Lesson 10: Ibn Khaldun Flashcards

1
Q

Ibn Khaldun (14-15th c.): Basics

A
  • First philosopher of history, sociology and modern economics
  • Chief judge of main center of Sunni Islamic studies, Al-Azhar, in Cairo
  • Lived during period of Arab decline - prompted him to examine historical life cycles of societies, civilizations and empires
  • Ignored until 19th c.
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2
Q

Ibn Khaldun (14-15th c.): Importance

A
  • Ambition: write universal history
  • Question: why do all empires disappear?
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3
Q

Ibn Khaldun (14-15th c.) & Al-Muqaddimah (The Introduction)

A
  • understand life cycle of empires
  • universal history of Arabs, Berbers and Persians specifically
  • 7 volumes (but intro most important part)
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4
Q

Ibn Khaldun (14-15th c.) & Al-Muqaddimah (The Introduction): Innovations

A

1) Enlarging concept of history (include not just kings and wars but also daily lives of people - i.e. social history)

2) Setting historiography rules
a- Neutrality (no partisanship)
b- Carrying out research (no credulity when it comes to sources)
c- Considering history globally (no decontextualization of events)
d- Understanding laws governing history & society (no ignorance of history logics and social dynamics)

3) Analyzing history & drawing historical patterns

4) Explaining social metamorphoses

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5
Q

Ibn Khaldun (14-15th c.) & Al-Muqaddimah (The Introduction): Relation between Climate and Civilization

A

Civilization (umran) thrives in moderate climate (combined with favorable social-economic conditions) because best for human creativity

Extreme weather conditions = no development of “non-essential” things because too occupied looking for means of survival and protection from weather

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6
Q

Ibn Khaldun (14-15th c.) & Al-Muqaddimah (The Introduction): Theory of Labor Division

A

Rural areas : families focused on satisfying their own basic needs

Urban areas: people work in cooperation, chain of production
=> allows spared collective energy for purposes other than survival

Surplus (Marx’s “capital”) = deeds of civilizations

Labor division = wealth = great civilization

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7
Q

Ibn Khaldun (14-15th c.) & Al-Muqaddimah (The Introduction): Death of Civilizations

A

Wealth = Luxury = Softness in Habits = Decrease in production = Shrinking Surplus = Population surpassed and subdued by others

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8
Q

Ibn Khaldun (14-15th c.) & Al-Muqaddimah (The Introduction): Formation & Disintegration of Societies

A

Essential ingredient: “social solidarity” or asabiyyah (pact of mutual help and protection) - extended from family to ethnic group to nation (often takes form of nationalism between people living under one state)

2 types for strongest states:

1) Biological/Tribal

2) Abstract/Religious

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9
Q

Ibn Khaldun (14-15th c.) & Al-Muqaddimah (The Introduction): 4 stages of state

A

Life cycles of Asabiyyah and state not synchronized - path influenced by external factors (wars, economics etc.)

1) Age of Foundation - tight solidarity & hard work/ common Asabiyyah/ charismatic leader

2) Golden Age - expansion and prosperity (best stage)

3) Age of Decline - luxury & corruption

4) Age of Disintegration - waiting for final collapse - enemies give final blow

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