The Philosopher of the Arabs. He opened the door between Greek thought and the Islamic world, and walked through it first.
Al-Kindi was born in Kufa and educated in Baghdad during the early Abbasid caliphate. He worked at the House of Wisdom, supervising translations of Greek texts into Arabic. He wrote over 250 works on philosophy, mathematics, medicine, music, and optics. He argued that philosophy and revelation are compatible paths to truth, and that studying the ancients is not impiety but obligation. Later generations called him the first philosopher of the Islamic world.
“The seeker of truth is not one who studies the writings of the ancients, but one who suspected the truth in them and follows argument.”
“We ought not to be ashamed of appreciating the truth and of acquiring it wherever it comes from.”
Born into an aristocratic Arab family in Kufa, a garrison city in southern Iraq. His father was governor of the city. He belonged to the Kinda tribe, one of the most prominent in pre-Islamic Arabia.
Joined the circle of scholars at the House of Wisdom in Baghdad under Caliph al-Ma'mun. He supervised translations of Greek philosophical and scientific texts into Arabic, bridging two intellectual worlds that had barely spoken to each other.
Wrote On First Philosophy, the first major philosophical work in Arabic. He argued that Greek philosophy and Islamic revelation were not enemies but allies in the search for truth. The book opened a conversation that would last five centuries.
Under Caliph al-Mutawakkil, who reversed the rationalist policies of his predecessors, al-Kindi lost his library and his position. He spent his last years in obscurity. The first philosopher of Islam died forgotten in Baghdad around 873.
Al-Kindi supervised the translation of Aristotle into Arabic and built on his metaphysics.