Islamic Medical and Scientific Tradition.
Varisco, Daniel Martin
Islamic Medical and Scientific Tradition. Edited by PETER E.
PORMANN. Critical Concepts in Islamic Studies. 4 vols. London:
ROUTLEDGE, 2011. Pp. xviii + 380 (vol. 1), ix + 427 (vol. 2), viii + 428
(vol. 3), viii + 240 (vol. 4). $1.295.
There was a time when scholars studying the history of the sciences
in Islamic contexts had no choice but to spend numerous hours in
university libraries or special manuscript collections. The more
esoteric the topic, such as al-Kindi on optics or Ibn al-Haytham on
plane trigonometry, the less likely a published study would be found in
major journals dealing with Islam. Anthologies have been available on a
variety of Islamic subjects, but rarely on the sciences. Now Peter
Pormann has assembled a massive four-volume compilation of fifty-three
previously published articles, of which thirty-six have appeared in the
last decade. Three of the articles are published for the first time in
English. This effort draws from journals, edited volumes, and
miscellaneous monograph series that only a few libraries would have on
their shelves. An anthology of this kind would be an excellent reference
for a library, even at the high cost for all four volumes. Individual
scholars would greatly benefit as well, but few will be able to afford
the price.
There are six specific parts to the overall text, entitled (1)
"The Theoretical Framework: The Sciences in Islamic Philosophy and
Theology" (four articles); (2) "The Life Sciences: Biology,
Medicine, Veterinary Medicine" (twenty-six articles); (3) "The
Physical Sciences: Physics, Astronomy, Geodesy" (seven articles);
(4) "The Occult Sciences: Astrology, Alchemy, Geomancy" (eight
articles); (5) "The Mathematical Sciences: Arithmetic, Algebra,
Geometry, Optics" (four articles); and (6) "The Practical
Sciences: Agriculture, Cartography, Engineering" (four articles).
The general objective of the collection is to provide access to articles
that "illustrate the intellectual curiosity and theoretical vigour
with which Arabs and non-Arabs living in the medieval Muslim world
pursued scientific endeavors" (vol. 1, p. 1). Rather than
attempting to provide a comprehensive overview, Pormann has chosen to
provide studies that "sample some of the delights and
delicacies" (vol. 1, p. 2) and highlight debates in recent
scholarship.
Half of the articles fall in part two, which is not surprising,
given Pormann's expertise in Islamic medicine. The editor
recognizes this personal bias in the topics that interested him,
providing reprints of five of his own articles and noting that
"this may well smack of nepotism and navel-gazing" (vol. 1, p.
21). It would be easy to quibble with the editor about articles left out
or the lack of coverage of certain sciences (e.g., botany). As a
specialist in the history of Arab agriculture and irrigation, I find the
section on agriculture weak, with its emphasis only on the well-traveled
Nabatean Agriculture; the rich traditions in Andalusia, Egypt, and Yemen
are completely ignored. The obvious value of an anthology is that it
provides ready access to material that is scattered and may not even all
be available in a single library. But there is potentially a problem of
academic canonization in which excellent articles are left out or more
useful articles by a scholar are not chosen. Nevertheless, the
bibliographies and endnotes for each article indicate a range of
significant sources on a topic. The four volumes provide an informative
and at times entertaining introduction to the range of issues in current
study of the sciences in Islamic contexts.
Although not apparent in the title, the articles all deal with the
so-called "medieval Muslim world," with a focus on the period
before the end of the 'AblAsid caliphate. The one notable exception
is Remke Kruk's "Harry Potter in the Gulf: Contemporary Islam
and the Occult" (no. 38), which discusses a recent Saudi magical
text. Several well-known Muslim scholars are discussed, including Hunayn
ibn Ishaq, Ibn al-Haytham (who is missing from the index), Ibn al-Nafis,
Ibn Sind, al-Khwarizmi, al-Kindi, and al-RAzi, but there are also
articles dealing with textual genres, schools of thought, institutions,
particular sciences, and specific texts. A full list of contents is
available on the publisher's website.
One of the stated aims of the editor is to emphasize the
interchange of ideas between Muslim scholars and scholarship in the
West. As Pormann observes, "we cannot write the history of European
and Enlightenment science without taking the rich Arabo-Islamic heritage
into consideration" (vol. 1, p. 8). This is especially true for
mathematics and astronomy, as noted in articles by David King (no. 32),
Jamil Ragep (no. 33), George Saliba (no. 35), and Christian Houzel (no.
37). Pormann is concerned about a recent resurrection of Ernest
Renan's nineteenth-century contention that Islam had little or no
role in transmitting and improving upon Greek science; this was put
forth in the 2007 book by the French medievalist Sylvain Gouguenheim,
who argued that Christians rather than Muslims were responsible for
preserving the Greek sciences he claimed were alien to Islamic thought.
For a book that asserts one cannot follow Jesus and Muhammad,
Gouguenheim's political agenda is thinly disguised and has been
warmly received in Islamophobic circles as well as several mainstream
media outlets. Polemical counterpoint would no doubt serve little
purpose in reducing this bias, but sound scholarship can provide a
balance. It is therefore a pity that the articles here are not
accessible to a general audience.
In recent years the archival potential of the Internet has made it
possible for most scholars to increasingly avoid libraries and read
published sources and manuscripts at home through online access. The
proliferation of pdf piracy, especially of articles in obscure and often
expensive academic journals, has posed a problem for publishers, who
either seek to make a profit or at least hope to break even. In this
climate it is legitimate to ask if anthologies such as that put together
by Pormann are still viable. For this specific set the answer is
definitely positive, since I did not find any of the articles readily
available, even through JSTOR or similar subscription-based services.
The high price for the set suggests that the publisher realizes there
will be only a limited amount of sales. But budget cuts in many college
and university libraries will further hinder accession of these volumes.
In an undertaking of this extent transliteration errors have been
kept to a minimum (e.g., Tibb for Tibb (vol. 1, p. 331 n. 10), even
though all the articles have been retyped. It should be noted that in
retyping there may be differences from the transliteration in the
original articles. It would have been useful to include a chart of the
transliteration system, since there are some inconsistencies. One finds
al-Khwarizmi (vol. 1, p. 53), al-Khwarizmi (vol. 4, p. 231), al-Hwarazmi
(vol. 1, p. 17), or the name left without transliteration (vol. 3, p.
312). At times the jim is presented as j and other times as g (e.g.,
Gamal al-Din al-Afgani [vol. 1, p. 2]); similarly the ghayn may be gh or
g and the dhal either d or dh. These differences would be understandable
if the original articles were published in facsimile, but consistent
transliteration would better serve this anthology. It is worth noting
that the final article (no. 53) by Jeremy Johns and Emilie Savage-Smith
from 2003 can be updated with reference to an online version of
"The Book of Curiosities" at the Bodleian Library website
(http://cosmos.bodley.ox.ac.uk/hms/home.php).
DANIEL MARTIN VARISCO
HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY