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Al-Farabi, Abu
Nasr (c.870-950)
al-Farabi, Abu Nasr (c.870-950) Al-Farabi was known
to the Arabs as the ‘Second
Master’ (after Aristotle), and
with good reason. It is unfortunate
that his name has been overshadowed
by those of later philosophers such
as Ibn Sina, for al-Farabi was one
of the world’s great philosophers
and much more original than many of
his Islamic successors. A
philosopher, logician and musician,
he was also a major political
scientist. Al-Farabi has left us no
autobiography and consequently,
relatively little is known for
certain about his life. His
philosophical legacy, however, is
large. In the arena of metaphysics
he has been designated the ‘Father
of Islamic Neoplatonism’, and
while he was also saturated with
Aristotelianism and certainly
deploys the vocabulary of Aristotle,
it is this Neoplatonic dimension
which dominates much of his corpus.
This is apparent in his most famous
work, al-Madina al-fadila (The
Virtuous City) which, far from being
a copy or a clone of Plato’s
Republic, is imbued with the
Neoplatonic concept of God. Of
course, al-Madina al-fadila has
undeniable Platonic elements but its
theology, as opposed to its
politics, places it outside the
mainstream of pure Platonism. In his
admittedly complex theories of
epistemology, al-Farabi has both an
Aristotelian and Neoplatonic
dimension, neither of which is
totally integrated with the other.
His influence was wide and extended
not only to major Islamic
philosophers such as Ibn Sina who
came after him, and to lesser
mortals such as Yahya ibn ‘Adi,
al-Sijistani, al-‘Amiri and al-Tawhidi,
but also to major thinkers of
Christian medieval Europe including
Thomas Aquinas. 1 Life and works Abu
Nasr Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn
Tarkhan ibn Awzalagh al-Farabi was
born in approximately AH 257/AD 870.
He may rightly be acclaimed as one
of the greatest of Islamic
philosophers of all time. While his
name tends to be overshadowed by
that of Ibn Sina, it is worth
bearing in mind that the latter was
less original than the former.
Indeed, a well-known story tells how
Ibn Sina sought in vain to
understand Aristotle’s
Metaphysics, and it was only through
a book by al-Farabi on the
intentions of the Metaphysics that
understanding finally came to him.
However, unlike Ibn Sina, al-Farabi
has left us no autobiography and we
know far less about his life in
consequence. Considerable myth has
become attached to the man: it is
unlikely, for example, that he
really spoke more than seventy
languages, and we may also query his
alleged ascetic lifestyle. We do
know that he was born in Turkestan
and later studied Arabic in Baghdad;
it has been claimed that most of his
books were written here. He
travelled to Damascus, Egypt, Harran
and Aleppo, and in the latter city
the Hamdanid ruler Sayf al-Dawla
became his patron. Even the
circumstances of his death are not
clear: some accounts portray him
dying naturally in Damascus while at
least one holds that he was mugged
and killed on the road from Damascus
to Ascalon. Al-Farabi became an
expert in philosophy and logic, and
also in music: one of his works is
entitled Kitab al-musiqa al-kabir
(The Great Book of Music). However,
perhaps the book for which he is
best known is that whose title is
abbreviated to al-Madina al-fadila
(The Virtuous City), and which is
often compared, misleadingly in view
of its Neoplatonic orientation, to
Plato’s Republic. Other major
titles from al-Farabi’s voluminous
corpus included the Risala
fi’l-‘aql (Epistle on the
Intellect), Kitab al-huruf (The Book
of Letters) and Kitab ihsa’ al-‘ulum
(The Book of the Enumeration of the
Sciences). 2 Metaphysics Majid
Fakhry (1983) has described al-Farabi
as ‘the founder of Arab
Neo-Platonism and the first major
figure in the history of that
philosophical movement since Proclus’.
This should be borne in mind as we
survey the metaphysics of the
philosopher whom the Latin Middle
Ages knew as Abunaser and whom the
Arabs designated the
‘Second Master’ (after
Aristotle). It should be noted that
al-Farabi was an Aristotelian as
well as a Neoplatonist: he is said,
for example, to have read On the
Soul two hundred times and even the
Physics forty times. It should then
come as no surprise that he deploys
Aristotelian terminology, and indeed
there are areas of his writings that
are quite untouched by Neoplatonism.
