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reach all educated people and introduce among them gradually a complete change in their
religious and scientific ideas. Their teaching was the same combination of neo-Platonic
speculation and mysticism with Aristotelian natural science, wrapped in Mu'tazilite
theology, that we have already known. Only there was added to it a Pythagorean reverence
for numbers, and everything, besides, was treated in an eminently superficial and
popularized manner. Our knowledge of the Fraternity and its objects is based on its
publication, "The Epistles of the Sincere Brethren" (Rasa'il ikhwan as-safa)
and upon scanty historical notices. The Epistles are fifty or fifty-one in number and
cover the field of human knowledge as then conceived. They form, in fact, an Arabic Encyclopedie.
The founders of the Fraternity, and authors, presumably, of the Epistles, were at most
ten. We have no certain knowledge that the Fraternity ever took even its first step and
spread to Baghdad. Beyond that almost certainly the development did not pass. The division
of members into fourlearners, teachers, guides, and drawers near to God in supernatural
visionand the plan of regular meetings of each circle for study and mutual edification
remained in its paper form. The society was half a secret one and lacked, apparently,
vitality and energy. There was among its founders no man of weight and character. So it
passed away and has left only these Epistles which have come down to us in numerous MSS.,
showing how eagerly they have been read and copied and how much influence they at least
must have exercised. That influence must
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THE IKHWAN AND THE FATIMIDS
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have been very mixed. It was, it is true, for intellectual life, yet it carried with it
in a still higher degree the defects we have already noticed in al-Farabi. To them must be
added the most simple skimming of all real philosophical problems and a treatment of
nature and natural science which had lost all connection with facts.
It has been suggested, and the suggestion seems luminous and fertile, that this
Fraternity was simply a part of the great Fatimid propaganda which, as we know,
honey-combed the ground everywhere under the Sunnite Abbasids. Descriptions which have
reached us of the methods followed by the leaders of the Fraternity agree exactly with
those of the missionaries of the Isma'ilians. They raised difficulties and suggested
serious questionings; hinted at possible answers but did not give them; referred to a
source where all questions would be answered. Again, their catch-words and fixed phrases
are the same as those afterward used by the Assassins, and we have traces of these
Epistles forming a part of the sacred library of the Assassins. It is to be remembered
that the Assassins were not simply robber bands who struck terror by their methods. Both
the western and the eastern branches were devoted to science, and it may be that in their
mountain fortresses there was the most absolute devotion to true learning that then
existed. When the Mongols captured Alamut, they found it rich in MSS. and in instruments
and apparatus of every kind. It is then possible that the elevated eclecticism of the Ikhwan
as-safa was the real doctrine of the Fatimids, the
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