| Ibn
Sina (Avicenna) – Doctor of Doctors
Ibn Sina was born in 980 C.E. in the village of
Afghanistan near Bukhara which today is located in the far south
of Uzbekistan. His father, Abdullah, was from Balkh and his mother
from a village near Bukhara.
In any age Ibn Sina, known in the West as Ibn Sina (Avicenna), would
have been a giant among giants. He displayed exceptional intellectual
prowess as a child and at the age of ten was already proficient
in the Qur'an and the Arabic classics. During the next six years
he devoted himself to Muslim Jurisprudence, Philosophy and Natural
Science and studied Logic, Euclid, and the Almeagest.
He turned his attention to Medicine at the age of 17 years and found
it, in his own words, "not difficult". However he was
greatly troubled by metaphysical problems and in particular the
works of Aristotle. By chance, he obtained a manual on this subject
by the celebrated philosopher al-Farabi which solved his difficulties.
By the age of 18 he had built up a reputation as a physician and
was summoned to attend the Samani ruler Nuh ibn Mansur (reigned
976-997 C.E.), who, in gratitude for Ibn Sina's services, allowed
him to make free use of the royal library, which contained many
rare and even unique books. Endowed with great powers of absorbing
and retaining knowledge, this Muslim scholar devoured the contents
of the library and at the age of 21 was in a position to compose
his first book.
At about the same time he lost his father and soon afterwards left
Bukhara and wandered westwards. He entered the services of Ali ibn
Ma'mun, the ruler of Khiva, for a while, but ultimately fled to
avoid being kidnapped by the Sultan Mahmud of Ghazna. After many
wanderings he came to Jurjan, near the Caspian Sea, attracted by
the fame of its ruler, Qabus, as a patron of learning Unfortunately
Ibn Sina's arrival almost coincided with the deposition and murder
of this ruler. At Jurjan, Ibn Sina lectured on logic and astronomy
and wrote the first part of the Qanun, his greatest work. He then
moved to Ray, near modern Teheran and established a busy medical
practice. When Ray was besieged, Ibn Sina fled to Hamadan where
he cured Amir Shamsud-Dawala of colic and was made Prime Minister.
A mutiny of soldiers against him caused his dismissal and imprisonment,
but subsequently the Amir, being again attacked by the colic, summoned
him back, apologised and reinstated him! His life at this time was
very strenuous: during the day he was busy with the Amir's services,
while a great deal of the night was passed in lecturing and dictating
notes for his books. Students would gather in his home and read
parts of his two great books, the Shifa and the Qanun, already composed.
Following the death of the Amir, Ibn Sina fled to Isfahan after
a few brushes with the law, including a period in prison. He spent
his final years in the services of the ruler of the city, Ala al-Daula
whom he advised on scientific and literary matters and accompanied
on military campaigns.
Friends advised him to slow down and take life in moderation, but
this was not in character. "I prefer a short life with width
to a narrow one with length", he would reply. Worn out by hard
work and hard living, Ibn Sina died in 1036/1 at a comparatively
early age of 58 years. He was buried in Hamadan where his grave
is still shown. Al-Qifti states that Ibn Sina completed 21 major
and 24 minor works on philosophy, medicine, theology, geometry,
astronomy and the like. Another source (Brockelmann) attributes
99 books to Ibn Sina comprising 16 on medicine, 68 on theology and
metaphysics 11 on astronomy and four on verse. Most of these were
in Arabic; but in his native Persian he wrote a large manual on
philosophical science entitled Danish-naama-i-Alai and a small treatise
on the pulse. His most celebrated Arabic poem describes the descent
of Soul into the Body from the Higher Sphere. Among his scientific
works, the leading two are the Kitab al-Shifa (Book of Healing),
a philosophical encyclopaedia based upon Aristotelian traditions
and the al-Qanun al-Tibb which represents the final categorisation
of Greco-Arabian thoughts on Medicine.
Of Ibn Sina's 16 medical works, eight are versified treatises on
such matter as the 25 signs indicating the fatal termination of
illnesses, hygienic precepts, proved remedies, anatomical memoranda
etc. Amongst his prose works, after the great Qanun, the treatise
on cardiac drugs, of which the British Museum possesses several
fine manuscripts, is probably the most important, but it remains
unpublished.The Qanun is, of course, by far the largest, most famous
and most important of Ibn Sina's works. The work contains about
one million words and like most Arabic books, is elaborately divided
and subdivided. The main division is into five books, of which the
first deals with general principles; the second with simple drugs
arranged alphabetically; the third with diseases of particular organs
and members of the body from the head to the foot; the fourth with
diseases which though local in their inception spread to other parts
of the body, such as fevers and the fifth with compound medicines.
The Qanun distinguishes mediastinitis from pleurisy and recognises
the contagious nature of phthisis (tuberculosis of the lung) and
the spread of disease by water and soil. It gives a scientific diagnosis
of ankylostomiasis and attributes the condition to an intestinal
worm. The Qanun points out the importance of dietetics, the influence
of climate and environment on health and the surgical use of oral
anaesthetics. Ibn Sina advised surgeons to treat cancer in its earliest
stages, ensuring the removal of all the diseased tissue. The Qanun's
materia medica considers some 760 drugs, with comments on their
application and effectiveness. He recommended the testing of a new
drug on animals and humans prior to general use.
Ibn Sina noted the close relationship between emotions and the physical
condition and felt that music had a definite physical and psychological
effect on patients. Of the many psychological disorders that he
described in the Qanun, one is of unusual interest: love sickness!
ibn Sina is reputed to have diagnosed this condition in a Prince
in Jurjan who lay sick and whose malady had baffled local doctors.
Ibn Sina noted a fluttering in the Prince's pulse when the address
and name of his beloved were mentioned. The great doctor had a simple
remedy: unite the sufferer with the beloved.
The Arabic text of the Qanun was published in Rome in 1593 and was
therefore one of the earliest Arabic books to see print. It was
translated into Latin by Gerard of Cremona in the 12th century.
This 'Canon', with its encyclopaedic content, its systematic arrangement
and philosophical plan, soon worked its way into a position of pre-eminence
in the medical literature of the age displacing the works of Galen,
al-Razi and al-Majusi, and becoming the text book for medical education
in the schools of Europe. In the last 30 years of the 15th century
it passed through 15 Latin editions and one Hebrew. In recent years,
a partial translation into English was made. From the 12th-17th
century, the Qanun served as the chief guide to Medical Science
in the West and is said to have influenced Leonardo da Vinci. In
the words of Dr. William Osler, the Qanun has remained "a medical
bible for a longer time than any other work".
Despite such glorious tributes to his work, Ibn Sina is rarely remembered
in the West today and his fundamental contributions to Medicine
and the European reawakening goes largely unrecognised. However,
in the museum at Bukhara, there are displays showing many of his
writings, surgical instruments from the period and paintings of
patients undergoing treatment. An impressive monument to the life
and works of the man who became known as the 'doctor of doctors'
still stands outside Bukhara museum and his portrait hangs in the
Hall of the Faculty of Medicine in the University of Paris.
these are some of his books that still use trough the worldwide.
1. Edward G. Browne (1921) Arabian Medicine, London, Cambridge University
Press.
2. Ynez Viole O'Neill (1973) in Mcgraw-Hill Encyclopaedia of World
Biography vol I: Aalto to Bizet.
3. Philip K. Hitti (1970) History of the Arabs, 10th ed, London,
Macmillan, pp 367- 368
4. M.A. Martin (1983) in The Genius of Arab Civilisation, 2nd ed,
Edited by J.R. Hayes, London, Eurabia Puplishing, pp 196-7
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