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The Muqaddimah : An Introduction to History. (Abridged Edition) (Bollingen Series (General))

The Muqaddimah : An Introduction to History. (Abridged Edition) (Bollingen Series (General))

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Ibn Khaldon :An ultimate genius
Review: Al Muqdma is an absolutely important book which is vital for sociologists , historians, and may be any one to read.It changes one's view to the world around and makes him look upon current events and history in a more organized and comprehensive perspective.

I did not read the English version of the Muqdma , but I read the Arabic one and I found it absolutely wonderful.Ilearned a lot from that valuable book about the nature of rulers , civilizations , and common people.I got an idea about the reasons why civilizations go up and why do they eventually fall in the end.I also discovered a lot about Arabic poetry and got really close to its history and nature.Apart from that the Muqdma introduced me to other issues as magic , Greek philosphy and alchemy.Above all my knowledge about my great religion, the Islamic religion was deepened. I recommend Al Muqdma to any knowledge loving intelluctual.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the greatest books ever written
Review: Arnold Toynbee (no slouch) rated this book as "one of the greatest books ever written." So, when I was in college, I ran out and got it, and I have to confess that its greatness was lost on me at that time. Lots of stuff about Bedouins settling down and becoming sedentary, etc.

The trick to appreciating this book is reading a lot of other books widely separated in time and space. I did this for 20-30 years and then picked up this shorted version of the Muqaddimah, and THEN I realized what an amazing thing Ibn Khaldun had done.

He had thought original thoughts, and observed things no man had observed before. He was the first to perceive regularity and rules in the social behavior and development of mankind. He observed such things as those famous bedouins desiring the goods of a sedentary life, and settling down. And he noticed that the same things ALWAYS happen when wanderers adopt a city life. They lose their nomad harshness as time goes by, and finally their grandchildren have never known anything but a city life. They start to demand goods and luxuries. Political factions form. A ruler emerges. Land prices go up in the city of the ruler. The city of the ruler will have the highest development of the arts and the crafts.

This explains perfectly why it is SO expensive to live in New York or Paris. These are the modern capital cities, and the ruling cliques and classes are there, bidding up the prices. The cultivation of arts and culture is at extremely high levels in Manhattan, Tokyo, and Paris, for the same old reasons.

Ibn Khaldun was the genius who started figuring all this out about five hundred years ago, and he was Tunisian.

One sentence from his book that I never forgot:

"As all men know, a man grows in strength and increases his abilities from birth until the age of thirty, then enters into a plateau between thirty and forty, and then enters a period of decline in strength and ability between forty and seventy."

I think Ibn Khaldun does not provide a source for this observation because it was his own.

Highest recommendation!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not for Everyone
Review: Arnold Toynbee described this book as " Undoutedly the greatest work of its kind that has ever been created by any mind in any time or place ..." That is what convinced me to read the book, but I don't think it is for everyone.

In addition to being the "earliest critical study of history", the book is truely encyclopedic, coverying sociology, culture, theology, and economics , in addition to history. It covers the rise and fall of dynasties and civilizations ( you can see why Toynbee liked it), the necessary conditions for civilization to arise and what determines the level of civilization that will be achieved by a given population.

To pick one topic on which I have some backgroud, economics , the author sucessfully analyzes the effect of demand and supply on prices, the effect of population growth on the economy, the effect of low stable prices on commerce, and the different ways merchants make profits. All, long before these were understood in Western Europe. He also presents the case for Supply Side Economics ( the proposition that raising taxes will result in lower revenue) 600 years before Art Laffer and Ronald Reagan.

Although he refers frquently to God, Muhammad, and the Qur'an (Koran), and has an entire section devoted to theology , his approach is consistently analytical rather than religious. In many was he is influenced by Aristotle, whom he quotes favorably several times.

Unfortunately I found this a difficult book to read. Although I realize that the book has tremendous historical importance, and was highly original at the time it was written , reading it in the 21st Century I found much of the theory of history to be obvious. Not being familiar with Muslim history , I found many of his examples to be incomprehensible. Lacking a knowledge of Medeival Muslim society and culture, I found much of the institutional discussion to lack content and therefore interest.

I'm sure that for someone better read on early Muslim history and society, this is a great book.But if you are not, I do not reccomend it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A masterful work that is good for all times
Review: Hello.

The English interpretation of Ibn Khaldun's historical works should be read by all those who wish to gain a better understanding into the currents that drive human civilization. The scholar's words, although they were written down over six hundred years ago, contain insights that are remarkable and wisdom that will provide the reader with a fresh outlook on the world around them.