Furthermore, al-Farabi tried to
demonstrate the basic agreement
between Aristotle and Plato on such
matters as the creation of the
world, the survival of the soul and
reward and punishment in the
afterlife. In al-Farabi’s
conception of God, essence and
existence fuse absolutely with no
possible separation between the two.
However, there is no getting away
from the fact that it is the
Neoplatonic element which dominates
so much else of al-Farabi’s work.
We see this, for example, in the
powerful picture of the transcendent
God of Neoplatonism which dominates
al-Madina al-fadila. We see this too
in al-Farabi’s references to God
in a negative mode, describing the
deity by what he is not: he has no
partner, he is indivisible and
indefinable. And perhaps we see the
Neoplatonic element most of all in
the doctrine of emanation as it is
deployed in al-Farabi’s hierarchy
of being. At the top of this
hierarchy is the Divine Being whom
al-Farabi characterizes as ‘the
First’. From this emanates a
second being which is the First
Intellect. (This is termed,
logically, ‘the Second’, that
is, the Second Being). Like God,
this being is an immaterial
substance. A total of ten intellects
emanate from the First Being. The
First Intellect comprehends God and,
in consequence of that
comprehension, produces a third
being, which is the Second
Intellect. The First Intellect also
comprehends its own essence, and the
result of this comprehension is the
production of the body and soul of
al-sama’ al-ula, the First Heaven.
Each of the following emanated
intellects are associated with the
generation of similar astral
phenomena, including the fixed
stars, Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, the
Sun, Venus, Mercury and the Moon. Of
particular significance in the
emanationist hierarchy is the Tenth
Intellect: it is this intellect
which constitutes the real bridge
between the heavenly and terrestrial
worlds. This Tenth Intellect
(variously called by the
philosophers the active or agent
intellect in English, the nous poiétikos
in Greek, the dator formarum in
Latin and the ‘aql al-fa‘‘al
in Arabic) was responsible both for
actualizing the potentiality for
thought in man’s intellect and
emanating form to man and the
sublunary world. With regard to the
latter activity, it has been pointed
out that here the active intellect
takes on the role of Plotinus’
Universal Soul (see Plotinus). In
Farabian metaphysics, then, the
concept of Neoplatonic emanation
replaces that of Qur’anic creation
ex nihilo (see Neoplatonism in
Islamic philosophy §2).
Furthermore, the Deity at the top of
the Neoplatonic hierarchy is
portrayed in a very remote fashion.
Al-Farabi’s philosophers’ God
does not act directly on the
sublunary world: much is delegated
to the Active Intellect. However,
God for al-Farabi certainly has an
indirect ‘responsibility’ for
everything, in that all things
emanate from him. Yet we must also
note, in order to present a fully
rounded picture, that while it is
the Neoplatonic portrait of God
which dominates al-Farabi’s
writings, this is not the only
picture. In some of his writings the
philosopher does address God
traditionally, Qur’anically and
Islamically: he does invoke God as
‘Lord of the Worlds’ and ‘God
of the Easts and the Wests’, and
he asks God to robe him in splendid
clothes, wisdom and humility and
deliver him from misfortune. Yet the
overwhelming Neoplatonic substratum
of so much else of what he writes
fully justifies Fakhry’s
characterization of al-Farabi, cited
earlier, as ‘the founder of Arab
Neo-Platonism’. 3 Epistemology
Farabian epistemology has both a
Neoplatonic and an Aristotelian
dimension. Much of the former has
already been surveyed in our
examination of al-Farabi’s
metaphysics, and thus our attention
turns now to the Aristotelian
dimension. Our three primary Arabic
sources for this are al-Farabi’s
Kitab ihsa’ al-‘ulum, Risala
fi’l-‘aql and Kitab al-huruf. It
is the second of these works, Risala
fi’l-‘aql, which provides
perhaps the most useful key to al-Farabi’s
complex theories of intellection. In
this work he divides ‘aql
(intellect or reason) into
six major categories in an attempt
to elaborate the various meanings of
the Arabic word ‘aql. First, there
is what might be termed discernment
or prudence; the individual who acts
for the good is characterized by
this faculty, and there is clearly
some overlap with the fourth kind of
intellect, described below. The
second of al-Farabi’s intellects
is that which has been identified
with common sense; this intellect
has connotations of
‘obviousness’ and ‘immediate
recognition’ associated with it.
