almost every short case) in calling it the Time of al-Biruni.
Contemporary accounts of Muslim achievements must be started with Ibn
al-Haitham, who flourished in Cairo at the beginning of the century. He was not
only the greatest Muslim physicist, but by all means the greatest of mediaeval
times. His researches on geometrical and physiological optics were the most
significant to occur between ancient times and the sixteenth century. His
description of the eye and his explanation of vision were distinct improvements.
Muslim scientists had developed a great interest in the determination of
specific gravity. Al-Biruni continued that tradition and measured the density of
18 precious stones and metals with remarkable accuracy. He observed that the
speed of light is incomparably greater than the of sound. Ibn Sina investigated
all the fundamental questions of physics which could be formulated finite. His
study of music was especially important and far ahead of the contemporary Latin
work. He described the doubling with octave, the fourth and the fifth, and even
with the third.
A college of Ibn al-Haitham in the Cairo academy, Masawaih
al-Mardini, explained the preparation empyreumatic oils. Ibn Sina intertained
original views on chemistry; he did not share the common belief of Muslim
alchemists that the coloring or bronzing of metals affected their substance, he
thought that the differences between metals were to deep to permit their
transmutation. An important alchemical treatise was composed in 1034 by
al-Kathi.
Spain: Al-Karmani has already been mentioned. He was at once a mathematician and a surgeon. Ibn al-Wafid composed a treatise on simple drugs, which is partly extant in Latin, and a treatise on Balneography. To these two Muslims may be added the Jew, Ibn Janah, who flourished in Saragossa and wrote there in Arabic, a book on simple remedies.
Egypt: Not less than four great Physician enjoyed the patronage of the Fatimid rulers of Egypt. Masawaih al-Mardini (Mesue the Younger) compiled a large dispensatory which was immensely popular in mediaeval Europe. For centuries it remained the standard work on the subject. Ammar was perhaps the most original oculist of Islam, but his work was superseded by that of the Eastern contemporary, Ali ibn Isa. The surgical part of Ammar's ophthalmologic treatise is particularly important. The third of these physicians, Ibn al-Haitham (Alhazen) has already been dealt with many times; he must be remembered her because of his studies in physiological optics. Ali ibn Ridwan wrote various commentaries on Greek medicine, of which the best known was one on Galen's Ars prava; he also wrote a treatise on hygiene with special reference to Egypt. It should be noted that Masawaih was a monophysite Christian; the others were Muslims.
East: The greatest physician of the time and one of the greatest of
all times was Ibn Sina (Avicenna). His enormous medical encyclopedia, the Qanun
(Canon), remained the supreme authority, not simply in Islam but also in
Christendom, for some six centuries. It contained a number of original
observations, but its hold on the people was chiefly due to its systematic
arrangement and its very dogmatism. Ibn Sina was not as great a physician as
Galen, but he had very much the same intellectual qualities and defects and his
ascendancy was largely based upon the same grounds. He had the advantage over
Galen being able to take into account the vast experience of Muslim
physicians.
Ibn al-Taiyib wrote commentaries on Greek medicine. Abu Sa'id
Ubaid Allah, of the famous Bakhtyashu family, wrote treatise on love-sickness
and discussed the philosophical terms used by physicians. Ibn Butlan compiled
the so-called Tables of Health, a medical summary, divided into 15 vertical
columns; he is perhaps the originator of that typical form of synopsis. Finally
Ali ibn Isa (Jesu Haly) was the author of the most famous ophthalmologistical
treatise written in Arabic, it is very remarkable that not than three of these
physicians, that is more than half of them, were Christians living in Bagdad:
Ibn al-Taiyib, Abu Sa'id Ubaid Allah, and Ibn Butlan. This testifies for the
faithfulness of the Christian community of Bagdad and the toleration of the
Muslim rulers. It should be added that the other physicians, i.e., the Muslims,
were far more important.
IBN AL-SAMH
Abu al-Qasim Asbagh ibn Mohammed
ibn al-Samh. Flourished at Granada; died May 29, 1035, at the age of 56.
