M. Muslim Intellectual [Book Review]

Review of Metaphysics 17 (2):310-311 (1963)
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Abstract

Watt takes a somewhat fast and sketchy look at an extremely complex period of history, religion and philosophy from an equally complex viewpoint. He is interested in the place and role of the various kinds of intellectuals in classic Islamic religion and society and their own conceptions of that religious society and their place in it. The central figure is Al-Ghazali who personally embodies the tensions which beset the first six centuries of Islam, and whose attitudes and solutions most characteristically reflect the broad consensus within historic Islam toward those tensions. Watt's book can be of profit as an encapsulation of six centuries of highly complex movements and sub-movements in the personality, career and ideas of one highly complex and brilliant intellectual figure.--W. G. E.

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