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The influence of the air (climate) upon h uman character.  WE 228 H A V E S E E N that Negroes are in gen eral characterized by levity, excitability, and great emotionalism. They are found eager to dance whenever they hear a melody . 229  They are everywhere described as stupid. The real reason for these (opinions) is that, as has been shown by philosophers in the proper place, joy and gladness are due to expansion and diffusion of the animal spirit. Sadness is due to the opposite, namely, contraction and concentration of the animal spirit. It has been shown that heat e xpands and rarefies air and vapors a nd increases their quantity. A drunken person experiences inexpressible joy and gladness, because the vapor of the spirit in his heart is pervaded by natural heat, which the power of the wine generates in his spirit. The spirit, as a result, expands, and there is joy. Likewise, when those who enjo y a hot bath inhale the air of the bath, so that the heat of the air enters their spirits and makes them hot, the y are found to experience jo y. It often happens that they start singing, as singing has its origin in gladness.  Now, Negroes live in the hot zone (of the earth). Heat dominates their temperament and formation. Therefore, they have in their spirits an amount of heat corresponding to that in their  bodies and that of the zone in which they live. In comparison with the spirits of the inhabitants of the fourth zone, theirs are hotter and, consequently, more expanded. As a result, they are more quickly moved to joy and gladness, and they are merrier. Excitability is the direct consequenc e.  In the same way, the inhabitants of coastal regions are somewhat similar to the inhabitants of the south. The air in which they live is very much h otter because of the reflection of the light and the ra ys of (the sun from) the surface of the sea. The refore, their share in the qualities resulting from heat, that is, joy and levity, is larger than that of the (inhabitants of) cold and hilly or mountainous countries. To a degree, this may be observed in the inhabitants of the Jarid in the third zone. The heat is abundant in it and in the air there, since it lies south of the coastal plains and hills. Another example is furnished by the Egyptians. Egypt lies at about the same latitude as the Jarid. The Eg yptians are dominated by joyfulness, levity, and disregard for the future. They store no provisions of food, neither for a month nor a year ahead, but purchase most of it (daily) in the market. Fez in the Maghrib, on the other hand, lies inland (and is) surrounded by cold hills. Its inhabitants can be ob served to look sad and gloomy and to be too much concerned for the future. Although a man in Fez might hav e provisions of wheat stored, sufficient to last him for years, he always goes to the market early to buy hi s food for the day,  because he is afraid to consume any of his hoarded food.  If one pays attention to this sort of thing in the various zones and countries, the influence of the varying quality of the air upon the character (of the inhabitants) will b ecome apparent. God is "the Creator, the Knowing One."  230  Al-Masudi undertook to investigate the reason for the levity, excitability, and emotionalism in Negroes, and attempted to explain it. However, he did no better than to report, on the authority of Galen and Ya'qub b. Ishaq alKind!, that the reason is a weakness of their brains which results in a weakness of their intellect . 231  This is an inconclusive and unproven statement. "God guides whomever He wants to guide."  232  

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The influence of the air (climate) upon human character. 

WE 228 

H A V E S E E N that Negroes are in general characterized by levity, excitability,

and great emotionalism. They are found eager to dance whenever they hear a melody.229

 They

are everywhere described as stupid. The real reason for these (opinions) is that, as has been

shown by philosophers in the proper place, joy and gladness are due to expansion and diffusionof the animal spirit. Sadness is due to the opposite, namely, contraction and concentration of the

animal spirit. It has been shown that heat expands and rarefies air and vapors and increases their 

quantity. A drunken person experiences inexpressible joy and gladness, because the vapor of thespirit in his heart is pervaded by natural heat, which the power of the wine generates in his spirit.

The spirit, as a result, expands, and there is joy. Likewise, when those who enjoy a hot bath

inhale the air of the bath, so that the heat of the air enters their spirits and makes them hot, they

are found to experience joy. It often happens that they start singing, as singing has its origin ingladness. 