Hispano-Muslim mathematician and astronomer. He wrote treatises on commercial
arithmetic (al-mu'amalat), on two mental calculus (hisab
al-hawa'i), on the nature of numbers, two on geometry, two on astrolabe, its
use and construction. His main work seems to have been the compilation of
astronomical tables, according to the Siddhanta method (for which see my notes
on Mohammed ibn Ibrahim al-Fazari second half of eighth century), together with
theoretical explanations (c. 1025).
H. Suter: Mathematiker
(85, 1900; 168, 1902).
IBN ABI-L-RIJAL
In Latin, Abenragel (also
Albohazen, Alboacen, which was more correct, for Abenragel was his father's
name, rather than his own). Abu-l-Hasan Ali ibn Abi-l-Rijal al-Saibani al-Katib
al-Maghribi. Born in Cordova or else where in Spain or in northern Africa,
flourished in Tunis some time about 1016 to 1040, died after 1040. Muslim
astrologer. His main work is the "distinguished book on horoscopes from the
constellations" (al-bari fi ahkam al-nujum). It was translated by Judah
ben Moses from Arabic into Castilian, then from Castilian into Latin by Aegidius
de Tebaldis and Petrus de Regio. He wrote a physiognomic treatise on
Naevi.
H. Suter: Die Mathematiker und Astronomen der Araber
(100, 1900; Nachtrage, 172, 1902); encyclopedia of Islam (vol. 2, 356,
1916).
IBN AL-SAFFAR
Abu-l-Qasim Ahmed ibn Abdallah
ibn Omar al-Ghafiqi, best known under the name of Ibn al-Saffar, meaning son of
coppersmith. Flourished at Cordova, toward the end of his life he retired in
Denia and died there in 1035. Hispano-Muslim mathematician and astronomer. He
wrote a treatise on the astrolabe and compiled tables according to the Siddhanta
method.
H. Suter: Mathematiker (86, 225, 1900; 169,
1902).
IBN YUNUS
Abu Hasan Ali ibn abi Sa'id Abd
al-Rahman ibn Ahmed ibn Yunus (or Ibn Yunus) al-Sadafi al-Misri. Died in Cairo,
1009 (not 1008). The date of his birth is unknown, but his father died in
958-59. Perhaps the greatest Muslim astronomer. A well equipped observatory in
Cairo enabled him to prepare improved astronomical tables. Begun c. 990 by order
of the Fatimid caliph al-Aziz (975-996), they were completed in 1007 under the
latter's son al-Hakim (996-1020) and are called after him the Hakemite Tables
(al-zij al-kabir al-Hakimi). They contain observations of eclipses and
conjunctions, old and new, improved values of astronomical constants
(inclination of the ecliptic, 23o 35`; longitude
of the sun's apogee, 86o 10`; solar parallax
reduced from 3` to 2`; precession, 51.2`` a year, no allusion to trepidation)
and accounts of the geodetic measurements carried on order by al-Ma'mun (q. v.,
first half of ninth century.)
His contributions to trigonometry, though less
important than those of Abu-l-Wafa; are considerable. He solved many problems of
spherical astronomy by means of orthogonal projections. He introduced the first
of those prosthapheretical formulae which were indispensable before the
invention of the logarithms, namely, the equivalent of
IBN AL-HAITHAM
See notes in the physical
section, below.
KUSHYAR IBN LABBAN
Abu-l-Hasan Kushayr ibn
Labban ibn Bashahri al-Jili (i. e., from Jilan, south of the Caspian Sea).
Flourished c. 971-1029; his main work was probably done about the beginning of
the eleventh century. Persian mathematician and astronomer, writing in Arabic.
He seems to have taken an important part in the elaboration of trigonometry. For
example, he continued the investigations of Abu-l-Wafa, the devoted much space
to this in his tables, al-zij al-jami wa-l-baligh (the comprehensive and mature
tables), which were translated into Persian before the end of the century. He
wrote also an astrological introduction and an arithmetic treatise (extant to
Hebrew).
H. Suter: Mathematiker und Astronomen der Araber
(83, 235, 1900; 168, 1902).
