The Philosophy Book

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Some Muslims did not view philosophy
as a legitimate subject for study in the
12th century, but Averroes argued that
it was essential to engage with religion
critically and philosophically.

See also: Plato 50–55 ■ Aristotle 56–63 ■ Al-Ghazâlî 332 ■ Ibn Bâjja 333 ■ Thomas Aquinas 88–95 ■
Moses of Narbonne 334


THE MEDIEVAL WORLD


that is to say the obvious meaning
of the words should be disregarded
and the scientific theory
demonstrated by Aristotelian
philosophy accepted in its place.


The immortal intellect
Averroes is willing to sacrifice some
widely-held Islamic doctrines in
order to maintain the compatibility
of philosophy and religion. For
instance, almost all Muslims believe
that the universe has a beginning,
but Averroes agrees with Aristotle
that it has always existed, and says
that there is nothing in the Qur’an


to contradict this view. However, the
resurrection of the dead, a basic
tenet of Islam, is harder to include
within an Aristotelian universe.
Averroes accepts that we must
believe in personal immortality,
and that anyone who denies this is
a heretic who should be executed.
But he takes a different position
from his predecessors by saying that
Aristotle’s treatise On the Soul does
not state that individual humans
have immortal souls. According to
Averroes’ interpretation, Aristotle
claims that humanity is immortal
only through a shared intellect.
Averroes seems to be saying that
there are truths discoverable by
humans that hold good for ever, but
that you and I as individuals will
perish when our bodies die.

Later Averroists
Averroes’ advocacy of Aristotelian
philosophy (if only for the elite) was
shunned by his fellow Muslims. But
his works, translated into Hebrew
and Latin, had enormous influence
in the 13th and 14th centuries.
Scholars who supported the opinions

Averroes Ibn Rushd, known in Europe as
Averroes, was born in 1126 in
Cordoba, then part of Islamic
Spain. He belonged to a family of
distinguished lawyers and trained
in law, science, and philosophy.
His friendship with another doctor
and philosopher, Ibn Tufayl, led
to an introduction to the Caliph
Abû Yacqûb Yûsuf, who appointed
Averroes chief judge and later
court physician. Abû Yacqûb
also shared Averroes’ interest in
Aristotle, and commissioned him
to write a series of paraphrases of
all Aristotle’s works, designed for
non-specialists such as himself.

Despite the increasingly liberal
views of the Almohads, the
public disapproved of Averroes’
unorthodox philosophy, and
public pressure led to a banning
of his books and personal exile in


  1. Reprieved two years later,
    Averroes returned to Cordoba
    but died the following year.


Key works

1179 – 80 Decisive Treatise
1179 – 80 The Incoherence of the
Incoherence
c.1186 Great Commentary on
Aristotle’s ‘On the Soul’

Philosophers believe
that religious laws are
necessary political arts.
Averroes

of Aristotle and Averroes became
known as Averroists, and they
included Jewish scholars such
as Moses of Narbonne, and Latin
scholars such as Anicius Boethius
and Siger of Brabant. The Latin
Averroists acccepted Aristotle as
interpreted by Averroes as the truth
according to reason—despite also
affirming an apparently conflicting
set of Christian “truths.” They have
been described as advocating a
“double truth” theory, but their view
is rather that truth is relative to the
context of enquiry. ■
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