 Now, Negroes live in the hot zone (of the earth). Heat dominates their temperament andformation. Therefore, they have in their spirits an amount of heat corresponding to that in their 

 bodies and that of the zone in which they live. In comparison with the spirits of the inhabitants of 

the fourth zone, theirs are hotter and, consequently, more expanded. As a result, they are more

quickly moved to joy and gladness, and they are merrier. Excitability is the direct consequence. 

In the same way, the inhabitants of coastal regions are somewhat similar to the

inhabitants of the south. The air in which they live is very much hotter because of the reflectionof the light and the rays of (the sun from) the surface of the sea. Therefore, their share in the

qualities resulting from heat, that is, joy and levity, is larger than that of the (inhabitants of) cold

and hilly or mountainous countries. To a degree, this may be observed in the inhabitants of theJarid in the third zone. The heat is abundant in it and in the air there, since it lies south of the

coastal plains and hills. Another example is furnished by the Egyptians. Egypt lies at about thesame latitude as the Jarid. The Egyptians are dominated by joyfulness, levity, and disregard for 

the future. They store no provisions of food, neither for a month nor a year ahead, but purchasemost of it (daily) in the market. Fez in the Maghrib, on the other hand, lies inland (and is)

surrounded by cold hills. Its inhabitants can be observed to look sad and gloomy and to be too

much concerned for the future. Although a man in Fez might have provisions of wheat stored,sufficient to last him for years, he always goes to the market early to buy his food for the day,

 because he is afraid to consume any of his hoarded food. 

If one pays attention to this sort of thing in the various zones and countries, the influenceof the varying quality of the air upon the character (of the inhabitants) will become apparent.

God is "the Creator, the Knowing One." 230

 Al-Masudi undertook to investigate the reason for 

the levity, excitability, and emotionalism in Negroes, and attempted to explain it. However, hedid no better than to report, on the authority of Galen and Ya'qub b. Ishaq alKind!, that the

reason is a weakness of their brains which results in a weakness of their intellect.231

 This is an

inconclusive and unproven statement. "God guides whomever He wants to guide." 232

 

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22. The science of logic.  

(Logic concerns) the norms enabling a person to distinguish between rightand wrong, both in definitions that give information about the essence of things, and

in arguments that assure apperception. This 

687 comes about as follows: The basis of perception is the sensibilia that

are perceived by the five senses. All living beings, those which are rational as well as

the others, participate in this kind of perception. Man is distinguished from theanimals by his ability to perceive universals, which are things abstracted from

the sensibilia. Man is enabled to do this by virtue of the fact that his imagination

obtains, from individual objects perceived by the senses and which agree with each

other, a picture conforming to all these individual objects. Such (a picture) is auniversal. The mind then compares the individual objects that agree with each other,

with other objects that (also) agree with them in some respects. It thus obtains a

 picture conforming to both of the two groups of objects compared), .in as much as

they agree with each other. In this way, abstraction continues to progress. Eventually,it reaches the universal (concept), which admits no other universal (concept) thatwould, agree with it, and is, therefore, simple. 

For instance, from the individual specimens of man, the picture of the species

to which all the individual specimens conform is abstracted. Then, man (the human

species) is compared with the animals, and the picture of the genus to which bothmen and animals conform is abstracted. Then, this is compared with the plants, until,

eventually, the highest genus is reached, which is "substance." 688 

There is no (other)

universal (concept) that would in any way agree with it. Therefore, the intellect stops

here and makes no further abstraction. 

God created in man the ability to think. Through it, he perceives the sciencesand crafts. Knowledge is either a perception (tasawwur ) of the essence of things -tasawwur meaning a primitive kind of perception not accompanied by (the exercise

of) judgment - or it is apperception (tasdiq), that is, the judgment that a thing is so.  

