Averroes, Kant and the origins of the Enlightenment :

Al Tamamy, Saud M. S.,

Averroes, Kant and the origins of the Enlightenment : reason and revelation in Arab thought / Saud M.S. Al Tamamy. - 280 p. ; 25 cm. - Library of Middle East history ; 46 .

Formerly CIP.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

The twelfth-century philosopher Averroes is often identified by modern Arab thinkers as an early advocate of the Enlightenment. Saud M. S. Al-Tamamy demonstrates that an historical as well as comparative approach to Averroes' thought refutes this widely held assumption. The philosophical doctrine of Averroes is compared with that of the key figure of the Enlightenment in Western thought, Immanuel Kant. By comparing Averroes and Kant, Al-Tamamy evaluates the ideologies of each thinker's workand in particular focuses on their respective political implications on two social groups: the Elite, in Averroes' case, and the Public, in the case of Kant. The book's methodology is at once historical, analytical and communicative, and is especially relevant when so many thinkers - both Western and Middle Eastern - are anxious to find common denominators between the formations of Islamic and Western cultures. It responds to a need for comparative analysis in the field of Averroesstudies, and takes on the challenge to uncover the philosopher's influence on the Enlightenment. Compares the ideologies of 12th-century Arab philosopher Averroes to Immanuel Kant, focusing on their respective implications on two social groups: the elite in the case of Averroes and the public in the case of Kant.

9781780765709




Enlightenment -- Arab countries.
Arab countries.
Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.)
Philosophy, Modern.

181.92