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Salaman adapts himself externally to the popular religion and rules the people; Asal,
seeking to perfect himself still further in solitude, goes to the other island. But there
he finds a man, Hayy ibn Yaqzan, who has lived alone from infancy and has gradually, by
the innate and uncorrupted powers of the mind, developed himself to the highest
philosophic level and reached the Vision of the Divine. He has passed through all the
stages of knowledge until the universe lies clear before him, and now he finds that his
philosophy thus reached, without prophet or revelation, and the purified religion of Asal
are one and the same. The story told by Asal of the people of the other island sitting in
darkness stirs his soul and he goes forth to them as a missionary. But he soon learns that
the method of Muhammad was the true one for the great masses, and that only by sensuous
allegory and concrete things could they be reached and held. He retires to his island
again to live the solitary life.
The bearing of this on the system of the Muwahhids cannot be mistaken. If it is a
criticism of the finality of historical revelation, it is also a defence of the attitude
of the Muwahhids toward both people and philosophers. By the favor of Abu Ya'qub, Ibn
Tufayl had practically been able to live on an island and develop himself by study. So,
too, Abu Ya'qub might stand for the enlightened but practical Salaman. Yet the meaning
evidently is that between them they failed and must fail. There could only be a solitary
philosopher here and there, and happy for him if he found a princely patron. The people
which
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knew not the truth were accursed. Perhaps, rather, they were children and had to be
humored and guided as such in an endless childhood.
It is evident that such a solitary possessor of truth had two courses open to him. He
could either busy himself in his studies and exercises, as had done Ibn Bajja and Ibn
Tufayl, or he could boldly enter public life and trust to his dialectic ingenuity and
resourceperhaps, also, to his plasticity of conscienceto carry him past all whispers
of heresy and unbelief. The latter course was chosen by Ibn Rushd. He was born at Cordova,
in 520, of a family of jurists and there studied law. From his legal studies only a book
on the law of inheritance has reached us, and it, though frequently commented on, has
never been printed. In 548 he was presented to Abu Ya'qub by Ibn Tufayl and encouraged by
him in the study of philosophy. In it his greatest work was done. In spite of the shreds
and patches of neo-Platonism which clung to him, he was the greatest mediaeval commentator
on Aristotle. It is only part of the eternal puzzle of the Muslim mind that the utility of
Greek for a student of Aristotle seems never to have struck him. Thereafter he acted as
judge in different places in Spain and was court physician for a short time in 578 to Abu
Ya'qub. In 575 he had written his tractates, to which we shall come immediately, mediating
between philosophy and theology. Toward the end of his life he was condemned by Abu Yusuf
al-Mansur for heresy and banished from Cordova. This was in all likelihood a truckling on
the part of al-Mansur to the religious prejudices of the
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