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         Khaldun Ibn:     more books (100)
  1. The Science Of Human Social Organization: Conflicting Views of Ibn Khaldun's (1332-1406) Ilm al-Umran (Mellen Studies in Sociology) (Vol 45) by Fuad Baali, 2005-01-30
  2. An Arab Philosophy of History Selections from the Prolegomena of ibn Khaldun of Tunis 1332-1406 by Charles, translated and arranged by Issawi, 1963
  3. Ibn Khaldun and the Medieval Maghrib (Variorum Collected Studies Series, 627) by Michael Brett, 1999-01
  4. al-Tarakum al-salbi wa-al-ilm al-nafi: an qurra Ibn Khaldun (Arabic Edition) by Ben Salem Himmich, 2001
  5. L'Historiographie Merinide: Ibn Khaldun Et Ses Contemporains by M. Shatzmiller, 1997-08-01
  6. Ibn Khaldun and Islamic Ideology (International Studies in Sociology and Social Anthropology)
  7. Ibn Khaldun: History As Science and the Patrimonial Empire (Bibliotheca Orientalis Hungarica,) by Robert Simon, 2003-03
  8. A Selection From The Prolegomena Of Ibn Khaldun: With Notes And An English-German Glossary (1905) by Duncan B. MacDonald, 2008-08-18
  9. Ibn Khaldun: A Reinterpretation (Arabic Thought and Culture) by Aziz Al-Azmeh, 1990-12-31
  10. Ibn Khaldun et ses lecteurs (Essais et conferences / College de France) (French Edition) by Ahmad Abd-al-Salam, 1983
  11. La pensee de l'urbanisation chez Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406) (Collection "Villes et entreprises") (French Edition) by Djamel Chabane, 1998
  12. Les Prolégomènes D'ibn Khaldoun, Volume 3 (French Edition) by Ibn Khaldun, William MacGuckin Slane, 2010-03-08
  13. Yaman: Its Early Medieval History by UMARAH IBN ALI AL-HAKAMI, Ibn Khaldun, et all 2005-08-31
  14. Peuples et Nations du monde, tome 2 by Ibn Khaldûn, 1995-09-05

21. Ibn Khaldun Center For Development Studies
A Cairobased professional research organization created in 1988 to advance applied social sciences, inspired by khaldun's service to the Arab world.
http://www.ibnkhaldun.org/

22. IBN KHALDUN - His Life And Work
from a life of practical activity that gave ibn khaldun his opportunity to cast his creative thought into literary
http://www.muslimphilosophy.com/ip/klf.htm
Printer friendly version IBN KHALDUN His Life and Work BY Muhammad Hozien TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Childhood and his Early Years In Tunisia and Morocco In Morocco and Spain ... Map of Ibn Khaldun's Travels (illustration) To Egypt Meeting Tamerlane The world at Ibn Khaldun's time (illustration) Final Days in Egypt The Magnum Opus "al-Muqaddimah" Facsimile of the cover page of the manuscript in Arabic (illustration) Endnotes Bibliography He is indeed the one outstanding personality in the history of a civilization whose social life on the whole was 'solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short'. In his chosen field of intellectual activity he appears to have been inspired by no predecessors, and to have found no kindred souls among his contemporaries, and to have kindled no answering spark of inspiration in any successors ; and yet, in the Prolegomena (Muqaddimat) to his Universal History he has conceived and formulated a philosophy of history which is undoubtedly the greatest work of its kind that has ever yet been created by any mind in any time or place. It was his single brief 'acquiescence' from a life of practical activity that gave Ibn Khaldun his opportunity to cast his creative thought into literary shape. A STUDY OR HISTORY. Vol. III.

