People of the Book: Empire and Social Science in the Islamic Commonwealth Period

Social science is often described as a product of nineteenth-century Europe and as a handmaiden to its imperial and colonial projects. However, centuries prior to the Western social science enterprise, Islamic imperial scholars developed their own “science of society.” This essay provides an overvie...

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Main Author: Musa al-Gharbi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-06-01
Series:Socius
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231211021200
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author Musa al-Gharbi
author_facet Musa al-Gharbi
author_sort Musa al-Gharbi
collection DOAJ
description Social science is often described as a product of nineteenth-century Europe and as a handmaiden to its imperial and colonial projects. However, centuries prior to the Western social science enterprise, Islamic imperial scholars developed their own “science of society.” This essay provides an overview of the historical and cultural milieu in which “Islamic” social science was born and then charts its development over time through case studies of four seminal scholars—al-Razi, al-Farabi, al-Biruni, and Ibn Khaldun—who played pivotal roles in establishing fields that could be roughly translated as psychology, political science, anthropology, and sociology. The axioms undergirding Islamic social science are subsequently explored, with particular emphasis paid to the relations between said axioms and the discursive tradition, “Islam.” The essay concludes with an exploration of how looking to social science enterprises beyond the “modern” West can clarify the purported relationships between social science and empire.
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spelling doaj.art-6f70462408b548088c2176d7f01daf032022-12-21T18:51:23ZengSAGE PublishingSocius2378-02312021-06-01710.1177/23780231211021200People of the Book: Empire and Social Science in the Islamic Commonwealth PeriodMusa al-Gharbi0Columbia University, New York, NY, USASocial science is often described as a product of nineteenth-century Europe and as a handmaiden to its imperial and colonial projects. However, centuries prior to the Western social science enterprise, Islamic imperial scholars developed their own “science of society.” This essay provides an overview of the historical and cultural milieu in which “Islamic” social science was born and then charts its development over time through case studies of four seminal scholars—al-Razi, al-Farabi, al-Biruni, and Ibn Khaldun—who played pivotal roles in establishing fields that could be roughly translated as psychology, political science, anthropology, and sociology. The axioms undergirding Islamic social science are subsequently explored, with particular emphasis paid to the relations between said axioms and the discursive tradition, “Islam.” The essay concludes with an exploration of how looking to social science enterprises beyond the “modern” West can clarify the purported relationships between social science and empire.https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231211021200
spellingShingle Musa al-Gharbi
People of the Book: Empire and Social Science in the Islamic Commonwealth Period
Socius
title People of the Book: Empire and Social Science in the Islamic Commonwealth Period
title_full People of the Book: Empire and Social Science in the Islamic Commonwealth Period
title_fullStr People of the Book: Empire and Social Science in the Islamic Commonwealth Period
title_full_unstemmed People of the Book: Empire and Social Science in the Islamic Commonwealth Period
title_short People of the Book: Empire and Social Science in the Islamic Commonwealth Period
title_sort people of the book empire and social science in the islamic commonwealth period
url https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231211021200
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