Express Shipping Info

Processing Order Please Wait

Once the process is finished,
you will be automatically
redirected to the order confirmation page.

Spend PKR 10,000+ to get free shipping (Nation Wide) and a PKR 500 cashback VOUCHER for your next order! Use Coupon Code

CASHBACK

cart-icon

Ibn Khaldun and the Social Sciences - Discourse on the Condition of Im-possibility

Ibn Khaldun and the Social Sciences - Discourse on the Condition of Im-possibility

Ibn Khaldun and the Social Sciences - Discourse on the Condition of Im-possibility

By: Javad Tabatabai


Publication Date:
Nov, 01 2024
Binding:
Paper Back
Availability :
In Stock
  • Rs 11,995.00

  • Ex Tax :Rs 11,995.00
  • Price in loyalty points :11995

Due to constant currency fluctuation, prices are subject to change with or without notice.

Read More Details
Arabic and European studies of Ibn Khaldun, the great medieval polymath, follow one of two paths. In one direction, scholars interpret his Prolegomena, written in 1377, as the point at which the new social sciences emerged. They identify Ibn Khaldun’s ‘new science of culture’ as sociology or as an ‘Islamic’ (or ‘Arab’) alternative to sociology. In the other direction, the interpretation of Khaldunian discourse is confined to the Islamic-Aristotelian paradigm of its time. The epistemological novelty of the Prolegomena is dismissed and the science of culture is perceived as a minor contribution to the Aristotelian curriculum.
 
Charting a different path, Javad Tabatabai’s highly original Ibn Khaldun and the Social Sciences is an inquiry into the condition of the im-possibility of the social sciences in the Islamic-Aristotelian paradigm. Rather than identifying the science of culture as a forerunner of, or alternative to, sociology, it investigates the Prolegomena within the epistemological framework established by the social sciences. Javad Tabatabai theorizes the condition of im-possibility of the ‘scientific revolution’ as the ‘epistemic obstacle’ to modernity in Islamic civilization. This theorization revisits Michel Foucault’s discussion of the condition of possibility of the human sciences in light of the history of Christian-Aristotelian thought and the broader French debates about epistemology from Bachelard to Althusser.

Ibn Khaldun and the Social Science offers a critical theory of tradition and modernity in the Middle East, elaborating on a historical situation where social and human sciences emerged by the way of colonial and post-colonial translations of discourse from Europe, and in a historical and epistemological break with inherited traditions of knowledge. In this situation, Tabatabai highlights the significance of reactivating Ibn Khaldun’s critical reckoning with the limit of inherited traditions as the political-theological horizon of renewal.