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Ibn Rushd

Islamic
Ibn Rushd comments on Aristotle in Cordoba, two paths of scripture and demonstration meeting over open manuscripts.
Two paths, one truth.
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Ibn Rushd was born into a family of judges in Cordoba and served as chief judge himself. Ibn Tufayl introduced him to the Almohad caliph, who commissioned him to write commentaries on Aristotle. He produced three levels of commentary on nearly every Aristotelian work, earning the title The Commentator in medieval Europe. His Incoherence of the Incoherence defended philosophy against Al-Ghazali's attacks. He argued for the compatibility of reason and faith. He was briefly exiled for his views, then restored. His work shaped Latin Scholasticism more than any other Islamic thinker.

Birth
1126 CE·Cordoba

Born in Cordoba

Born into a family of distinguished jurists in Cordoba. His grandfather had been the chief judge of the city. He grew up surrounded by law, theology, and the intellectual life of al-Andalus at its peak.

Words

“Ignorance leads to fear, fear leads to hate, and hate leads to violence.”

— Ibn Rushd
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