Arabic Philosophy refers to philosophical thought in the Arab world that spans Persia, the Middle
East, North Africa, and Iberia, although, as a particular centre of intellectual endeavour, Persian
Philosophy is often treated separately. Some schools of Arabic thought, including Avicennism and
Averroism are also often considered within the traditons of Western philosophy.
His near-contemporary, the Persian (or possibly Central Asian) polymath al-Farabi (872 - 950 A.D.),
made use of the logical treatises of Aristotle and the practical political philosophy of Plato, and
employed arguments for the existence of God which would only make their way into the Christian
tradition in the 13th Century. He is credited with over one hundred works and his output, aimed at
synthesis of philosophy and Sufism, paved the way for Avicenna's later work.
The 11th-century Persian Islamic philosopher Avicenna (also known as Ibn Sina) attempted to
reconcile Western Aristotelianism and Neoplatonism with Islamic theology, and his metaphysics were
very influencial on the Western Scholastics and St. Thomas Aquinas among others. He proposed an
ontological argument for the existence of God as the first cause of all things, and developed his own
system of Avicennian logic.
The 13th Century Arab philosopher Averros (also known as Ibn Rushd) has been described as the
founding father of secular thought in Western Europe. He lived in southern Spain and Morocco and
based his work on interpretations of Aristotle and the reconciliation of Aristotelianism with the Islamic
faith. Devoted to the teachings of Aristotle, he often disagreed explicitly with his Islamic predecessors,
particularly with the Ash'arite al-Ghazali and Avicenna.
The 14th Century Ash'arite philosopher and scholar Ibn Khaldun (1332 - 1406), born in present-day
Tunisia, is considered one of the greatest Arabic political theorists, and his definition of government
as "an institution which prevents injustice other than such as it commits itself" is still considered a
succinct analysis. He is sometimes credited as a "father" of demography, cultural history,
historiography, the philosophy of history, sociology and modern economics for anticipating many
elements of these disciplines centuries before they were developed.