Synopses & Reviews
Aladdins Lamp is the fascinating story of how ancient Greek philosophy and science began in the sixth century B.C. and, during the next millennium, spread across the Greco-Roman world, producing the remarkable discoveries and theories of Thales, Pythagoras, Hippocrates, Plato, Aristotle, Euclid, Archimedes, Galen, Ptolemy, and many others. John Freely explains how, as the Dark Ages shrouded Europe, scholars in medieval Baghdad translated the works of these Greek thinkers into Arabic, spreading their ideas throughout the Islamic world from Central Asia to Spain, with many Muslim scientists, most notably Avicenna, Alhazen, and Averroës, adding their own interpretations to the philosophy and science they had inherited. Freely goes on to show how, beginning in the twelfth century, these texts by Islamic scholars were then translated from Arabic into Latin, sparking the emergence of modern science at the dawn of the Renaissance, which climaxed in the Scientific Revolution of the seventeenth century.
Here is early science in all its glory, from Pythagorean “celestial harmony” to the sun-centered planetary theory of Copernicus, who, in 1543, aided by the mathematical methods of medieval Arabic astronomers, revived a concept proposed by the Greek astronomer Aristarchus some eighteen centuries before. When Newton laid the foundations of modern science, building on the work of Copernicus, Tycho Brahe, Kepler, Galileo, and others, he said that he was “standing on the sholders [sic] of Giants,” referring to his predecessors in ancient Greece and in the Arabic and Latin worlds from the Middle Ages through the Renaissance.
Caliph Harun al-Rashid was one of the Muslim rulers who first promoted translating Greek texts into Arabic. His Baghdad is the setting for The Thousand and One Nights, in which Scheherazadess “Tale of Aladdin and His Magic Lamp” reflects the marvels of the new science and the amazing inventions it was said to produce. John Freelys Aladdins Lamp returns us to that time and brings to light an essential and long-overlooked chapter in the history of science.
About the Author
John Freely was born in Brooklyn, New York, and grew up there and in Ireland before joining the U.S. Navy at seventeen for the last two years of World War II. Since 1960 he has taught physics and the history of science at Bosphorus University in Istanbul, with intervals in New York, Boston, London, Athens, and Venice. He is the author of more than forty books, including Istanbul: The Imperial City; The Western Shores of Turkey; Strolling Through Athens; The Lost Messiah: In Search of the Mystical Rabbi Sabbatai Sevi; and Jem Sultan: The Adventures of a Captive Turkish Prince in Renaissance Europe.
Table of Contents
List of IllustrationsIntroduction
1. Ionia: The First Physicists
2. Classical Athens: The School of Hellas
3. Hellenistic Alexandria: The Museum and Library
4. From Athens to Rome, Constantinople, and Jundishapur
5. Baghdads House of Wisdom: Greek into Arabic
6. The Islamic Renaissance
7. Cairo and Damascus
8. Al-Andalus, Moorish Spain
9. From Toledo to Palermo: Arabic into Latin
10. Paris and Oxford I: Reinterpreting Aristotle
11. Paris and Oxford II: The Emergence of European Science
12. From Byzantium to Italy: Greek into Latin
13. The Revolution of the Heavenly Spheres
14. The Debate over the Two World Systems
15. The Scientific Revolution
16. Samarkand to Istanbul: The Long Twilight of Islamic Science
17. Science Lost and Found
18. Harran: The Road to Baghdad
Acknowledgments
Illustration Credits
Notes
Bibliography
Index