(Man's) ability to think may try to obtain the desired (information) by

combining the universals with each other, with the result that the mind obtains a

universal picture that conforms to details outside. Such a picture in the mind assures aknowledge of the quiddity of the individual objects. Or, (man's) ability to think may

udge one thing by another and draw conclusions (from the one thing as to the other).

Thus, (the other thing) is established in (the mind). This is apperception. In fact,

(apperception) ultimately reverts to perception, because the only use of having

(perception) is (to achieve) knowledge of the realities of things, which is the requiredgoal of apperceptive 

689 knowledge. 

(Man's) ability to think may embark on this (process) in either the right or thewrong way. Selection of the way to be followed by man's ability to think in its effort

to attain the knowledge desired, requires discernment, so that (man) can distinguish

 between right and wrong. This (process) became the canon of logic. 

When the ancients first began to discuss (logic), they did so in a sententious,

disconnected manner by selecting certain stray propositions. Logical methods were

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unimproved. The problems of logic were not seen together. Eventually, Aristotle

appeared among the Greeks. He improved the methods of logic and systematized its

 problems and details. He assigned to logic its proper place as the first philosophicaldiscipline and the introduction to philosophy. Therefore (Aristotle) is called "the First

Teacher." 690 

His work on logic is called "the Text." 691 

It comprises eight books,

three 

691a 

on the forms of analogical reasoning, and five on the matter (to whichanalogical reasoning is applied). 

This is because the objects of apperception are of different kinds. Some of them concern things that are certain by nature. Others concern things that arehypothetical in various degrees. Therefore, logic studies analogical reasoning from

the point of view of the desired (information) it is expected to yield. It studies what

the premises (of the desired information) ought to be, as seen in this light, and to

which kind of certain or hypothetical knowledge the (desired information) belongs.Logic studies analogical reasoning (the syllogism), not with some particular object in

mind but exclusively with regard to the way in which it is produced. Therefore, the

first study, it is said, is undertaken with regard to matter, that is, the matter that

 produces some particular certain or hypothetical information. The second study, it issaid, is undertaken with regard to the form and the manner in which analogical

reasoning (the syllogism) in general is produced. Thus, the number of the books on

logic came to be eight. 

The first book deals with the highest genera that abstraction among

the sensibiliamay attain in the mind and that admit no (more universal) genera abovethem. It is called Kitab al-Maqulat (Categories). 

The second book deals with the various kinds of apperceptive propositions. Itis called Kitab al-'Ibarah ( Hermeneutics). 

The third book deals with analogical reasoning (the syllogism) and the form

in which it is produced in general. It is called Kitab al-Qiyas ( Analytics). Here endsthe logical study from the point of view of (its) form. 

The fourth book is the Kitab al-Burhan ( Apodeictica). It studies the kind of analogical reasoning (the syllogism) that produces certain (knowledge). It also

studies (the problem of) why its premises must be certain ones. In particular, it

mentions other conditions for yielding certain knowledge. For instance, the(premises) must be essential, primary, and so on. This book contains a discussion of 

determinatives 692

 and definitions, because one wants them to be certain, since it is

necessary - nothing else is possible - that a definition conform to the thing defined.

Therefore, (definitions) were treated by the ancients in this book. 

The fifth book is the Kitab al-Jadl (Topics). Jadl ("disputation") is the kind of 

analogical reasoning that shows how to cut off a troublesome adversary and silenceone's opponent, and teaches the famous (methods) to be employed to this end. It is

also concerned with other conditions required in this connection. They are mentioned

here. The book deals with the "places" (topoi) from which the syllogism is evolved by using them to clarify the so-called middle term that brings the two ends of the

desired information together .693 

It also deals with the conversion of terms. 

The sixth book is the Kitab as-Safsatah (Sophistici Elenchi). Sophistry is the

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kind of analogical reasoning that teaches the opposite of the truth and enables a

disputant to confuse his opponent. The (book) is bad because of its purpose. It was

written only so that one might know sophistical reasoning and be on guard against it.  