23. "Ibn Khaldun, The Father Of Economics"
Ibrahim M. Oweiss looks at the 14th century Arab historian's pioneering work in the fields of labor theory and economics. In his Prolegomena (The Muqaddimah), 'Abd alRahman ibn Muhammad ibn khaldun al-Hadrami of Tunis (A.D.
http://www.georgetown.edu/oweiss/ibn.htm
IBRAHIM M. OWEISS
In his Prolegomena (The Muqaddimah), 'Abd al-Rahman Ibn Muhammad Ibn Khaldun al-Hadrami of Tunis (A.D. 1332-1406), commonly known as Ibn Khaldun, laid down the foundations of different fields of knowledge, in particular the science of civilization (al-'umran). His significant contributions to economics, however, should place him in the history of economic thought as a major forerunner, if not the "father," of economics, a title which has been given to Adam Smith, whose great works were published some three hundred and seventy years after Ibn Khaldun's death. Not only did Ibn Khaldun plant the germinating seeds of classical economics, whether in production, supply, or cost, but he also pioneered in consumption, demand, and utility, the cornerstones of modern economic theory.
Before Ibn Khaldun, Plato and his contemporary Xenophon presented, probably for the first time In writing, a crude account of the specialization and division of labor. On a non-theoretical level, the ancient Egyptians used the techniques of specialization, particularly in the era of the Eighteenth Dynasty, in order to save time and to produce more work per hour. Following Plato, Aristotle proposed a definition of economics and considered the use of money in his analysis of exchange. His example of the use of a shoe for wear and for its use in exchange was later presented by Adam Smith as the value in use and the value in exchange. Another aspect of economic thought before Ibn Khaldun was that of the Scholastics and of the Canonites, who proposed placing economics within the framework of laws based on religious and moral perceptions for the good of all human beings. Therefore all economic activities were to be undertaken in accordance with such laws.

24. Ibn Khaldun, 1332-1395 C.E.
A biography and outline of beliefs written by Dr. A. Zahoor.
http://salam.muslimsonline.com/~azahoor/khaldun.html
IBN KHALDUN (1332 - 1395 C.E.) by
Dr. A. Zahoor

Click here to proceed

25. Ibn Khaldun And Comte: Discontinuity Or Progress
Short essay that argues for including a session on ibn khaldun (comparing him to Comte) in a social theory syllabus.
http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~frers/ibn_khaldun.html
Ibn Khaldun and Comte
Discontinuity or Progress
Author: Lars Frers, November 1999
e-mail: frers@zedat.fu-berlin.de
www: http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~frers
This text as a .pdf file for offline reading:
IbnKhaldunSyllabus.pdf
Adobe is necessary)
Contents
Occident and Orient
Nature or History

Comparing Comte and Ibn Khaldun

Dichotomies and the Muqaddimah
...
References
Occident and Orient
In this paper, I want to promote Ibn Khaldun as a social theorist by lining out how and why Ibn Khaldun could be included into an early session of a social theory class. Instead of reading Hobbes and Comte under the title "Two Legacies: Order and Positivism: Hobbes and Comte" (as suggested in Tom Gieryn 's social theory graduate class at Indiana University in 1999) I would suggest reading and comparing Ibn Khaldun and Comte. The title of the session could be "Circularity or Progress: Ibn Khaldun and Comte". The central piece of Ibn Khaldun's work is The Muqaddimah , which was completed in 1377. In this text he develops a theory of what he calls 'ilm al-umran', which could be translated as the study of social organization or civilization or as the science of human association/the science of culture Bringing Ibn Khaldun into the syllabus would reflect these contributions and acknowledge post-colonialist critiques al least to some extent. (b) I would see one of the goals of a graduate class on sociological theory in presenting to the students a view on the field of sociology that shows them how sociological theory is rooted in its contemporary culture. Ibn Khaldun is an excellent example for this embeddedness as he embarks on the analysis of medieval North Africa. His texts a a very vivid example, showing how a new perspective of one's own environment can be reconstructed through the use of sociological argumentation.

26. - Great Books -
ibn khaldun (13321395), Abd al-Rahman ibn Mohammad is generally knownas ibn khaldun after a remote ancestor. His parents, originally
http://www.malaspina.com/site/person_712.asp
Ibn Khaldun
Abd al-Rahman Ibn Mohammad is generally known as Ibn Khaldun after a remote ancestor. His parents, originally Yemenite Arabs, had settled in Spain, but after the fall of Seville, had migrated to Tunisia. He was born in Tunisia in 1332 A.D., where he received his early education and where, still in his teens, he entered the service of the Egyptian ruler Sultan Barquq. His thirst for advanced know- ledge and a better academic setting soon made him leave this service and migrate to Fez. This was followed by a long period of unrest marked by contemporary political rivalries affecting his career. This turbulent period also included a three year refuge in a small village Qalat Ibn Salama in Algeria, which provided him with the opportunity to write Muqaddimah , the first volume of his world history that won him an immortal place among historians, sociologists and philosophers. The uncertainty of his career still continued, with Egypt becoming his final abode where he spent his last 24 years. Here he lived a life of fame and respect, marked by his appointment as the Chief Malakite Judge and lecturing at the AL-Azhar University, but envy caused his removal from his high judicial office as many as five times.
Ibn Khaldun's chief contribution lies in philosophy of history and sociology. He sought to write a world history preambled by a first volume aimed at an analysis of historical events. This volume, commonly known as