IBN AL-HUSAIN
Abu Ja'far Mohammed ibn
al-Husain. Flourished not long after al-Khujandi (q. v., second half of the
tenth century). Mathematician. He wrote a memoir on rational right angled
triangles and another on the determination of two mean proportionals between two
lines by a geometrical method (vs. kinematic method), i. e., by the use of what
the Muslims called "fixed geometry", al-handasa al-thabit. Solution of the
equation
ABU-L-JUD
Abu-l-Jud Mohammed ibn al-Lith,
contemporary of al-Biruni. Mathematician. Solution of al-Birunic problems by
means of intersecting conics. Regular heptagon and enneagon. Classification of
equations and their reduction to conic sections.
Suter: Die
Mathematiker und Astronomen der Araber (79, 1900).
AL-KARKHI
Abu Bakr Mohammed ibn al-Hassan (or
Husain) al-Hasib (the calculator) al-Karkhi, meaning of Karkh, a suburb of
Bagdad. Flourished in Bagdad during the vizierate of Abu Ghakib Mohammed ibn
Khalaf Fakhr al-mulk (glory of the realm), who died in 1016; he died himself c.
1019 to 1029. One of the greatest Muslim mathematicians. His book on arithmetic
(the sufficient on calculation, alkafi fi-l-hisab) is based chiefly of
the Greek and Hellenistic knowledge. No numerals of any kind are used, the names
of the numbers being written in full. Casting out of the nines and elevens.
AL-NASAWI
Abu-l-Hasan Ali ibn Ahmed al-Nasawi.
From Nasa, Khurasan. Flourished under the Buwayhid sultan Majd al-dawla, who
died in 1029-30, and under his successor. Persian mathematician. He wrote a
practical arithmetic in Persian, before 1030, and later under Majd al-dawla's
successor an Arabic translation of it, entitled the "Satisfying (or Convincing)
on Hindu Calculation" (al-muqni fi-l-hisab al hindi). He also wrote on
Archemedes's lemnata and Menelaos's theorem (Kitab al-ishba, satiation). His
arithmetic explains the division of fractions and the extraction of square and
cubic roots (square root of 57,342; cubic root of 3, 652, 296) almost in the
modern manner. It is remarkable that al-Nasawi replaces sexagesimal by decimal
fractions, e. g.,
Suter: Die Mathematiker und Astronomen der
Araber (96, 1900) Uber das Rechenbuch des Ali ben Ahmed el-Nasawi (Bibliotheca
Mathematica, vol. 7, 113-119, 1906).
IBN AL-HAITHAM
Latin name: Alhazen. Abu Ali
al-Hasan ibn al-Hasan (or al-Husain) ibn al-Haitham. Born c. 965 in Basra,
flourished in egypt under al-Hakim (996 to 10200 died in Cairo in 1039 or soon
after. The greatest Muslim physicist and one of the greatest students of optics
of all the times. He was also an astronomer, a mathematician, a physician, and
he wrote commentaries on Aristotle and Galen.
The Latin translation of his
main work, the Optics (kitab al-manazir), exerted a great influence upon
Western science (R. Bacon; Kepler). It showed a great progress in the
experimental method. Research in catoptrics: spherical and parabolic mirrors,
spherical aberration; in dioptrics: the ratio between the angle and incidence
and refraction does not remain constant; magnifying power of a lens. study of
atmospheric refraction. The twilight only ceases or begins when the sun is
19o below the horizon; attempt to measure the height of the
atmosphere on that basis. Better description of the eye, and better
understanding of vision, though ibn al-haitham considered the lens as the
sensitive part; the rays originate in the object seen, not in the eye. Attempt
to explain binocular vision. Correct explanation of the apparent increase in the
size the sun and the moon when near the horizon. earliest use of the camera
obscura.
The catoptrics contain the following problem, known as Alhazen's
problem: from two points of the plane of a circle to draw lines meeting at point
of the circumference and making equal angles with the normal at that point. It
leads to an equation of the fourth degree. Alhazen solved it by the aid of an
hyberpola intersecting a circle. He also solved the so-called al-Mahani's
(cubic) equation (q. v., second half of the ninth century) in a similar
(Archimedian) manner.
Suter: Die Mathematiker und Astronomen
der Araber (91-95, Nachtrage, 169, 1902).
