Mesopotamia & Gulf Lowlands
Philosophers of Mesopotamia & Gulf Lowlands
Showing 4 of 4 philosophers.

Abu Yusuf al-Kindi
801 CE – 873 CE
Kufa
Kufa-born Abbasid philosopher who turned Greek metaphysics, logic, medicine, optics, mathematics, music, and theology into an Arabic philosophical program, arguing for divine unity, finite creation, intellect, soul, and disciplined ethical life.

Hunayn ibn Ishaq
808 CE – 873 CE
al-Hira, near Baghdad
Arab Christian physician, translator, theologian, and scientific writer of Abbasid Baghdad whose Greek-Arabic and Greek-Syriac translation method, Galenic medicine, ophthalmology, logic transmission, and Christian Arabic apologetic work shaped medieval Islamic and Latin philosophy of science.

Ishaq ibn Hunayn
830 CE – 910 CE
Baghdad
Arab Christian translator, physician, mathematician, astronomer, and philosophical transmitter of Abbasid Baghdad whose Arabic versions of Aristotle, Euclid, Ptolemy, Menelaus, Autolycus, and medical-biographical sources helped form the technical language of medieval Arabic philosophy and science.

Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi
1236 CE – 1311 CE
Shiraz
Persian Islamic polymath of Shiraz, Maragha astronomy, Avicennan medicine, Illuminationist commentary, planetary models, optics, rhetoric, Quran commentary, and Durrat al-Taj.