The House of Wisdom: How the Arabs Transformed Western Civilization
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Average customer review:Product Description
For centuries following the fall of Rome, Western Europe was backward and benighted, locked into the Dark Ages and barely able to tell the time of day. Augustine had decreed that belief, not reason, should be the guiding light of Christian thinking and partially as a result Europeans lived in a world of nominal literacy and subsistence farming, where blind faith, superstition and sorcery took the place of medicine, and the church harnessed nascent aggression among the kingdoms to its own ends in the pursuit of astonishingly violent and cruel holy wars - the Crusades. Arab culture, however, was thriving, and had become a powerhouse of intellectual exploration and discussion that dazzled the likes of Adelard of Bath who ventured to the Near East in search of the scientific riches pouring out of cities like Antioch or Baghdad, whose House of Wisdom held four hundred thousand books at a time when the best European libraries housed, at most, several dozen. The Arabs could measure the earth's circumference, a feat not matched in the West for eight hundred years; they discovered algebra; were adept at astronomy and navigation, developed the astrolabe, translated all the Greek scientific and philosophical texts including, importantly, those of Aristotle; they made paper lenses and mirrors. Without them, and the knowledge that travellers like Adelard brought back to the West, Europe would in all likelihood have been a very different place over the last millennium. In this fascinating and thoughtful book Jonathan Lyons restores credit to the Arab thinkers of the past, explores and reveals the extent of their learning and describes the intrepid adventures of those who went in search of it and who, in doing so, laid the foundations of what we now call the Renaissance.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #61126 in Books
- Published on: 2009-02-02
- Original language: English
- Binding: Hardcover
- 272 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
'The House Of Wisdom lays out for us the fascinating decades before the forgetting began' --Evening Standard
Review
`Jonathan Lyons tells the story of the House of Wisdom, the caliphs who supported it and the people who worked there, at a riveting, breakneck pace'
Review
`Lyons tells many of these stories well; this is a work of popular history, not of original research, but he has read widely in the English-language literature, and has a good journalist's eye for detail.'
Customer Reviews
The book's subtitle says it all
The subtitle of this book is `How the Arabs Transformed Western Civilization'; and in order to show this, Jonathan Lyons devotes the first 50 pages of a 200 page text principally to show how badly the West needed to be transformed.
When the First Crusade (about which we are given many unnecessary political details) began in 1096, the people of the West were rightly looked upon by the Arabs as coarse, brutish, and dirty; so ignorant that they could not even tell the time with any exactitude; their notion of justice involving trial by ordeal; their `medical' procedures which killed rather than cured; a clumsy numerical system they had inherited from the Romans; and with only scraps of knowledge of the achievements of antiquity having survived the barbarian invasions. In Europe, there was indeed some scholarship - we speak of a Carolingian and of an Ottonian Renaissance - but most learning was theological, and the official line of the Church was that any pragmatic attempt to understand the material world was suspect as being at best a distraction from seeking salvation and at worst a danger to it.
But there was also, among the violence, more peaceful interaction between the western invaders and the Arabs (and between the Arab invaders of Spain and the Christians there). Lyons describes how Arab scholarship of every kind had been promoted by the early Abbasid caliphs from the middle of the 8th to the first half of the 9th century (i.e. well before the First Crusade of 1096): by al-Mansur, Harun al-Rashid, and especially by al-Mamun, who had established the House of Wisdom as a great centre of learning and translations from Greek, Persian and Indian manuscripts.
Among the early westerners who were eager to learn what the Arabs had to offer was Roger II of Sicily (1095 to 1154), son of the Norman mercenary who had conquered Sicily from the Arabs between 1068 and 1091. He was already very knowledgeable about the achievements of the Arabs and brought Arab scholars to Sicily to extend that knowledge still further. A contemporary of Roger's was one Adelard of Bath (ca. 1080 to 1152) who in 1109 set out for the East specifically to see what he could learn from the Arabs, and who in Antioch came upon a treasure trove of Arab books. He was the most important of those who first transmitted Arab knowledge to the West. Lyons gives an excellent account of this hugely influential man, who not only translated Arab texts (like Euclid's Elements, translated from the Greek by the Arabs three centuries before Adelard brought it to Europe), but entered deeply into the spirit of scientific thought which was at the time quite alien to the West. Adelard produced the first comprehensive work on the astrolabe (which Lyons calls `the most potent analogue computer until the modern era', whose use had been refined by al-Khwarizmi in the 9th century and which was the most important tool for astronomy) and he introduced a translation of Ptolemy's Amalgest from the Arabic. Adelard certainly ought to be very much better known than he is.
At the College of Translators set up in Toledo in 1130 by its Archbishop Raymond , the most prominent of those working there was the industrious Gerard of Cremona (1114 to 1187), who translated no fewer than 87 books from Arabic into Latin.
Roger II's grandson, the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II (reigned from 1220 to 1250), was another great patron of Arab learning, and it was under his patronage that Michael Scot produced translations from the great Arabic Aristotelians, Avicenna or Ibn Sina (980 to 1037) and Averroës or Ibn Rushd (1126 to 1198). From Italy the reception of Averroës spread to France and to the rest of Europe.
The earlier transmissions from the Arabic had for the most part been scientific, but now, with the reception of Avicenna and Averroës, they were also metaphysical, raising the question of the relationship between philosophy and religion. So when the Sorbonne became one of the great centres of Averroism, a battle broke out between the Averroists, headed by Siger of Brabant (1235 to 1281), and those who thought that the Aristotelian metaphysic was a threat to Christian orthodoxy. The immense achievement of the Dominican Thomas Aquinas (1225 to 1274) was to create a system in which Aristotelean/Averroist philosophy and Christian theology were seen as complementary and not as antagonistic. There was some resistance to this synthesis from the Franciscans, but in the end Thomism carried the day, and the canonization of Aquinas in 1323 ensured that the transformation of the West through Arab influence was safeguarded, and it is on that foundation that much of the later progress of western civilization would rest. Actually, the influence of Averroës would bear more fruit in the West than it would bear in the Islamic world - but that is another story.
Some readers may find some the technical details of both Arab science and Arab philosophy a little difficult to understand; but no reader will be left in any doubt that there was a time, lasting for at least three centuries, when the Islamic world was far more sophisticated and advanced than was the West and was indeed in many respects its teacher.
An insight into what Modern Science owes owes to Arab scholars
'The House of Wisdom' shows how many of the fundamental principles of modern science were firstly collected by early Arab scholars from disparate sources: Greek, Sanscrit and Hindu and then further refined and developed in the Arab world before being disseminated to scholars in Western Europe. A must-read for anyone interested in the history of science and the international nature of scientific research and scholarship.
The House of Wisdom: How the Arabs Transformed Western Civilization
No doubt a good read but I was a bit miffed that the diagram by al- Biruni on the even side of page 111 is a mirror image or rather it is back to front. I paid 20 pounds for the hard back version and I expect a little more care should have taken place in proof reading the Arabic document mentioned.