AL-KATHI
Abu-l-Hakim Mohammed ibn Abd al-Malik
al-Salihi al-Khwarizmi al-Kathi. Flourished in Bagdad c. 1034. Muslim Chemist,
he wrote, in 1034, a treatise on alchemy entitled "Essence of the Art and Aid to
the Workers" (Ain al-san'a wa awn-al-sana'a), strikingly similar in some
respects to the "Summa perfectionis magisterii" of the Latin Geber (for which
see my notes on Jabir, second half of eighth century).
H. E.
Stapleton and R. F. Azo: Alchemical Equipments in the Eleventh century (Memories
of Asiatic Society of Bengal, vol. 1, 47-70, 1 pl., Calcutta, 1905. Containing
Arabic text, an analysis of it, and an introduction; very
important).
IBN AL-WAFID
AMMAR
Latin name: Canamusali. Abu-l-Qasim
Ammar ibn Ali al-Mawsili. From Mawsil in Iraq; flourished in Egypt in the reign
of al-Hakim, who ruled from 996-1020. Physician. The most original of Muslim
oculists, His work was eclipsed by that of his contemporary Ali ibn Isa, which
was more comprehensive. His summary on the treatment of the eye (Kitab
al-muntakhab fi ilaz al-ain) contains many clear descriptions of diseases
and treatments, arranged in logical order. The surgical part is especially
important.
E. Mittwoch: Encyclopaedia of Islam (vol. 1, 332,
1910).
IBN AL-HAITHAM
See notes in physical section,
above.
ALI IBN RIDWAN
Abu-l-Hasan Ali ibn Radwan ibn
Ali ibn Ja'far al-Misri. Born in Jiza near Cairo, c. 998. Flourished in Cairo
and died there in 1061 or in 1067. Astrologer. physician. The author of many
medical writings of which the most popular was his commentary on Galen'a Ars
prava, which was translated by Gerardo Cremonese. I may still quote his treatise
on hygiene with special reference to Egypt (fi daf mudar al-abdan bi-ard
Misr). He wrote various other commentaries on Hippoctates and Galen and on
Ptolemy's astrological books.
C. Brocklmann: Arabischen
Litteratur (vol. 1, 484, 1898).
IBN SINA
Abu Ali al-Hassan ibn Abdallah ibn
Sina. Hebrew, Aven Sina; Latin, Avicenna. Born in 980 at Afshana, near Bukhara,
died in Hamadhan, 1037. Encyclopaedist, philosopher, physician, mathematician,
astronomer. The most famous scientist of Islam and one of the most famous of all
races, places, and times; one may say that his thought represents the climax of
mediaeval philosophy. He wrote a many great treatises in prose and verse; most
of them in Arabic, a few in Persian. His philosophical encyclopedia (Kitab
al-shifa, sanatio) implies the following classification: theoretical
knowledge (subdivided, with regard to increasing abstraction, into physics,
mathematics, and metaphysics), practical knowledge (ethics, economy, politics).
His philosophy roughly represents the Aristotelian tradition as modified by
Neoplatonic influences and Muslim theology. Among his many other philosophical
works, I must still quote a treatise on logic, Kitab al-isharat
wal-tanbihat (The Book of Signs and Adonitions). As ibn Sina expressed his
views on almost any subject very clearly, very forcible, and generally more than
once, his thought is, or at any rate can be, known with great accuracy.
His
most important medical works are the Qanun (Canon) and a treatise on cardiac
drugs (hitherto unpublished). The Qanun fi-l-tibb is an immense
encyclopedia of medicine (of about a million words), a codification of the whole
ancient and Muslim knowledge. Being similar in many respects to Galen, Ibn Sina
elaborated to a degree the Galenic classifications (for example, he
distinguished 15 qualities of pain). Because of its formal perfection as well as
its intrinsic value, the Qanun superseded Razi's Hawi, Ali ibn Abbas's
Maliki, and even works of Galen, and remained supreme for six centuries.
However the very success of Ibn Sina as an encyclopedist caused his original
observations to be correspondingly depreciated. Yet the Qanun contains
many examples of good observation - distinction of mediastinitis from pleurisy;
contagious nature of phthitis; distribution of diseases by soil and water;
careful description of skin troubles, of sexual diseases; and supervisions; of
nervous ailments (including love sickness); many psychological and pathological
facts clearly analyzed if badly explained.
