Ibn Hindu
Abū Al-Faraj ʿAlī ibn al-Husayn ibn Hindū d. 1019-1032,[1] was a poet, a man of letters, and a practitioner of Galenic medicine coming from Rey.[2] Scholars have posited multiple explanations for his name, including: he was Persian and from Hindujān, his possible Indian heritage, and that he was an Arab descendant from the Prophet Muhammad.[3]
Education
His philosophical and medical training was extensive and he studied under Abu al-Hassan al-Amiri,[4] Abū Al-Khayr al-Hasan ibn Siwār,[5] and Abū al-Khayr ibn al-Khammār.[6] He travels to Arraiján in 965, where he continued his services for the Buwayhids.[7]
He wrote in Arabic. He was most famous for his works of poetry, than as a physician. He was also held in high esteem by his students who would travel to study with him.[8] He was employed at 'Adud al-Dawla's dīwān.[9] His approach to religion has been described as open-minded.[10]
Publications
Ibn Hindū. Miftah al-tibb wa-minhaj al-tullab. [The key to the science of medicine and the students' guide]. Mohaghegh M, Daneshpajuh MT, eds. Tehran: Institute of Islamic Studies, McGill University Tehran Branch, in collaboration with Tehran University, 1989.
Later translated by Aidi Tibi as The Key to Medicine and a Guide for Students. The book, espousing the virtues of medicine, has three primary arguments. The first is to demonstrate the noble qualities of being a physician, and to locate the role of physicians within a hierarchy of prestigious professions. The second is to reinforce a hierarchy between those who see reason and accept medicine and the erroneous logic of disbeliever. And finally, ibn Hindū seeks to show the superiority of Dogmatists over Methodists and Empiricists.
The above work makes mention to the existence of A Treatise Encouraging the Study of Philosophy, but only a few excerpts of it survive today.[11]
Abū al-Faraj ibn Hindū, al-Kalim al-rūḥānīyah fī al-ḥikam al-Yūnānīyah (Bayrūt, 2001).
References
- ↑ For contention about the date of his death see "Ibn Hindū." Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Brill Online, 2013; Aida Tibi, “Translator’s Introduction,” in The Key to Medicine and a Guide for Students, trans. Aida Tibi (Reading: Garnet Publishing Limited, 2010), xiii-xix, http://books.google.ca/books?id=7LqkpC5oI9sC&pg=PR15&dq=the+key+to+medicine+a+guide+for+students&hl=en&sa=X&ei=x-CDUYXLKKXC0gG9nIDAAw&ved=0CDEQ6AEwAA; M. Nasser and A. Tibi, “Ibn Hindu and the Science of Medicine,” Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 100 (January 2007), 55–56; Cecilia Martini Bonadeo, "Ibn Ḥindū, Abū l-Faraj", Encyclopedia of Medieval Philosophy (2011).
- ↑ M. Nasser and A. Tibi, “Ibn Hindu and the Science of Medicine,” Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 100 (January 2007), 55–56
- ↑ Aida Tibi, “Translator’s Introduction,” in The Key to Medicine and a Guide for Students, trans. Aida Tibi (Reading: Garnet Publishing Limited, 2010), xiii-xix.
- ↑ Ibn Hindū Abū l-Faraj (s. n.) (1971) In: Lewis B, Menage VL, Pellat Ch, Schacht J (eds) Encyclopaedia of Islam, new edition, vol III. Brill, Leiden/London
- ↑ Aida Tibi, “Translator’s Introduction,” in The Key to Medicine and a Guide for Students, trans. Aida Tibi (Reading: Garnet Publishing Limited, 2010), xiii-xix.
- ↑ Abū Al-Faraj ʿAlī ibn al-Husayn ibn Hindū, The Key to Medicine and a Guide for Students, trans. Aida Tibi (Reading: Garnet Publishing Limited, 2010).
- ↑ Ed... "Ibn Hindū." Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Brill Online, 2013.
- ↑ M. Nasser and A. Tibi, “Ibn Hindu and the Science of Medicine,” Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 100 (January 2007), 55–56.
- ↑ M. Nasser and A. Tibi, “Ibn Hindu and the Science of Medicine,” Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 100 (January 2007), 55–56.
- ↑ Aida Tibi, “Translator’s Introduction,” in The Key to Medicine and a Guide for Students, trans. Aida Tibi (Reading: Garnet Publishing Limited, 2010), xiii-xix.
- ↑ Aida Tibi, “Translator’s Introduction,” in The Key to Medicine and a Guide for Students, trans. Aida Tibi (Reading: Garnet Publishing Limited, 2010), xiii-xix.