The seventh book is the Kitab al-Khitabah ( Rhetoric). Rhetoric is the kind of analogical reasoning that teaches how to influence the great mass and get them to do

what one wants them to do. It also teaches the forms of speech to be employed in thisconnection. 

The eighth book is the Kitdb ash-Shi'r ( Poetics). Poetics is the kind of analogical reasoning that teaches the invention of parables and similes, especially for 

the purpose of (encouraging oneself and others) to undertake something or avoid

doing something. It also teaches the imaginary propositions 694 

to be employed in thisconnection. 

These are the eight books on logic according to the ancients. After logic had been improved and systematized, the Greek philosophers were of the opinion that itwas necessary to discuss the five universals providing the perception

that 

695 

conforms to the quiddities outside or to their parts or accidents. The (five) aregenus, difference, species, property, and general accident.696

 Therefore, they took thesubject up in a special book concerned with the (five universals), which serves as an

introduction to the discipline. Thus, the books on (logic) came to be nine.  

All of them were translated in Islam. The Muslim philosophers wrote

commentaries and abridgments of them. Al-Farabi and Avicenna, for instance, did

this, and, later on, the Spanish philosopher, Averroes. Avicenna wrote the Kitab ash-

Shifa',697

 which comprises all the seven philosophical disciplines. 

Later on, more recent scholars have changed the terminology of logic. Theyadded to the study of the five universals the (study of) its fruit, namely, the discussion

of definitions and descriptions which they took over from the Apodeictica. They

discarded theCategories, because (the logicians') study of the book is accidental andnot essential. To the Hermeneutics they added the discussion of the conversion (of 

terms), whereas the ancient books included that subject in the Topics ,698

  but, in somerespects, it does fall under the discussion of propositions. 

Then, they discussed analogical reasoning in as much as it produces thedesired information in general, and without regard to any matter. They discarded

study of the matter to which analogical reasoning (is applied). That concerned five

 books, the Apodeictica, theTopics, the Rhetoric, the Poetics, and the Sophistici Elenchi. Some of them occasionally touched a little on those books. (But in general,)

they neglected them, as if they had never been, whereas they are a very important

 basis of the discipline. 

Then, they thoroughly discussed their writings on logic and studied them as adiscipline in its own right, not as an instrument for the sciences. This resulted in a

long and extensive discussion of the subject. The first to do this was the imam Fakhr-

ad-din b. al-Khatib.699

 He was followed by Afdal-ad-din al-Khunaji.700

 Al-Khunaji's books are used by contemporary easterners as reference works. On logic, he wrote

the long Kitab Kashf al-asrar, the Mukhtasar al-mujiz which is good as a textbook,

and the Mukhtasar al jumal .701

 

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The last-mentioned work consists of four leaves and gives a synopsis of thediscipline and its basic principles. Contemporary students use it and profit from it.The books and methods of the ancients are avoided, as if they had never been,

although they are full of the results and useful aspects of logic, as we have stated. 

God is the guide to that which is correct. 

It 702 

should be known that the early Muslims and the early speculativetheologians greatly disapproved of the study of this discipline. They vehementlyattacked it and warned against it. They forbade the study and teaching of it. Later on,

ever since al-Ghazzali and the imam Ibn al-Khatib, scholars have been somewhat

more lenient in this respect. Since that time, they have gone on studying (logic),except for a few who have recourse to the opinion of the ancients concerning it and

shun it and vehemently disapprove of it. 

Let us explain on what the acceptance or rejection of (logic) depends, so thatit will be known what scholars have in mind with their different opinions. This comes

about as follows: 

When the theologians invented the science of speculative theology, in order tosupport the articles of faith with rational evidence, their approach was to use some

 particular evidence, which they mentioned in their books. Thus, they proved thecreatedness of the world by affirming that accidents exist and are created, that bodies

cannot possibly be free from accidents, and that something that cannot be free from

created things must itself be created. Or, they affirmed the oneness of God by the

argument of mutual antagonism 703 

They affirmed the existence of primeval attributeswith reference to the four comprehensive (attributes),

 704 

in that they drew

conclusions from the visible as to the supernatural. There are other such arguments

mentioned in their books.. 

