
Franz Rosenthal (1914–2003)
Author of The Muqaddimah, an Introduction to History [abridged Rosenthal translation]
About the Author
Franz Rosenthal (1914-2003) was Sterling Professor Emeritus of Arabic and Semitic Studies at Yale University and a scholar of Arabic literature and Islam. Professor Rosenthal was a prolific scholar whose publications ranged from this monograph on Humor in Early Islam to a three-volume annotated show more translation of the Muqaddimah of Ibn Khaldun to a Grammar of Biblical Aramaic. show less
Series
Works by Franz Rosenthal
The Muqaddimah, an Introduction to History [abridged Rosenthal translation] (1969) — Translator — 749 copies, 8 reviews
The History of al-Tabari Vol. 1. General Introduction and from the Creation to the Flood (1989) — Introduction and Translator — 46 copies
Knowledge Triumphant: The Concept of Knowledge in Medieval Islam (Brill Classics in Islam) (1992) 27 copies
Aḥmad b. aṭ-Tayyib as-Saraḫsî 2 copies
The Muqaddimah. 2 1 copy
The Muqaddimah. 1 1 copy
Trijumfalno znanje 1 copy
Greek Philosophy in the Arab World: A Collection of Essays (Variorum Collected Studies Series) (1990) 1 copy
مفهوم الحرية في الإسلام 1 copy
علم التاريخ عند المسلمين 1 copy
Bilginin Zaferi 1 copy
Studia Arabica I 1 copy
The Muqaddimah. 3 1 copy
Associated Works
Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament (1950) — Contributor — 366 copies, 1 review
The History of al-Tabari Vol. 38. The Return of the Caliphate to Baghdad: The Caliphates of al-Mu'tadid, al-Muktafi and al-Muqtadir A.D. 892-915/A.H. 279-302 (1985) — Translator, some editions — 21 copies
Studies in Honour of Clifford Edmund Bosworth: Hunter of the East : Arabic and Semitic Studies (1999) — Contributor — 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Rosenthal, Franz
- Birthdate
- 1914-08-31
- Date of death
- 2003-05-08
- Gender
- male
- Education
- University of Berlin
- Occupations
- philologist
professor - Organizations
- Yale University
- Nationality
- Germany
USA - Birthplace
- Berlin, Germany
- Associated Place (for map)
- Berlin, Germany
Members
Reviews
The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History - Abridged Edition (Princeton Classics, 13) by Ibn Khaldūn
There are books that are good, and there are books that are magnificent. This book by Ibn Khaldun falls into the latter category. The editing and translation are superb.
After reading this abridged version, I decided that in the near future I will read the entire text.
Ibn Khaldun's thinking was far ahead of his time and is advanced even in our modern age. He was a true intellectual, whose vision went wide.
This edition focuses on the nature of civilization and is - as per the subtitle - an show more introduction to history.
The book does not focus on kings and queens, but not on how kingdoms and civilization developed in his part of the world. When you read this book, you get an excellent understanding of life in the Middle East at that time, what forces were at play and how the Bedouin culture interacted with the more settled urban culture.
Read this book. You will want more. show less
After reading this abridged version, I decided that in the near future I will read the entire text.
Ibn Khaldun's thinking was far ahead of his time and is advanced even in our modern age. He was a true intellectual, whose vision went wide.
This edition focuses on the nature of civilization and is - as per the subtitle - an show more introduction to history.
The book does not focus on kings and queens, but not on how kingdoms and civilization developed in his part of the world. When you read this book, you get an excellent understanding of life in the Middle East at that time, what forces were at play and how the Bedouin culture interacted with the more settled urban culture.
Read this book. You will want more. show less
The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History - Abridged Edition (Princeton Classics, 13) by Ibn Khaldūn
يشيد ابن خلدون بالعقل والفكر بصفته ما يميز البشر ويرفعهم على باقي الكائنات، ويصف نشأة وسقوط الأمم انطلاقاً من العلاقة بين الفرد والجماعة، وتأثير البيئة على طبيعة البشر، فضلاً عن قواعد الاقتصاد وإدارة رأس المال.
