Ibn
Bajah
Born
1095 Zaragoza
Died 1138
Fes, Morocco
Nationality
al-Andalus
Fields Astronomer, Philosopher,
Physician, Physicist, Poet, Scientist
Abū-Bakr
Muhammad ibn
Yahya ibn al-Sāyigh
(Arabic
أبو بكر محمد بن يحيى بن الصائغ),
known as Ibn
Bājjah (Arabic:
ابن باجة),
was an Andalusian-Muslim
polymath:[1] an astronomer, logician, musician, philosopher,
physician, physicist, psychologist, poet and scientist.[2] He
was known in the West by his Latinized name,
Avempace. He was born in Zaragoza in
what is today Spain and died in Fes, Morocco in 1138.
Avempace worked as
vizir for Abu
Bakr ibn Ibrahim
Ibn Tîfilwît,
the Almoravid governor of Saragossa.
Avempace also wrote poems
(panegyrics and 'muwasshahat') for
him, and they both enjoyed music and wine.
Avempace joined in poetic competitions with the poet al-Tutili.
He later worked, for some twenty years, as the
vizir of Yahyà
ibn Yûsuf
Ibn Tashufin,
another brother of the Almoravid
Sultan Yusuf Ibn
Tashufin (d. 1143) in Morocco.
His
philosophic ideas had a clear effect on Ibn
Rushd and
Albertus Magnus. Most of his writings and book were not
completed (or well organized) because of his early death. He had
a vast knowledge of Medicine, Mathematics and Astronomy. His
main contribution to Islamic Philosophy is his idea on Soul
Phenomenology, but unfortunately not completed.
His
beloved expressions were Gharib
غريب and
Mutawahhid
متوحد, two
approved and popular expressions of Islamic Gnostics.
Ibn Bajjah
was also a renowned poet. In his explanation of the
Zajal E.G. Gomes writes: "There is
some evidence for the belief that it was invented by the famous
philosopher and musician known as Avempace.
Its chief characteristic being that it is written entirely in
the vernacular. ” (Emilio Gracia
Gomes in his essay “Moorish Spain")
Though
many of his works have not survived, his theories on astronomy
and physics were preserved by Maimonides and Averroes
respectively, which had a subsequent influence on later
astronomers and physicists in the Islamic civilization and
Renaissance Europe, including Galileo
Galilei.
Astronomy
In
Islamic astronomy, Maimonides wrote the following on the
planetary model proposed by Ibn
Bajjah:
"I have
heard that Abu Bakr [Ibn
Bajja] discovered a system in which
no epicycles occur, but eccentric spheres are not excluded by
him. I have not heard it from his pupils; and even if it be
correct that he discovered such a system, he has not gained much
by it, for eccentricity is likewise contrary to the principles
laid down by Aristotle.... I have explained to you that these
difficulties do not concern the astronomer, for he does not
profess to tell us the existing properties of the spheres, but
to suggest, whether correctly or not, a theory in which the
motion of the stars and planets is uniform and circular, and in
agreement with observation.
In his
commentary on Aristotle's Meteorology, Ibn
Bajjah presented his own theory on
the Milky Way galaxy. Aristotle believed the Milky Way to be
caused by "the ignition of the fiery exhalation of some stars
which were large, numerous and close together" and that the
"ignition takes place in the upper part of the atmosphere, in
the region of the world which is continuous with the heavenly
motions." On the other hand, Aristotle's Arabic commentator
Ibn al-Bitriq
considered "the Milky Way to be a phenomenon exclusively of the
heavenly spheres, not of the upper part of the atmosphere" and
that the "light of those stars makes a visible patch because
they are so close." Ibn
Bajjah's view differed from both, as
he considered "the Milky Way to be a phenomenon both of the
spheres above the moon and of the sublunar
region." The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy describes his
theory and observation on the Milky Way as follows:
"The
Milky Way is the light of many stars which almost touch one
another. Their light forms a “continuous image” (khayâl
muttasil) on the surface of the body
which is like a “tent” (takhawwum)
under the fierily element and over the air which it covers.
Avempace defines the continuous
image as the result of refraction (in‛ikâs)
and supports its explanation with an observation of a
conjunction of two planets, Jupiter and Mars which took place in
500/1106-7. He watched the conjunction and “saw them having an
elongate figure” although their figure is circular."
Physics
In
Islamic physics, Ibn
Bajjah's law of motion was
equivalent to the principle that uniform motion implies absence
of action by a force. This principle would later form the basis
of modern mechanics and have a subsequent influence on the
classical mechanics of physicists such as Galileo
Galilei. Ibn
Bajjah's definition of velocity was
also equivalent to Galileo's definition of velocity:]
Velocity
= Motive Power - Material Resistance
where the motive power is measured by
the specific gravity of the mobile body and the material
resistance is the resisting medium whose resistive power is
measured by its specific gravity.