The work deals with the various conditions that underly the rise, maintenence, maturity and decline of civilization and of the political entities that are created by people. The role of the "dynasty" (government) in the economy, the effect of taxation, the circulation of wealth, and other aspects of the political economy are set down in great detail.

Ibn Khaldun describes the stages that every civilization passes from the turmoil of the inception of political entities, through the stability of the "middle period," to the "senility" and decline. Where the pursuit of luxury and ease in a sociey dominates and results in the eventual death of the dynasty. His parallel of the life of a society and with the life of an individual is a thing that is thought provoking.

I hope more people will read this book and thereby experience the genius of Ibn Khaldun.

Peace,

Sharif M. Sazzad

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Shockingly amazing. A real treasure of knowledge
Review: I first came across this amazing gem of a book while browsing through the travel section of a Borders bookstore, while my friend shopped for his software books. Just a casual glance at a couple of pages were enough to take me by storm. I almost felt as if both 'my sensibilia and my intelligibilia' (commonly used words in this book) had taken the first sip of one of the most beautifully intoxicating drink.

I soon brought it home and read it, and I read it like a hog, literally. Although, the language is a bit archaic for me, I suppose the difficulty stems from the fact that I am from a totally different field, (I am a computer systems engineer); at every turn of a page, I wished and prayed that I could pour the entire contents of the book into my head in one moment. Very rarely have I had such a desperate feeling to read a book in it's entirety.

A.J. Toynbee has remarked quite aptly about this book. "Undoubtedly the greatest work of its kind that has ever been created by any mind in any time or place..."

And I totally agree with him.

Besides delving into great details on the science of history and sociology, Ibn-Khaldun has touched upon topics I could never have imagined a scholar of those times would even think of. Mind dazzling discussions on even distant subjects like the classification of sciences, alchemy, medicine, mathematics/algebra/geometry (conics! surds!), lexicography, grammar, politics, warfare, trade, customs duties, taxation, espionage, inheritance, astronomy, astrology, sorcery, magic, physics, metaphysics, agriculture, sufism, Islamic jurisprudence, tips for students and teachers, concept of perception and extra-sensory perception, and tons of totally amazing stuff.

He even indicates where we can get even more detailed information on these topics.

He provides a very close-up view of contemporary scholarly exercise and debates and controversies. Discusses ancient and contemporary scholars and their books, Arab as well as non-Arab (Greek, Roman, Persian, Syrian, Coptic,...), casually reviewing/criticising their works as he goes along (sometimes quite insensitively and also unfairly at times, though I assume it was ultimately a classic way of scholarly interaction acrosss space and time that exists in all ages - perhaps!). However, he does ultimately provide us with great insights into works of ancient and contemporary scientists, scholars and philosophers. He has already added a number of Greek, Arabic and Persian books to the list of books I MUST read now. Amazing book indeed. A must for anybody who is interested in the monumental works in the field of knowledge.

God is the best in Knowledge.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Newton of Social Sciences!
Review: I first read this book as part of a history course, but I only appreciated it when I read it later at a slower pace (the first time was just some pre-exam cramming!). I like to use the analogy of ibn Khaldun being the Isaac Newton of social sciences since their contributions were similar in a way: they both took a very ordinary happenings that people take for granted everyday (the falling objects in Isaac Newton's case, everyday social life in ibn Khaldun's case), researched them and gave some marvellous findings. ibn Khaldun shows how societies and people group together to form communities, cities and eventually countries and nations. He shows through logical reasoning the relationship between social and economic circumstances within a society, plus many other fascinating findings that show that the medieval Arabs must have had some very organized researchers and thinkers. Definitely one of the best books ever written on social sciences.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Can't Blame it all on the Turks
Review: If you are an economist you should know about Arthur Laffer, who invented the Laffer Curve for taxation. After reading Ibn Khaldun, I found that in fact it was he who came up with theory four centuries before Mr. Laffer. I believe all the economics text book should make necessary changes to acknowledge Ibn Khaldun's work. This book remarkably illustrates the Islamic philosophy behind the State Management and Decision-Making. Ibn Khaldun's original work in over 1200 pages. He has also written the Islamic History which I dont believe is available in English.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the foundational and greatest works in world history
Review: It is difficult to avoid overusing superlatives when thinking of or reviewing this work. 'Muqaddimah' means 'introduction'; this was ibn Khaldun's introduction to his volumes of world history. The introduction, however, is what has been entered into the library of the world's greatest written works. By those who read more than western books, he is called the father of sociology (westerners grant Weber that title). In addition to groundbreaking and still-relevant sociological ideas, his muqaddimah is filled with major contributions to political science as well. He includes his thoughts on the supposed 'state of nature' and goes on to describe the workings of civilizations, in Braudel's longue duree view.

