Averroes and Maimonides: Translating Religious Motives into Philosophy

Averroes Lecture Series

A lecture by Ali Benmakhlouf.

Averroes and Maimonides: Translating Religious Motives into Philosophy


Averroes and Maimonides lived at the same time in 12th-century Andalusia without ever meeting. In Cairo, Maimonides received Averroes' works late in life. He had already written The Guide for the Perplexed. In this lecture, Ali Benmakhlouf will attempt to show that the common concern of these two philosophers was to translate religious motifs into philosophical arguments. They did not do so in the same way. Two major questions arise: What were the processes by which they carried out this  translation? What were the challenges for them in making such a translation? 

 

About the Speaker

 

Ali Benmakhlouf is a professor at Mohammed VI Polytechnique University, Rabat (UM6P), where he also directs the African Studies Centre and the Centre for Arabic Classical Philosophy and Philosophy of Science. He is a professor emeritus at Paris Est Val de Marne University and an honorary member of the Institut Universitaire de France. He is currently involved in debates on bioethics, having been a member and then vice-chairman of the French National Consultative Ethics Committee (CCNE, 2008-2016) and the  Consultative Ethics Committee (CCDE) of the “Institut de recherches (IRD) pour le  développement,” which he chaired from 2009 to 2013. He is a member of the Société Française de Philosophie, the Institut International de Philosophie, and a permanent member of the “Académie Nationale de Pharmacie” (since 2020) and of the Academy of the Kingdom of Morocco (since 2022). His research focuses on medical sciences, the philosophy of logic, and the forgotten legacies of classical Arab philosophy, including the works of Al Fârâbi, Ibn Tufayl, and Averroès.


Sponsor(s): Center for Near Eastern Studies, UCLA Alan D. Leve Center for Jewish Studies