Professional Researcher's Encyclopaedia

Knowledge is only a click away

The Muqadimmah - enyclopaedia article

The Muqadimmah

Summary: The Muqadimmah records an early Muslim view of 'universal history'. Many modern thinkers view it as one of the first works of sociology. The Arab historian Ibn Khaldun wrote the work in 1377 as the preface or first book of his planned world history, the kitab al-ibar, but already in his lifetime it became regarded as an independent work. Ibn Khaldun starts the Muqadimmah with a thorough criticism of the mistakes regularly committed by his fellow historians and the difficulties which await th ...

read the full The Muqadimmah article

Buy The Muqadimmah related products:


Buy from Amazon.co.uk Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Video-games - Software - Electronics - Toys
Buy from Amazon.com Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Videogames - Software - Electronics - Photo - Toys
Buy from Amazon.ca Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Video-games - Software - Livres en Français
Buy from Amazon.de - - - - - - -
Buy from Amazon.fr - - - - -
Advanced Product Search (new):    uk    |     us    |     ca    |     de    |     fr

The Muqadimmah

     From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Muqadimmah records an early Muslim view of 'universal history'. Many modern thinkers view it as one of the first works of sociology. The Arab historian Ibn Khaldun wrote the work in 1377 as the preface or first book of his planned world history, the kitab al-ibar, but already in his lifetime it became regarded as an independent work.

Ibn Khaldun starts the Muqadimmah with a thorough criticism of the mistakes regularly committed by his fellow historians and the difficulties which await the historian in his work. He notes seven critical issues: "All records, by their very nature, are liable to error...

  1. ...partisanship towards a creed or opinion...
  2. ...over-confidence in one's sources...
  3. ...the failure to understand what is intended...
  4. ...a mistaken belief in the truth...
  5. ...the inability to place an event in its real context
  6. ...the common desire to gain favor of those of high ranks, by praising them, by spreading their fame...
  7. ...the most important is the ignorance of the laws governing the transformation of human society."
Against the seventh point (the ignorance of social laws) Ibn Khaldun lays out his theory of human society in the Muqadimmah.

See also: early Muslim sociology External links: - http://home.hio.no/~araki/arabase/ibn/khaldun.html

link to this article with the following HTML

 
This article is from Wikipedia. This article was up-to-date as of 8 May 2004 - See live article
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

This page is part of Professional Researcher
Web site design by Dean Marshall