
Before modern sociology existed, Ibn Khaldun's 1377 masterpiece revealed why civilizations rise and fall. Praised by historian Arnold Toynbee as "the greatest work of its kind," this timeless analysis of social cohesion still influences leaders across cultures today.
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What if someone had cracked the code of how civilizations work-not in our age of big data and algorithms, but 600 years ago? In 14th-century North Africa, while Europe struggled through the Black Death, a scholar named Ibn Khaldun was writing what would become perhaps the most remarkable book on human society ever produced. He wasn't just recording history; he was uncovering the invisible forces that make kingdoms rise from dust and crumble back into it. His insights feel eerily modern, as if he'd somehow glimpsed patterns we're only now beginning to understand through sociology, economics, and political science. Ibn Khaldun made a brilliant distinction that changed everything: the difference between Tradition and Event. Think of it this way-when your grandmother tells you how to make her famous recipe, you follow it exactly. That's Tradition. But when your friend tells you what happened at a party, you might want to check with others who were there. That's Event, and it demands evidence. This might sound obvious, but it was revolutionary. Islamic scholars had perfected the art of verifying religious teachings by tracing chains of transmission back to Prophet Muhammad. Ibn Khaldun honored this practice while asking: shouldn't we also test historical claims against what we actually observe about how societies work? He wasn't rejecting tradition-he was adding a new layer. Historical events, unlike religious commands, could be checked against patterns in human behavior. If someone claimed an ancient king commanded an army of a million soldiers, Ibn Khaldun would ask: could any economy actually feed that many? Did the roads exist to move them? This was history as detective work, using logic and observation to separate fact from fantasy.
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Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco

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