ورغم أن عديد أفكاره يعتبر بالياً قديماً (كالدعوة إلى السلطة show more الملكية باعتبارها المثلى لترسيخ النظام وكبح الشر في المجتمع، واعتبار التحضر والمدنية مدمرة لذاتها، وتفضيل دوام الترحال، والكثير من الهراء الديني الممل)، يبقى كتابه هذا سابقاً لعصره، ومادة مناسبة للدارس والقارئ في التاريخ والمجتمع. show less
ورغم أن عديد أفكاره يعتبر بالياً قديماً (كالدعوة إلى السلطة show more الملكية باعتبارها المثلى لترسيخ النظام وكبح الشر في المجتمع، واعتبار التحضر والمدنية مدمرة لذاتها، وتفضيل دوام الترحال، والكثير من الهراء الديني الممل)، يبقى كتابه هذا سابقاً لعصره، ومادة مناسبة للدارس والقارئ في التاريخ والمجتمع. show less
The Muqaddimah is a pleasurable read for experts with many surprises (in the background/sidelines). Rosenthal's bracket fillers are sometimes annoying and misleading. Khaldun finished the work in 1377, which is a pivotal year in both, the Renaissance and also the decline of Islam civilization into intellectual and economic poverty. It is written at a time where much of Islam's high culture had already been lost. The Muqaddimah is full of superstitions that replaced earlier Arab knowledge.
show more
Khaldun's social economic system is based on group feeling (singular nationalism), social cooperation (socialism) and natural cycles of excessive wealth that corrupt civilizations. He recognizes urbanization as a key factor to prosperity. As a stark reminder to modernity, excess leads to living above means, according to Khaldun, and to the corruption of character. This, he argues, leads to the ruin of civilizations. Hence, his conclusion is that religion - his Sufi version of religion - is the only way to keep a civilization sane and modest. It is an important book that builds a bridge to some understanding of modern Muslim thought. Many of Khaldun's offerings are found in Gaddafi's Green book in a slightly modified version.
The historical narrative that is based on traditions (that were invented after the fact) are useless for the student of history. For more information about how the traditions and the main Arab sects fit into history, see The Great Leap-Fraud. show less
show more
Khaldun's social economic system is based on group feeling (singular nationalism), social cooperation (socialism) and natural cycles of excessive wealth that corrupt civilizations. He recognizes urbanization as a key factor to prosperity. As a stark reminder to modernity, excess leads to living above means, according to Khaldun, and to the corruption of character. This, he argues, leads to the ruin of civilizations. Hence, his conclusion is that religion - his Sufi version of religion - is the only way to keep a civilization sane and modest. It is an important book that builds a bridge to some understanding of modern Muslim thought. Many of Khaldun's offerings are found in Gaddafi's Green book in a slightly modified version.
The historical narrative that is based on traditions (that were invented after the fact) are useless for the student of history. For more information about how the traditions and the main Arab sects fit into history, see The Great Leap-Fraud. show less
Criminally ignored in history of philosophy/intellectual history, since it shockingly illustrates the different ways European & Arabic philosophy were working. This work, written in the 1300s, predates & anticipates a fantastic number of "unique" and "milestone" breakthroughs in European philosophy, including:
Limits of induction (Hume), compromise between rationalism & empiricism (Kant), inaccessibility of the noumenal world (also Kant), Labor theory of value (Smith/Marx), necessity of show more interpretation due to cultural/linguistic relativity (Vico/Herder), Truth as intellectual consensus conforming to empirical observation (Popper), tension between truth in text and truth in speech (Derrida), language influences thought (Whorf), the power necessarily inherent in law (Weber/Foucault)
and probably some others as well show less
Limits of induction (Hume), compromise between rationalism & empiricism (Kant), inaccessibility of the noumenal world (also Kant), Labor theory of value (Smith/Marx), necessity of show more interpretation due to cultural/linguistic relativity (Vico/Herder), Truth as intellectual consensus conforming to empirical observation (Popper), tension between truth in text and truth in speech (Derrida), language influences thought (Whorf), the power necessarily inherent in law (Weber/Foucault)
and probably some others as well show less
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