Ibn Sina's interest in mathematics
was philosophical rather than technical and such as we would expect in a late
Neoplatonist. He explained the casting out of nines and its application to the
verification of square and cubes. Many of his writings were devoted to
mathematical and astronomical subjects. He composed a translation on Euclid. He
made astronomical observations, and devised a contrivance the purpose of which
was similar to that of the vernier, that is, to increase the precision of
instrumental readings.
He made a profound study of various physical questions
- motion, contact, force, vacuum, infinity, light, and heat. He observed that if
the perception of light is due to the emission of some sort of particles by the
luminous source, and speed of light must be finite. He made investigations on
specific gravity.
He did not believe the possibility of chemical
transmutation, because in his opinion the differences of the metals were not
superficial, but much deeper; coloring or bronzing the metals does not affect
their essence. It should be noted that these views were radically opposed to
those which were then generally accepted.
Ibn Sina's treatise on minerals was
the main source of the geological ideas of the Christian encyclopedist of the
thirteenth century.
Ibn Sina wrote an autobiography which was completed by
his favorite disciple al-Juzajani.
His triumph was too complete; it
discouraged original investigations and sterilized intellectual life. Like
Aristotle and Vergil, Avicenna was considered by the people of later times as a
magician.
C. Brocklmann: Geschichte der arabischen
Litteratur (vol. 1, 452-458, 1898. With list of 99 works).
IBN AL-TAIYIB
Abu-l-Faraj Abdallah Ibn
al-Taiyib al-Iraqi. Latin name : Abulpharagius Abdalla Benattibus. Died in
1043-44. Nestorian physician. Secertary to Elias I, Nestorian Catholics from
1028 to 1049. Physician at the Adudite hospital in Bagdad. He had many
commentaries on Greek medicine, and original memories on various medical topics,
also a translation of the pseudo-Aristotelian De plantis, with additional
excerpts from ancient literature.
From Arabic translation of the Diatessaron
ascribed to him.
Brocklmann: Arabischen Litteratur (vol. 1,
482, 1898).
ABU SA'ID UBAID ALLAH
Abu Sa'id Ubaid Allah
ibn Bakhtyashu. Flourished in Maiya-fariqin, Jazirah; friend of Ibn Butlan; died
in 1058. Physician. The last and possibly the greatest representative of the
Bukhtyashu, a syrian family of physicians which emigrated from Junsishapur to
Bagdad in 765. His main works are the Reminder of the Homestayer, dealing with
the philosophical terms used in medicine, and a treatise on
lovesickness.
C. Brocklmann: Encyclopaedia of Islam (t. 1,
601, 1911).
IBN BUTLAN
Abu-l-Hasan al-Mukhtar ibn al-Hasan
ibn Abdun ibn Sa'dun ibn Butlan. Latin name: Elluchasem Elimither. Flourished in
Bagdad; died, probably in Antioch, in or soon after 1063. Christian physician.
He wrote synoptic tables of hygiene, dietetics, domestic medicine, called the
Tables of Health. He probably originated that form of synopsis, which was
developed by ibn Jazla (q. v., second half of eleventh century). Medical polemic
with Ali ibn Ridwan.
C. Brocklmann: Arabischen Litteratur
(vol. 1, 483, 1898).
ALI IBN ISA
Ali ibn Isa or Jesu Haly.
flourished in Bagdad in the first half of the eleventh century. He is said to
have been a christian. The most Famous Arabic oculist. His "Manual" in three
books, Tadhkirat al-kahhalin, is the oldest Arabic work on ophthalmology
of which the original text is completely extant. It is based partly on ancient
knowledge, partly on personal experience. It is at once very detailed and very
comprehensive. The first book deals with the anatomy and physiology of the eye;
the second with the diseases externally visible; the third with hidden diseases,
dietetics, and general medicine from the oculistic standpoint; 130 eye diseases
are carefully described; 143 drugs characterized.
J.
Hirschberg: Die arabischen Lehrbucher der Augenheilkunde (Abhd. der preuss. Ak.
der Wiss., 117 p., Berlin, 1905).