in full Abu 'ali Ahmad Ibn Muhammad Ibn Ya'qub Ibn Miskawayh born c. 930 died 1030, Rayy, Iran Persian scientist, philosopher, and historian whose scholarly works became models for later generations of Islamic thinkers. Little is known of Ibn Miskawayh's personal life. It is believed he converted to Islam from Zoroastrianism, the religion of pre-Islamic Iran. His interests included alchemy and poetry, and some 20 works are attributed to him. His most notable contributions, however, were in ethics and history. His moral treatise Tahdhib al-akhlaq, influenced by the Aristotelian concept of the mean, is considered one of the best statements of Islamic philosophy. The Islamic philosopher Nasir ad-Din Tusi (died 1274) modelled his Akhlaq Nasiri (The Nasiri Ethics) on the Tahdhib al-akhlaq. As a historian Ibn Miskawayh is noted for his Persian nationalist bias and his conviction that the history of peoples offers moral instruction, as well as his abandonment of legends as a source. His universal history Kitab tajarib al-umam wa ta'aqub al-himam (7 vol.; Eng. trans. by D.S. Margoliouth, The Eclipse of the Abbasid Caliphate, 1921), was noted for its use of all available sources and greatly stimulated the development of Islamic historiography.
IBN MISKAWAYH
Meaning of IBN MISKAWAYH in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012