27. Hull , Isabel
khaldun , ibn. Muqaddimah an introduction to history 1969 D 16.7 .I24131969, COPIES 4. COURSE V3399 S03 PROFESSOR Bard, Amy. Search
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/libraries/reserves/barnard/author/author666.html
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(SPRING 2003)
Hull , Isabel
Sexuality, State, and Civil Society
folder COPIES: 1 HQ 18 .G3 H84 1996 COPIES: 1 COURSE: BC3323 S03 PROFESSOR: Valenze, Debora Search Across All CU Online Reserve Lists:
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28. Ibn Khaldun Center - The Deceased Priest Of Enlightenment Ibrahim Abd El-Seid
ElSeid. By Dr. Ahmed Sobhy Mashour. The weekly meeting of the Riwaqibn khaldun (ibn khaldun Forum) was due on August 31 st 1999.
http://www.ibnkhaldun.org/newsletter/1999/sept/center3.html
Civil Society: Democratization in the Arab World
A Monthly Publication of the Ibn Khaldun Center for Development Studies
Center Notes:
The Deceased Priest of Enlightenment
Ibrahim Abd El-Seid
By Dr. Ahmed Sobhy Mashour The weekly meeting of the Riwaq Ibn Khaldun (Ibn Khaldun Forum) was due on August 31 st 1999. At this meeting, there was the absence of Ibrahim El-Seid who has sadly passed on. His Riwaq colleagues farewelled him on the same day. The late priest was one of tolerance, persistence, honesty, integrity and enlightenment. It is a fact that this enlightened priest has enriched the Egyptian intellectual life with his distinguished articles and researches. He tackled the most crucial, sensitive and controversial issues in a strictly objective manner. He was not by any chance hesitant to announce his findings and speak his opinion out loudly, no matter what the cost. Part of this cost was the gloomy scene at his funeral when the Egyptian Coptic Church refused to let his corpse into the Ard-el-Golf church for the ceremony. It was quite a shock for everyone at the funeral to see such a stance of the Coptic Church. Father Agathon performed the ceremony at the deceased's village tomb with great bitterness shaking all attendants.

29. Ibn Khaldun On The Web
Comprehensive web directory and guide to ibn khaldun, the great Arab historianand philosopher of history. META NAME=. ibn khaldun and Murray Rothbard.
http://www.isidore-of-seville.com/ibnkhaldun/2.html
About this site
Web Biographies

Academic

Selections
...
Other

Academic
The Encyclopedia of Islam the scholarly source online). Kudos to Muhammad Hozien for putting this online, together with other entries on Muslim Philosophy "Ibn Khaldoun, précurseur médiéval de l'histoire des civilisations" from Fernand Braudel's "La longue, l'inepuisable duree des civilisations." Un texte classique de Fernand Braudel. Braudel goes in serch of his antecedents. French language, obviously. "Ibn Khaldun and Comte: Discontinuity or Progress" by Lars Frers. Argues for using Ibn Khaldun in social theory classes, comparing him to Hobbes and Comte. "Alchemy in Ibn Khaldun's Muqaddimah" by Prof. Hamed A. Ead, Cairo University. Introduction and selections. Mirrored . See also Prof. Ead's Alchemy in Islamic Times "Ibn Khaldun's Civil Society" by Maverick F. Fisher. Midterm paper compares the views of Khaldun and the American political scientist Robert Putnam for a class studying civil society at UT, Austin. "Islamic political thought: Ibn Khaldun" by R. J. Kilcullen, for a class in political theory at Macquarie University, Australia. Deft analysis, drawn primarily from Mushin Mahdi's Ibn Khaldun's Philosophy of History "Islam and the Medieval Progenitors of Austrian Economics" 1995 conference paper by Imad-ad-Dean Ahmad, Minaret of Freedom Institute. Ibn Khaldun and Murray Rothbard. Khaldun is also mentioned frequently in the author's

