Fr. 135.00

Al-Sanå«sä«

English · Hardback

Will be released 27.03.2026

Description

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The North African scholar Muhammad ibn Yusuf al-Sanusi (1436-90), from Tlemcen, present-day Algeria, was one of the most influential theologians and logicians in the Islamic tradition. al-Sanusi's theological works were wildly popular in large areas of the Islamic world until the modern period and are still studied to this day. In the premodern period, his works were translated or adapted into Berber, Fulani, Turkish, Malay, and Javanese. The sheer number of commentaries, glosses, adaptations, and versifications of his works in subsequent centuries is testament to their popularity. Despite this historical influence, contemporary studies on al- Sanusi have been sparse. In this book, author Khaled El-Rouayheb surveys al- Sanusi's life, writings, and intellectual milieu, including discussions of his controversial attacks on imitation or conformism to one's elders and peers when it comes to religious belief and his insistence that every sane believer should learn both the core articles of faith and their rational groundings. Closely analyzing al- Sanusi's logical writings--especially the influential Epitome of Logic-- and interventions in long-standing topics in Islamic theology, El-Rouayheb traces and the reception of the revered theologian's works down to the modern period.

List of contents










  • Introduction

  • 2. Life, Works, and Intellectual Milieu

  • 3. The Condemnation of Imitation

  • 4. What Every Believer Should Know

  • 5. Logic

  • 6. Proofs for the Existence of God

  • 7. The Divine Attributes

  • 8. Occasionalism

  • 9. Some Older Theological Controversies

  • 10. From Knowledge to Works

  • 11. Sanusi's Legacy

  • Notes

  • Bibliography

  • Index



About the author










Khaled El-Rouayheb is Professor of Arabic and Islamic Intellectual History at Harvard University. His research interests include: the intellectual and cultural history of the Arabic-Islamic world in the Mamluk and early-Ottoman periods (1200-1800); the history of Arabic logic; and Islamic theology and philosophy.

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