Then, they strengthened that evidence by inventing basic principles

constituting a sort of premises for the evidence. Thus, they affirmed the existence of 

atomic matter and atomic time and the vacuum. They denied nature 705 

and theintellectual combination of quiddities. They affirmed that an accident does not persist

two moments.706

 They also affirmed the existence of the "state," that is, an attribute

of something existing, that neither exists nor yet does not exist.707

 They have stillother basic principles upon which they have built their particular arguments. 

It then came to be the opinion of Shaykh Abul-Hasan (al-Ash'ari), Judge AbuBakr (al-Baqillani), and Professor Abu Ishaq (al-Isfarayini), that the evidence for the

articles of faith is reversible in the sense that if the arguments are wrong, the things

 proven (by them) are wrong.708

 Therefore, Judge Abu Bakr thought that the

arguments for the articles of faith hold the same position as the articles of faiththemselves and that an attack against them is an attack against the articles of faith,

 because they rest on those (arguments). 

 Now, if one considers logic, one will find that it all revolves around

intellectual combination and the affirmation of the outside existence of a natural

universal to which must correspond the mental universal that is divided into the fiveuniversals, namely, genus, species, difference, property, and general accident.

709 This

is wrong in the opinion of the speculative theologians. The universal and essential is

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to them merely a mental concept having no correspondence outside (the mind), or - to

those who believe in the theory of "states"- (it is merely) a "state." Thus, the five

universals, the definitions based on them, and the ten categories are wrong, and theessential attribute is a wrong (concept and does not exist). This implies that the

essential and necessary propositions on which argumentation is predicated are wrong

and that the rational cause is a wrong (concept and does not exist). Thus,the Apodeictica is wrong, and the "places" (topoi) which are the central part of theTopics are a wrong (concept). They were the things from which one derives the

middle term that brings the two ends together in analogical reasoning.710

 

The only thing that remains is formal analogical reasoning (thesyllogism).

711 The only remaining definition is the one that is equally true for all

details of the thing defined and cannot be more general, because then other matters

would enter it, nor can it be more restricted, because then part of those details would be left out. That is what the grammarians express by jam' and man', and the

speculative theologians by tard and 'aks(complete identity of the definition and the

thing defined, and reversibility of the definition).712

 

Thus, all the pillars of logic are destroyed. (On the other hand,) if we affirmtheir existence, as is done in logic, we (thereby) declare wrong many of the premisesof the speculative theologians. This, then, leads to considering wrong their arguments

for the articles of faith, as has been mentioned before. This is why the early

theologians vehemently disapproved of the study of logic and considered it

innovation or unbelief, depending on the particular argument declared wrong (by theuse of logic). However, recent theologians since al-Ghazzali have disapproved of (the

idea of the) reversibility of arguments and have not assumed that the fact that the

arguments are wrong requires as its necessary consequence that the thing proven (bythem) be wrong. They considered correct the opinion of logicians concerning

intellectual combination and the outside existence of natural quiddities and their 

universals. Therefore, they decided that logic is not in contradiction with the articlesof faith, even though it is in contradiction to some of the arguments for them. In fact,they concluded that many of the premises of the speculative theologians were wrong.

For instance, they deny the existence of atomic matter and the vacuum and

(affirm) 713 

the persistence of accidents, and so on. For the arguments of thetheologians for the articles of faith, they substituted other arguments which they

 proved to be correct by means of speculation and analogical reasoning. They hold

that this goes in no way against the orthodox articles of faith. This is the opinion of the imam (Fakhr-ad-din Ibn alKhatib),

714 al-Ghazzali, and their contemporary

followers. 

This should be considered. The methods and sources used by religiousscholars to form their opinions should be understood. 

God gives guidance and success to that which is correct.