The Double Life of Ibn Bajja: A Platonic Philosopher among the Potentates of His Time

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2022

Abstract

Ibn Bajja both lavishly praises Plato, and quietly alters his teaching. He develops a novel version of the Platonic city, taken partly from Alfarabi, which completely excludes non-philosophers from it, arguing that the gap between purely intellectual philosophy and mostly corporeal politics is simply too great. This allows Ibn Bajja to escape many of the problems associated with the exposition and implementation of the city of the Republic and Political Regime, but raises a new difficulty, namely, the relationship of the small, weak city of the philosophers to the stronger, larger cities of human beings more generally, in the midst of which it must somehow flourish. Ibn Bajja's solution, ironically, points to the frenetic political engagement for which his biography is known, and which he himself may eventually have come to regret. Keywords

Publication Source (Journal or Book title)

Polis (United Kingdom)

First Page

368

Last Page

390

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