Medieval and Modern Philologies

Series | Medieval and Modern Philologies
Volume 14 | Review | The Book of the Wandering Camels and Those Who Herd Them

The Book of the Wandering Camels and Those Who Herd Them

open access | peer reviewed
  • Abū Ḥayyān Al-Tawḥīdī - email
  • Abū ՙAlī Miskawayh - email
    edited by
  • Lidia Bettini - Università degli Studi di Firenze, Italia - email

Abstract
This book presents the first unabridged translation of Kitāb al-hawāmil wa-al-šawāmil – a work containing 175 questions asked by Abū Ḥayyān al-Tawḥīdī and the related answers given by Abū ʿAlī Miskawayh – into a European language. It was composed at the end of the tenth century and belongs to the period of the complex acclimatisation of the philosophical and scientific Greek tradition within the Muslim Arabic milieu. The questions – which broach philological, literary, ethical, philosophical and scientific themes, together with those related to custom – possess the eclectic nature and literary style of the adab, whereas the answers lie within the technical domain of the falsafa, in its double dimension of ethics and logics. The dialogue takes place between peers: then, given the relative brevity of the answers and the wide variety of the themes, the peculiar nature of the work is the network of intertextual relations and references, which are quite often only allusive, to the heritage that was common to the intellectuals of the time, i.e. Artistotle’s, Plotinus’, Galen’s or Plato’s revised thought, in a milieu in which cultivating medicine, mathematics, astronomy, music, and perhaps even alchemy, together – and, above all these sciences, philosophy – was normal. Miskawayh was not an original philosopher and the book is not a philosophical treatise but, if we go through its interconnections, not only do we grasp its scattered allusions, but we also understand how an organic system of interpretation of the universe – which is, for example, comparable to Fārābī’s –, although not clarified, is always an implied point of reference. The considerable apparatus of footnotes tries, as much as possible, to provide the references, which were made anonymously or summarily by the two authors, with a context, in the belief that, in order to have an idea of the cultural depth of a work, it is necessary to know what it refers to and how it does it.

Permalink http://doi.org/10.14277/978-88-6969-175-1/FMM-14 | e-ISBN 978-88-6969-175-1 | ISBN (PRINT) 978-88-6969-176-8 | Published Sept. 18, 2017 | Language it