30. Ibn Khaldun And Our Age
Paper by James Kalb giving a treatment of khaldun's philosophy of society and its applicability in the modern day.
http://counterrevolution.net/kalb_texts/khaldun.html
A slightly edited version of the following essay appeared in issue 20 of The Scorpion . The writer, James Kalb , would be grateful for any comments. The issues the essay raises can be discussed on our discussion board, The Struggle Continues! Your participation is welcome. For more on Ibn Khaldun, you may visit Ibn Khaldun on the Web a comprehensive directory and guide.
Ibn Khaldun and Our Age
Political thinkers engage our attention by their presentation of the particular features of their own time and place as well as the permanent qualities of man in society. We can read Aristotle and Hobbes for general lessons, or for the politics of the Greek city-state and of European society after the wars of religion. As times change so do the thinkers who interest us. Those of our own tradition normally interest us most since they illuminate the succeeding stages of our own social world. That world is always changing, however, sometimes in ways that are not fully continuous with its past but bring it closer in important respects to other civilizations. The conditions that are westernizing the world's East and South also affect Europe and its offspring. World dominion, which orientalized Rome, may end by doing so to us; if so, certain Eastern thinkers will become as relevant as those of the West for understanding the social setting in which we live. Ibn Khaldun,[

31. Ibn Khaldun And Our Age
Abd alRahman ibn Mohammad is generally known as ibn khaldun after a remote ancestor.
http://www.counterrevolution.net/kalb_texts/khaldun.html
A slightly edited version of the following essay appeared in issue 20 of The Scorpion . The writer, James Kalb , would be grateful for any comments. The issues the essay raises can be discussed on our discussion board, The Struggle Continues! Your participation is welcome. For more on Ibn Khaldun, you may visit Ibn Khaldun on the Web a comprehensive directory and guide.
Ibn Khaldun and Our Age
Political thinkers engage our attention by their presentation of the particular features of their own time and place as well as the permanent qualities of man in society. We can read Aristotle and Hobbes for general lessons, or for the politics of the Greek city-state and of European society after the wars of religion. As times change so do the thinkers who interest us. Those of our own tradition normally interest us most since they illuminate the succeeding stages of our own social world. That world is always changing, however, sometimes in ways that are not fully continuous with its past but bring it closer in important respects to other civilizations. The conditions that are westernizing the world's East and South also affect Europe and its offspring. World dominion, which orientalized Rome, may end by doing so to us; if so, certain Eastern thinkers will become as relevant as those of the West for understanding the social setting in which we live. Ibn Khaldun,[

32. Ibn Khaldun, 'Abd Al-Rahman (1332-1406)
ibn khaldun, 'Abd alRahman (1332-1406). ibn khaldun's work on the philosophyof history is a landmark of social thought. Many historians
http://www.muslimphilosophy.com/rep/H024.htm
Ibn Khaldun, 'Abd al-Rahman (1332-1406)
Ibn Khaldun's work on the philosophy of history is a landmark of social thought. Many historians - Greek, Roman, Muslim and other - had written valuable historiography, but here we have brilliant reflections on the meaning, pattern and laws of history and society, as well as profound insights into the nature of social processes and the interconnections between phenomena in such diverse fields as politics, economics, sociology and education. By any reckoning, Ibn Khaldun was the outstanding figure in the social sciences between Aristotle and Machiavelli, and one of the greatest philosophers of history of all time. His most important philosophical work is the Muqaddima , the introduction to a much longer history of the Arabs and Berbers. In this work, Ibn Khaldun clearly defines a science of culture and expounds on the nature of human society and on political and social cycles. Different social groups, nomads, townspeople and traders, interact with and affect one another in a continuous pattern. Religion played an important part in Ibn Khaldun's conception of the state, and he followed al-Ghazali rather than Ibn Rushd as a surer guide to the truth.
  • Life and cultural context Philosophy of history Critique of Islamic philosophy
  • 1. Life and cultural context

    33. In The Liberal Tradition: A History Of Liberty
    Short profile of khaldun and his place in the Western liberal tradition, provided by the Acton Institute.
    http://www.acton.org/research/libtrad/khaldun.html

    Site Map
    Contact Us Home Research ... Subscribe to Acton Publications The Academic Research Center of the Acton Institute
    In the Liberal Tradition: A History of Liberty
    This collection of short biographies highlights the life and thought of central characters in the history of liberty. THE MIDDLE AGES THE RENAISSANCE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY NINETEENTH CENTURY TWENTIETH CENTURY About CEP: Research Staff Key Topics (Reading List): Christian Social Thought
    Economic Personalism

    Free-market Economics

    Human Dignity
    ...
    Value Theory (Axiology)
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    Christian Social Thought Series

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    Economic Personalism: What is Econ. Personalism?