Ibn Bajjah
was also the first to state that there is always a reaction
force for every force exerted, a
precursor to Gottfried Leibniz's idea of force which underlies
Newton's third law of motion or law of reciprocal actions.
Ibn Bajjah
also had an influence on Thomas Aquinas' analysis of motion. In
his Systeme du Monde, the pioneering
historian of medieval science, Pierre Duhem,
stated:
"For the
first time we have seen human reason
distinguish two elements in a heavy body: the motive
force, that is, in modern terms, the weight; and the moved
thing, the corpus quantum, or as we say today, the mass. For the
first time we have seen the notion of mass being introduced in
mechanics, and being introduced as equivalent to what remains in
a body when one has suppressed all forms in order to leave only
the prime matter quantified by its determined dimensions. Saint
Thomas Aquinas's analysis, completing Ibn
Bajja's, came to distinguish three
notions in a falling body: the weight, the mass, and the
resistance of the medium, about which physics will reason during
the modern era....This mass, this quantified body, resists the
motor attempting to transport it from one place to another,
stated Thomas Aquinas.”
Text 71
Text 71
of Averroes' commentary on Aristotle's Physics contains a
discussion on Ibn
Bajjah's theory of motion, as well
as the following quotation from the seventh book of
Ibn Bajjah's
lost work on physics:
"And
this resistance which is between the plenum and the body which
is moved in it, is that between which, and the potency of the
void, Aristotle made the proportion in his fourth book; and what
is believed to be his opinion, is not so. For the proportion of
water to air in density is not as the proportion of the motion
of the stone in water to its motion in air; but the proportion
of the cohesive power of water to that of air is as the
proportion of the retardation occurring to the moved body by
reason of the medium in which it is moved, namely water, to the
retardation occurring to it when it is moved in air.”
"For, if
what some people have believed were true, then natural motion
would be violent; therefore, if there were no resistance
present, how could there be any motion? For it would necessarily
be instantaneous. What then shall be said concerning the
circular motion? There is no resistance there, because there is
no cleavage of a medium involved; the place
of the circle is always the same, so that it does not leave one
place and enter another; it is therefore necessary that
the circular motion should be instantaneous. Yet we observe in
it the greatest slowness, as in the case of the fixed stars, and
also the greatest speed, as in the case of the diurnal rotation.
And this is caused only by the difference in perfection between
the mover and the moved. When therefore the mover is of greater
perfection, that which is moved by it will be more rapid; and
when the mover is of lesser perfection, it will be nearer (in
perfection) to that which is moved, and the motion will be
slower.”
Averroes
writes the following comments on Ibn
Bajjah's theory of motion:
"Avempace,
however, here raises a good question. For he says that it does
not follow that the proportion of the motion of one and the same
stone in water to its motion in air is as the proportion of the
density of water to the density of air, except on the assumption
that the motion of the stone takes time only because it is moved
in a medium. And if this assumption were true, it would then be
the case that no motion would require time except because of
something resisting it for the medium seems to impede the thing
moved. And if this were so, then the heavenly bodies, which
encounter no resistant medium, would be moved instantaneously.
And he says that the proportion of the rarity of water to the
rarity of air is as the proportion of the retardation occurring
to the moved body in water, to the retardation occurring to it
in air.”
"And if
this which he has said be conceded,
then Aristotle's demonstration will be false; because, if the
proportion of the rarity of one medium to the rarity of the
other is as the proportion of accidental retardation of the
movement in one of them to the retardation occurring to it in
the other, and is not as the proportion of the motion itself, it
will not follow that what is moved in a void would be moved in
an instant; because in that case there would be subtracted from
the motion only the retardation affecting it by reason of the
medium, and its natural motion would remain. And every motion
involves time; therefore what is moved in a void is necessarily
moved in time and with a divisible motion; and nothing
impossible will follow. This, then, is
Avempace's question.]
Psychology
In
Islamic psychology, Ibn
Bajjah "based his psychological
studies on physics." In his essay, Recognition of the Active
Intelligence, he wrote that active intelligence is the most
important ability of human beings, and he wrote many other
essays on sensations and imaginations. He concluded that
"knowledge cannot be acquired by senses alone but by Active
Intelligence, which is the governing intelligence of nature." He
begins his discussion of the soul with the definition that
"bodies are composed of matter and form and intelligence is the
most important part of man—sound knowledge is obtained through
intelligence, which alone enables one to attain prosperity and
build character." He viewed the unity of the rational soul as
the principle of the individual identity, and that by its
contact with the Active Intelligence, it "becomes one of those
lights that gives glory to God." His definition of freedom is
"that when one can think and act rationally". He also writes
that "the aim of life should be to seek spiritual knowledge and
make contact with Active Intelligence and thus with the Divine.