The book is worth reading for two reasons. First, it is a historical monument -- the birthplace of many important ideas. Second, the ideas are still not common knowledge. His ideas provide a useful and accurate representation of the world, suitable (after adaptation to the time period) to examining Chingis Khan's empire or the position of the United States in global political and economic regime.

One caveat: I read the three-volume, unabridged version. This 300 page paperback version comprises only a small fraction of the complete (and compleat) work.

Another reviewer mentioned the dated scientific theories in this book. In a three-volume 'introduction' to a seven-volume (if memory serves) 'history of the world', ibn Khaldun covered a wide array of topics, including both the social and the natural sciences. The dated natural science is kept strictly seperate from the more lastingly-relevant social science; this makes it an easy job to seperate the wheat from the chaff.

Obviously, I HIGHLY recommend the Muqaddimah to anyone with an interest in political science, anthropology, sociology, or history.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The father of social sciences...
Review: This is a gem of a book that is not well enough known in the West. It is a brilliant account of the ordinary, things that take place around us that we often take for granted. Ibn Khaldun notices these things and explains them in an organized manner.

His theory of 'asabiya' describes the rise and fall of tribes and nations as a very natural process, one that occurs and will occur repeatedly throughout history. His is perhaps the most coherent theory that I know of. It's perhaps a bit simplistic but sometimes Occam's razor, the simplest explanation being the correct one, is true.

Many accuse Ibn Khaldun of leaving God out of the picture but, as a devout Muslim, God was the very being of everything he wrote. Just because nations rise and fall in a natural progression doesn't mean that God is not a part of the picture. God has given us free will and allows the world to operate on this free will, one side effect on a collective scale being the rise and fall of nations. This notion underpins his work.

He also catelogues in great detail all kinds of events, both natural and human, in a very interesting fashion. It is a treasure trove of a book, one that you can revisit in bits and pieces and always come away with a feeling of having learned something you already knew.

This book needs more recognition as it has influenced far more people than may be realized. The kicker is that this book was written over 600 years ago, long before the notion of 'science' as we know it today as an independent and 'objective' approach to the study of reality really existed.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Dated in ways, but nonetheless carries some core truths
Review: You can chisel out the sections on temperature and race, temperature and behavior, for these are silly and offensive. He compares Sub-Saharan Africans as just a hair above dumb animals, and he slams Arabs and Bedouin in other ways. However, his sections on economics and social politics are still valid, and he was a pioneer in areas that other Westerners tend to get credit for.

Before Adam Smith outlined the need for "Specialized labor" in a commercial society, there was Ibn Khaldun. Khaldun wrote of the pivotal role of "crafts" and specialization of crafts in a functioning human society. He even suggests that skills in crafts are limited, that is, if you're a master shoe-maker you in all likelihood won't be a master farmer. Therefore, master shoe-makers should make as many shoes as they can and farmers should farm as they can, so as to produce as many goods between the two of them than if they shared their time doing both. Before there was Friedrich Hayek and Ludwig Von Mises, Ibn Khaldun implied the need for Rule of Law. Khaldun chastized the Bedouin who disrupted the social order through their raids, and sent the craftsmen packing. Some sort of consistent legal standard and social order is needed to ensure that specialized labor has the ability to perform its "crafts". Before there was Reaganomics and Arthur Laffer, there was Ibn Khaldun. You want more tax revenue? Cut taxes, which provides incentive for people to work harder and expand their enterprises. More business, more economic growth, more tax revenue. High taxes deter enterprise and shrinks tax revenue. Arthur Laffer? Yes, but Ibn Khaldun 300+ years earlier.

The issue Khaldun is most known for is "squadness", Group Feeling, Group Narcissism, Tribalism, whatever you wish to call it. Governments and regimes come and go based on the strength of the leaders to appeal to group cohesion. This could be religious, blood, nationalist, whatever, but regimes need ideological cohesion in order to survive. Once that group feeling is lost, the regime becomes weak and conquerable if not self destructive. Multiculturalism and Postmodernism would be signs of cultural disorder and eventual social crumbling to Ibn Khaldun. Crane Brinton, Erich Fromm, Erik Hoffer all touched on the "Group Feeling" themes in their own works, in different ways and emphases, and in many ways did it better (they had more historical examples to pull from, since history has dramatically accelerated since Khaldun's time), nonetheless, Khaldun was the one who first articulated this concept of political and social (dis)order.


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