    34. Directory :: Look.com
    khaldun, ibn (11) ibn khaldun and Our Age Paper by James Kalb giving a treatmentof khaldun's philosophy of society and its applicability in the modern day.
    http://www.look.com/searchroute/directorysearch.asp?p=339543

    35. Searchalot Directory For Khaldun, Ibn
    ibn khaldun Center for Development A Cairo-based professional research organizationcreated in 1988 to advance applied social sciences, inspired by khaldun's
    http://www.searchalot.com/Top/Society/Philosophy/Philosophers/Khaldun,Ibn/
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    36. Autorenverzeichnis: Ibn Khaldun
    Translate this page Perlentaucher.de - ibn KhaldunAbd al-Rahman ibn Mohammad ibn Khaldunwurde 1332 in Tunis geboren. Seine Eltern des ägyptischen
    http://www.perlentaucher.de/autoren/6450.html
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    37. Malaspina.com - Ibn Khaldun (1332-1395)
    Launch Previous Entry in New Window Malaspina Literature Database Launch NextEntry in New Window ibn khaldun (13321395) Muslim Scholars Page.
    http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/khaldun1.htm
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    38. Listings Of The World Society Philosophy Philosophers Khaldun
    http//www.georgetown.edu/oweiss/ibn.htm Added Nov-27-02; ibn khaldun and Comte- Discontinuity or Progress Post Review Short essay that argues for including
    http://listingsworld.com/Society/Philosophy/Philosophers/Khaldun,_Ibn/

    39. Ibn Khaldun (InterIslamicNet)
    ibn khaldun (13321395. AD) ibn khaldun is universally recognized asthe founder and father of Sociology and Sciences of History.
    http://members.tripod.com/bimcrot/alkisah/khaldun.html
    Ibn Khaldun (1332-1395. A.D.) Ibn Khaldun is universally recognized as the founder and father of Sociology and Sciences of History. He is best known for his famous ' Muqaddimah Prolegomena ). Abd al-Rahman Ibn Mohammad, generally known as Ibn Khaldun after a remote ancestor, was born in Tunis in 732 A.H. (1332 C.E.) to an upper class family that had migrated from Seville in Muslim Spain. His ancestors were Yemenite Arabs who settled in Spain in the very beginning of Muslim rule in the eighth century. During his formative years, Ibn Khaldun experienced his family's active participation in the intellectual life of the city, and to a lesser degree, its political life. He was used to frequent visits to his family by the political and intellectual leaders of western Islamic states (i.e., North Africa and Spain), many of whom took refuge there. Ibn Khaldun was educated at Tunis and Fez, and studied the Qur'an, Prophet Muhammad's Traditions and other branches of Islamic studies such as Dialectical theology, shari'a (Islamic Law of Jurisprudence, according to the Maliki School). He also studied Arabic literature, philosophy, mathematics and astronomy. While still in his teens, he entered the service of the Egyptian ruler Sultan Barquq. Ibn Khaldun had to move from one court to another, sometimes at his own will, but often forced to do so by plotting rivals or despotic rulers. He learnt much from his encounters with rulers, ambassadors, politicians and scholars from North Africa, Muslim Spain, Egypt and other parts of the Muslim world.

    40. MetaXearch > Society Philosophy Philosophers Khaldun, Ibn
    MetaXearch / Philosophy / Philosophers / khaldun, ibn /. ibn khaldun MuslimPhilosophy ibn khaldun A history of the philospher. ibn khaldun
    http://www.metaxearch.com/en/odp/Society/Philosophy/Philosophers/Khaldun,_Ibn/
    Adult filter: On Search: MetaXearch Philosophy Philosophers Khaldun, Ibn ... Ibn Khaldun Center for Development
    A Cairo-based professional research organization created in 1988 to advance applied social sciences, inspired by Khaldun's service to the Arab world. Muslims Online - Ibn Khaldun, 1332-1395 C.E.
    A biography and outline of beliefs written by Dr. A. Zahoor. Islamic Gateway - Ibn Khaldun
    An overview of Khaldun's contributions to philosophy of history and sociology. Ibm Khaldun - Father of Economics
    Paper by Ibrahim M. Oweiss citing Khaldun's writings as the inspiration of modern economic theory and of Adam Smith himself. Encyclopaedia of the Orient: Ibn Khaldoun
    A short biography. Muslim Philosophy: Ibn Khaldun
    A history of the philospher. Ibn Khaldun and Our Age
    Paper by James Kalb giving a treatment of Khaldun's philosophy of society and its applicability in the modern day. Ibn Khaldun on the Web
    Extensive web directory and guide to the great Arab historian and philosopher of history, including articles, academic papers, online books, and web biographies. Islamic Political Thought: Ibn Khaldun
    Paper by R. J. Kilcullen, an undergraduate at Macquarie University, briefly summarizing Khaldun's theories on the rise and fall of states and civilizations.

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