A History of Islamic Philosophy
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A History of Islamic Philosophy - 2nd Edition

by Majid Fakhry

Columbia University Press, New York 1983

 

Table of Contents

bulletPreface to the First Edition
bulletPreface to the Second Edition
bulletIntroduction
bulletChapter One. The Legacy of Greece, Alexandria, and the Orient
bulletI. The Near Eastern Scene in the Seventh Century
bulletII. The Translations of Philosophical Texts
bulletIII. Neo-Platonic Elements: The Apocryphal Theologia Aristotelis and the Liber de Causis
bulletIV. Persian and Indian Influences
bulletChapter Two. Early Political and Religious Tensions
bulletI. The Religio-Political Factions
bulletII. The Rise of Islamic Scholasticism (Kalam)
bulletChapter Three. Beginnings of Systematic Philosophical Writing in the Ninth Century
bulletI. The First Creative Philosophical Writer in Islam: Al-Kindi
bulletII. The Rise of Naturalism and the Challenge to Islamic Dogma: Ibn Al-Rawandi and Al-Razi
bulletChapter Four. The Further development of Islamic Neo-Platonism
bulletI. Al-Farabi
bulletII. Ibn Sina
bullet Chapter Five. Neo-Pythagoreanism and the Popluarization of the Philosophical Sciences

bulletI. Philosophy, the handmaiden of Politics
II. The Mathematico-Philosophical Presuppositions of the Brethren
bulletIII. The Cosmology and Metaphysics of the Brethren
bulletIV. The Psychology and the Epistemology of the Brethren
bulletV. Conclusion
bulletChapter Six. The Diffusion of the Philosophical culture in the Tenth Century
bulletI. Abu Hayyan Al-Tauhidi
bulletII. Miskawayh
bulletIII. Yahia b. ‘Adi
bullet Chapter Seven. The Interaction of Philosophy and Dogma
bullet I. The Eclipse of Theological Rationalism
bullet II. The Ash’arite school and the Formulation of the Occasionalist Metaphysics of Atoms and accidents
bullet III. The Systematic Refutation of Neo-Platonism: Al-Ghazali
bulletChapter eight. The Rise and Development of Islamic Mysticism (Sufism)
bulletI. Ascetic Origins
bulletII. Pantheistic Tendencies: Al-Bastami (or Al-Bistami), Al-Hallaj, and others
bulletIII. Synthesis and Systematization – Al-Ghazali and Ibn ‘Arabi
bullet Chapter Nine. The Arab-Spanish Interlude and the Revival of Perpateticism

bulletI. Beginnings of Philosophical Speculation in Muslim Spain: Ibn Masarrah, Al-Majriti, and Ibn Bajjah
bulletII. Ibn Tufayl and the Natural Progression of the Mind Toward Truth
bulletIII. Ibn Rushd and the Defense of Aristotelianism
bulletChapter Ten. Post-Avicennian Developments: Illumination and the Reaction against Peripateticism
bulletI. Al-Suhrawardi
bulletII. The Subsequent Development of Illumination: Sadr Al-Din Al-Shirazi (Mulla Sadra) and his successors
bulletChapter Eleven. Theological Reaction and Reconstruction
bulletI. Literalism and Neo-Hanbalism: Ibn Hazm, Ibn Taymiyah, and Muhammad B. ‘Abdul-Wahhab
bulletII. Moderation and Decline: F. D. Al-Razi, N. D. Al-Nasafi, Al-Iji, Al-Jurjani and Al-Bajuri
bulletIII. Reaction and Reconstruction: Ibn Khaldun
bulletChapter Twelve. Modern Contemporary Trends
bulletI. The Emergence of the Modernist Spirit: J. D. Al-Afghani, Muhammad ‘Abdu
bulletII. Modernism in India: Sayyid Ahmad Khan, Ameer Ali, and Muhammad Iqbal
bulletIII. Contemporary Philosophical Scene: Fundamentalism, Modernism, and Existentialism
bulletIV. Other Recent Developments: Positivism and Socialism
bulletBibliography

 

 

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