Al-Farabi’s third intellect is
natural perception. He traces its
source to Aristotle’s Posterior
Analytics, and it is this intellect
which allows us to be certain about
fundamental truths. It is not a
skill derived from the study of
logic, but it may well be inborn.
The fourth of the six intellects may
be characterized as
‘conscience’: this is drawn by
the philosopher from Book VI of
Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics. It
is a quality whereby good might be
distinguished from evil and results
from considerable experience of life
(see Aristotle §§18-21). Al-Farabi’s
fifth intellect is both the most
difficult and the most important. He
gives most space to its description
in his Risala fi’l-‘aql and
considers it to be of four different
types: potential intellect, actual
intellect, acquired intellect and
agent or active intellect. ‘Aql
bi’l-quwwa (potential intellect)
is the intellect which, in
Fakhry’s words, has the capacity ‘of abstracting the forms of existing entities with which
it is ultimately identified’ (Fakhry
1983: 121). Potential intellect can
thus become ‘aql bi’l-fi‘l
(actual intellect). In its
relationship to the actual
intellect, the third sub-species of
intellect, ‘aql mustafad (acquired
intellect) is, to use Fakhry’s
words again, the ‘the agent of
actualization’ to the actualized
object. Finally, there is the ‘aql
al-fa‘‘al (agent or active
intellect), which was described in
§2 above and need not be elaborated
upon again. The sixth and last of
the major intellects is Divine
Reason or God himself, the source of
all intellectual energy and power.
Even this brief presentation of
Farabian intellection must appear
complex; however, given the
complexity of the subject itself,
there is little option. The best
source for al-Farabi’s
classification of knowledge is his
Kitab ihsa’ al-‘ulum. This work
illustrates neatly al-Farabi’s
beliefs both about what can be known
and the sheer range of that
knowledge. Here he leaves aside the
division into theological and
philosophical sciences which other
Islamic thinkers would use, and
divides his material instead into
five major chapters. Through all of
them runs a primary Aristotelian
stress on the importance of
knowledge. Chapter 1 deals with the
‘science of language’, Chapter 2
formally covers the ‘science of
logic’, Chapter 3 is devoted to
the ‘mathematical sciences’,
Chapter 4 surveys physics and
metaphysics, and the final chapter
encompasses ‘civil science’
(some prefer the term ‘political
science’), jurisprudence and
scholastic theology. A brief
examination of these chapter
headings shows that a total of eight
main subjects are covered; not
surprisingly, there are further
subdivisions as well. To give just
one example, the third chapter on
the mathematical sciences embraces
the seven subdivisions of
arithmetic, geometry, optics,
astronomy, music, weights and
‘mechanical artifices’; these
subdivisions in turn have their own
subdivisions. Thus al-Farabi’s
epistemology, from what has been
described both in this section and
§2 above, may be said to be
encyclopedic in range and complex in
articulation, with that articulation
using both a Neoplatonic and an
Aristotelian voice. 4 Political
philosophy The best known Arabic
source for al-Farabi’s political
philosophy is al-Madina al-fadila.
While this work undoubtedly embraces
Platonic themes, it is in no way an
Arabic clone of Plato’s Republic.
This becomes very clear right at the
beginning of al-Farabi’s work,
with its description of the First
Cause (Chapters 1-2) and the
emanation of ‘the Second’ from
‘The First’ (Chapter 3). Later
in the work, however, al-Farabi lays
down in Platonic fashion the
qualities necessary for the ruler:
he should be predisposed to rule by
virtue of an innate disposition and
exhibit the right attitude for such
rule. He will have perfected himself
and be a good orator, and his soul
will be, as it were, united to the
active intellect (see §3). He will
have a strong physique, a good
understanding and memory, love
learning and truth and be above the
materialism of this world. Other
qualities are enumerated by al-Farabi
as well, and it is clear that here
his ideal ruler is akin to Plato’s
classical philosopher-king (see
Plato §14). Al-Farabi has a number
of political divisions for his
world. He identifies, for example,
three types of society which are
perfect and grades these according
to size. His ideal virtuous city,
which gives its name to the whole
volume, is that which wholeheartedly
embraces the pursuit of goodness and
happiness and where the virtues will
clearly abound. This virtuous city
is compared in its function to the
limbs of a perfectly healthy body.
