Ibn Sina (980-1037 CE), known in the Western world as Avicenna, was a Persian Muslim philosopher and physician. He was born near Bukhara in what is now Uzbekistan. He was exceptionally gifted: he is said to have memorised the Quran by age ten, and by eighteen was a practising physician whom established doctors came to consult. He lived an active and often difficult life, working as a physician and court official for various rulers across Central Asia and Persia while writing philosophy and science at an extraordinary pace. He wrote more than 200 books. His most important works are the Canon of Medicine, which became the standard medical textbook across Europe and the Islamic world for five centuries, and the Book of Healing (Kitab al-Shifa), a massive encyclopaedia of philosophy and science. He died at 57 years old, in 1037 CE, in what is now western Iran.
Ibn Sina matters for several connected reasons. He represents the extraordinary intellectual achievement of the Islamic Golden Age, the period from roughly the 8th to the 13th centuries when the Islamic world was the world's leading centre of philosophy, science, mathematics, medicine, and scholarship. During this period, Islamic scholars preserved, translated, and extended the philosophical and scientific knowledge of ancient Greece, India, and Persia, and transmitted it to medieval Europe. Without this Islamic transmission, much of ancient knowledge would have been lost. Ibn Sina also made independent contributions of extraordinary significance: his medical system was the most advanced available for centuries, and his philosophical work, including his flying man thought experiment, influenced thinkers in Europe for centuries. He is important today as a reminder that the history of philosophy and science is genuinely global: major advances in human knowledge have come from many traditions and many parts of the world.
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has a freely available article on Ibn Sina (Avicenna) that is the best scholarly introduction to his philosophy.
Jim al-Khalili's Pathfinders: The Golden Age of Arabic Science (2010, Allen Lane) is an accessible and enthusiastic account of Islamic scientific achievement including Ibn Sina's contributions. The BBC documentary Science and Islam presented by Jim al-Khalili is freely available on YouTube.
Shams Inati's Ibn Sina's Remarks and Admonitions: Physics and Metaphysics (2014, Columbia University Press) provides a manageable English translation of one of his philosophical works.
Emilie Savage-Smith's work on Islamic medical manuscripts provides context for the Canon's significance. Dimitri Gutas's Avicenna and the Aristotelian Tradition (1988, Brill) is the most important scholarly account of his philosophical development.
Ibn Sina only matters for the history of medicine.
Ibn Sina was primarily a philosopher who also made major contributions to medicine. His philosophical work on the soul, self-knowledge, the nature of God, and the relationship between essence and existence was enormously influential on medieval Islamic and Christian philosophy. His flying man thought experiment anticipates Descartes's famous cogito argument by six centuries. He matters to the history of philosophy at least as much as to the history of medicine.
The Islamic Golden Age was just a period of preserving Greek knowledge, not of creating new knowledge.
Islamic scholars did preserve and transmit Greek knowledge, which was an invaluable contribution. But they also made major independent contributions in every field: algebra in mathematics, the development of scientific method in optics, advances in astronomy and chemistry, and significant philosophical developments that went beyond anything in Aristotle. Ibn Sina's flying man argument, his theory of the soul, and his distinction between essence and existence were original contributions. The Islamic Golden Age was a period of genuine innovation, not just storage.
Ibn Sina's philosophy is only relevant for Muslims or for people interested in Islamic thought.
Ibn Sina's philosophical arguments engage with universal questions: what is the self? what is the relationship between mind and body? does God exist, and what would God be like? what distinguishes necessary from contingent existence? These questions are not culturally specific, and his answers have been influential across religious and cultural boundaries. Thomas Aquinas, the most important Christian philosopher of the medieval period, drew heavily on Ibn Sina. Modern philosophers of mind find his flying man thought experiment genuinely important for contemporary debates about consciousness.
Ibn Sina was just applying and repeating Aristotle's ideas.
Ibn Sina was deeply influenced by Aristotle and worked within a broadly Aristotelian framework. But he developed, modified, and extended that framework in original ways. His flying man thought experiment has no precedent in Aristotle. His distinction between essence and existence is not in Aristotle. His theory of the Necessary Existent as an argument for God's existence goes well beyond Aristotle's unmoved mover. He is a creative and original thinker who used Aristotle as a starting point, not a mechanical transmitter of someone else's ideas.
The complete Canon of Medicine in Gruner and Shah's translation (1999, Kazi Publications) is the primary medical text. For the flying man argument and psychology: Dag Nikolaus Hasse's Avicenna's De Anima in the Latin West (2000, Warburg Institute) examines the influence of Ibn Sina's psychology on Western thought. For the philosophical theology: Michael Marmura's translation of The Metaphysics of the Healing (2005, Brigham Young University Press) is the standard philosophical text. Jon McGinnis's Avicenna (2010, Oxford University Press) is the most complete single-volume treatment of his thought available in English.
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