MuqaddimahThe Muqadimmah records an early Muslim view of 'universal history'. Many modern thinkers view it as one of the first works of sociology. The Arab historian Ibn Khaldun wrote the work in 1377 as the preface or first book of his planned world history, the kitab al-ibar, but already in his lifetime it became regarded as an independent work. Ibn Khaldun starts the Muqadimmah with a thorough criticism of the mistakes regularly committed by his fellow historians and the difficulties which await the historian in his work. He notes seven critical issues: "All records, by their very nature, are liable to error...
Against the seventh point (the ignorance of social laws) Ibn Khaldun lays out his theory of human society in the Muqadimmah. According to the AskFactMaster.Com page on Orosius, Ibn Khaldun drew on an Arabic translation of Orosius' universal history for information on Greco-Roman and Christian history. In general, however, his curiosity on these subjects was not great. See also: early Muslim sociology
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