By stark contrast, al-Farabi
identifies four different types of
corrupt city: these are the ignorant
city (al-madina al-jahiliyya), the
dissolute city (al-madina al-fasiqa),
the turncoat city (al-madina al-mubaddala)
and the straying city (al-madina al-dalla).
The souls of many of the inhabitants
of such cities face ultimate
extinction, while those who have
been the cause of their fall face
eternal torment. In itemizing four
corrupt societies, al-Farabi was
surely aware of Plato’s own
fourfold division of imperfect
societies in the Republic into
timarchy, oligarchy, democracy and
tyranny. The resemblance, however,
is more one of structure (four
divisions) rather than of content.
At the heart of al-Farabi’s
political philosophy is the concept
of happiness (sa‘ada). The
virtuous society (al-ijtima‘ al-fadil)
is defined as that in which people
cooperate to gain happiness. The
virtuous city (al-madina al-fadila)
is one where there is cooperation in
achieving happiness. The virtuous
world (al-ma‘mura al-fadila) will
only occur when all its constituent
nations collaborate to achieve
happiness. Walzer reminds us that
both Plato and Aristotle held that
supreme happiness was only to be
gained by those who philosophized in
the right manner. Al-Farabi followed
the Greek paradigm and the highest
rank of happiness was allocated to
his ideal sovereign whose soul was
‘united as it were with the Active
Intellect’. But Walzer goes on to
stress that al-Farabi ‘does not
confine his interest to the felicity
of the first ruler: he is equally
concerned with the felicity of all
the five classes which make up the
perfect state’
(Walzer, in introduction to
al-Madina al-fadila (1985: 409-10)).
Farabian political philosophy, then,
sits astride the saddle of Greek
eudaimonia, and a soteriological
dimension may easily be deduced from
this emphasis on happiness. For if
salvation in some form is reserved
for the inhabitants of the virtuous
city, and if the essence of that
city is happiness, then it is no
exaggeration to say that salvation
is the reward of those who cooperate
in the achievement of human
happiness. Eudaimonia/sa‘ada
becomes a soteriological raft or
steed. 5 Influence The impact of al-Farabi’s
work on Ibn Sina was not limited
merely to illuminating Aristotle’s
Metaphysics. It was with good reason
that al-Farabi was designated the ‘Second Master’ (after Aristotle). One modern scholar
recently acknowledged the dependence
of Ibn Sina on al-Farabi in a book
dealing with both which he entitled
The Two Farabis (Farrukh 1944). And
if Aquinas (§9) did not derive his
essence-existence doctrine from al-Farabi
but from the Latinized Ibn Sina, as
is generally assumed, there is no
doubt that Farabian concepts of
essence and existence provided a
base for the elaborated metaphysics
of Ibn Sina and thence of Aquinas.
Finally, the briefest of comparisons
between the tenfold hierarchy of
intellection produced by al-Farabi
and the similar hierarchy espoused
by Ibn Sina, each of which gives a
key role to the Tenth Intellect,
shows that in matters of emanation,
hierarchy and Neoplatonic
intellection, Ibn Sina owes a
considerable intellectual debt to
his predecessor. Al-Farabi
influenced many other thinkers as
well. A glance at the period between
AH 256/AD 870 and AH 414/AD 1023 and
at four of the major thinkers who
flourished in this period serves to
confirm this: Yahya ibn ‘Adi, Abu
Sulayman al-Sijistani, Abu
‘l-Hasan Muhammad ibn Yusuf al-‘Amiri
and Abu Hayyan al-Tawhidi may all be
said to constitute in one form or
another a ‘Farabian School’. The
Christian Monophysite Yahya ibn
‘Adi studied in Baghdad under al-Farabi
and others. Like his master, Yahya
was devoted to the study of logic;
like his master also, Yahya held
that there was a real link between
reason, ethics and politics. Al-Sijistani
was a pupil of Yahya’s and thus at
one remove from al-Farabi;
nonetheless, he shared in both his
