A Comparative Study of Qut[dotbelow]b al-Din Shirazi's Texts and Models on the Configuration of the Heavens
[Thesis]
Kaveh Farzad Niazi
G. Saliba
Columbia University
2011
297
Ph.D.
Columbia University
2011
This dissertation analyzes the astronomical writings of Qut[dotbelow]b al-Din Shiraz i, a well-known Persian scholar of the Ilkhanid era (i.e., the second half of the thirteenth century to the early decades of the fourteenth century C. E.). The sustained attempts, by scientists of the Islamic world to rid Ptolemaic astronomy from what they considered its many non-physical characteristics was the driving force of the particularly productive genre of hay'a or the science of the configuration of the universe. All three of Shirazi's works that are studied in this thesis belong to this genre of astronomical writing. These works are the Nihayat al-idr ak fi dirayat al-afl ak (1281 C. E.), al-Tuh[dotbelow]fa al-sh ahiya fi `ilm al-hay'a (1285 C. E.), and the Ikhtiy arat-i Muz[dotbelow]affari . This thesis highlights Shiraz i's models for the upper planets, and their evolution over the period 1281 to 1285 C. E. A careful look at the models for the upper planets allows for a clearer view of the distinctions between these three substantial works and their relations to one another. In particular this study allows us to date the Ikhtiyar at-i Muz[dotbelow]affari to the same period as the Nihayat al-idr ak fi dirayat al-afl ak , i.e., c. 1281 C. E. In the thesis I discuss, as well, the reasons for Shiraz i's choice of language for the Ikhtiy arat-i Muz[dotbelow]affari , which was written in Persian (unlike the other two that were written in the lingua franca of Islamic science and scholarship, Arabic). This thesis demonstrates, as well, that the Ikhtiyar at-i Muz[dotbelow]affari was a scientific work of the same technical sophistication as the other two works listed.