Description
About the Author
Frank Griffel is Professor of Islamic Studies at the Department of Religious Studies at Yale University. He is a Carnegie Scholar and a recipient of a Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel Research Award of Germany's Humboldt Foundation, among others. He is author of Al-Ghazali's Philosophical Theology.
Reviews
It is certain that future research will greatly benefit from the painstaking effort at systematization Griffel undertook, as well as from the refreshing clarity and openness of his interpretations. * Marco Signori, Studi Medievali *
Without doubt, Griffel's extensive study is an inspiring and thought-provoking contribution to our understanding of the post-classical era. * Sultan Saluti, Revista Espanola de Filosofia Medieval *
Frank Griffel's The Formation of Post-Classical Philosophy in Islam is a must-read for anyone seeking to understand post-Avicennan philosophy in Islam. Through the study and contextualization of more than a dozen twelfth-century authors and in particular al-Razi's philosophical summae, this elegantly written, profoundly erudite book argues that the Islamic philosophy of the twelfth century "is no less philosophical than British empiricism or German idealism" and proposes a bold new assessment of the prevailing understanding of the relationship between philosophy and theology in the post-Avicennan period, both challenging and refining the cutting-edge debates on Islamicate intellectual history * Judith Pfeiffer, Alexander von Humboldt Professor for Islamic Studies, University of Bonn *
Islamic thought in the twelfth, thirteenth and later centuries is now a very exciting field, which is attracting many researchers. But Frank Griffel's contribution is outstanding. His magnificent new book on it is essential reading for anyone interested in the history of philosophy, because it both rewrites the standard account with its bold new thesis, and opens up the area to non-specialists * John Marenbon, Honorary Professor of Medieval Philosophy, University of Cambridge *
The post-classical period of philosophy in the Islamic world is still underappreciated but is receiving increasing attention from scholars. Griffel's important contribution to this endeavor is insightful in its treatment of major figures like Abu l-Barakat al-Baghdadi and Fakhr al-Din al-Razi. More generally, he gives a compelling picture of the nature of "philosophy" in this period, showing great sensitivity to the methods and goals of the different kinds of writing that should be of interest to the historian of philosophy * Peter Adamson, Professor of Late Ancient and Arabic Philosophy, Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich *
The Formation of Post-Classical Philosophy in Islam is, first and foremost, a landmark contribution to that tradition...it also has much to benefit historians, philosophers, and anyone interested in the ways that problematic ideas in the present-such as narratives of decline-shape readings of the past. * Hasan Hameed, Marginalia Review *
The book is a masterful combination of the history of social-intellectual context (part 1), philosophical biography (part 2), and the history of philosophy (part 3), each meant to provide the most updated account of its subject matter...The book will deservedly become a go-to resource for Islamic intellectual history for a long time, and its various parts can conveniently be assigned for reading in undergraduate courses and graduate seminars. * Mehmet Emin Gulecyuz, University of Chicago, Journal of Religion *
The book is a masterful combination of the history of social-intellectual context (part 1), philosophical biography (part 2), and the history of philosophy (part 3), each meant to provide the most updated account of its subject matter... The book will deservedly become a go-to resource for Islamic intellectual history for a long time. * Mehmet Emin Gulecyuz, University of Chicago, The Journal of Religion *
Book Information
ISBN 9780190886325
Author Frank Griffel
Format Hardback
Page Count 664
Imprint Oxford University Press Inc
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc
Weight(grams) 1g
Dimensions(mm) 167mm * 236mm * 46mm