master’s and al-Farabi’s
devotion to logic, and indeed was
known as al-Sijistani al-Mantiqi
(The Logician). In his use of
Platonic classification and thought,
al-Sijistani reveals himself as a
true disciple of al-Farabi. Although
al-‘Amiri appears to speak
disparagingly of al-Farabi at one
point, there can be no doubt about
al-Farabi’s impact on him. Indeed,
al-‘Amiri’s works combine the
Platonic, the Aristotelian and the
Neoplatonic. Finally, Abu Hayyan al-Tawhidi,
a pupil of both Yahya and al-Sijistani,
stressed, for example, the primacy
of reason and the necessity of using
logic. Like others of the Farabian
School outlined above, al-Tawhidi
contributed towards a body of
thought the primary constituents of
which were the soteriological, the
ethical and the noetic. See also:
Aristotelianism in Islamic
philosophy; Greek philosophy: impact
on Islamic philosophy; Ibn Sina;
Logic in Islamic philosophy;
Neoplatonism in Islamic philosophy;
Political philosophy in classical
Islam IAN RICHARD NETTON Routledge
Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Version
1.0, London: Routledge
List of works
al-Farabi (c.870-950) al-Madina al-fadila (The
Virtuous City), trans. R. Walzer,
Al-Farabi on the Perfect State: Abu
Nasr al-Farabi’s Mabadi’ Ara Ahl
al-Madina al-Fadila, Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1985.(Revised with
introduction and commentary by the
translator.) al-Farabi (c.870-950)
Risala fi’l-‘aql (Epistle on the
Intellect), ed. M. Bouyges, Beirut:
Imprimerie Catholique, 1938.(A
seminal text for the understanding
of Farabian epistemology.) al-Farabi
(c.870-950) Kitab al-huruf (The Book
of Letters), ed. M. Mahdi, Beirut:
Dar al-Mashriq, 1969.(Modelled on
Aristotle’s Metaphysics, but of
interest to students of linguistics
as well as of philosophy.) al-Farabi(c.
870-950) Kitab ihsa’ al-‘ulum
(The Book of the Enumeration of the
Sciences), ed. and trans. A. Gonzلlez
Palencia, Catلlogo
de las Ciencias, Arabic text with
Latin and Spanish translation,
Madrid: Imprenta y Editorial Maestre,
1953.(A survey of the learned
sciences of the day, of encyclopedic
range.) al-Farabi (c.870-950) Kitab
al-musiqa al-kabir (The Great Book
of Music), ed. G.A. Khashab and M.A.
al-Hafni, Cairo: Dar al-Katib al-‘Arabi,
1967.(Al-Farabi’s major
contribution to musicology.)
References and further reading Alon,
I. (1990) ‘Farabi’s Funny Flora:
Al-Nawabit as Opposition’, Arabica
37: 56-90.(Highly creative
discussion of the links between the
philosophical terminology of Ibn
Bajja and al-Farabi, which brings
out the complexity of the
theological and political
ramifications of such language.)
Black, D. (1996) ‘Al-Farabi’, in
S.H. Nasr and O. Leaman (eds)
History of Islamic Philosophy,
London: Routledge, ch. 12,
178-97.(Account of the thought and
main works of al-Farabi.) Fakhry, M.
(1983) A History of Islamic
Philosophy, London: Longman; New
York: Columbia University Press, 2nd
edn.(An excellent standard
introduction to the field. See
especially pages 107-128.) Farrukh,
U. (1944) Al-Farabiyyan (The Two
Farabis), Beirut.(Ibn Sina’s
dependence onal-Farabi, as mentioned
in §5.) Galston, M. (1990) Politics
and Excellence: The Political
Philosophy of Alfarabi, Princeton,
NJ: Princeton University Press.(A
major analysis of an important
aspect of Farabian philosophy.)
Netton, I.R. (1989) Allah
Transcendent: Studies in the
Structure and Semiotics of Islamic
Philosophy, Theology and Cosmology,
London and New York: Routledge.
(Contains a wide-ranging chapter on
al-Farabi, see pages 99-148. This
volume was later published in
paperback by Curzon Press in 1994.)
Netton, I.R. (1992) Al-Farabi and
His School, Arabic Thought and
Culture Series, London andNew York:
Routledge.(Assesses the philosopher
through an epistemological lens.)
Routledge Encyclopedia of
Philosophy, Version 1.0, London:
Routledge
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