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Pioneer of sociology: In his philosophy of history, Ibn Khaldun recognised the value of "Asabiyah" (social cohesion)

It is not clear that the West has successfully met the challenge of 9/11. Worse: it is not clear that the West yet fully understands what the challenge is. 

To understand 2001 we have to go back to 1989, the year of the collapse of the Soviet Union, the end of the Cold War, and the fall of the Berlin Wall. It was an historic moment that few had expected. What did it mean? It was then that two stories were born, with one of which we are familiar, the other of which we seem hardly to know or understand at all.

The first narrative was that the West had won. Communism had imploded. In the end, it failed to deliver the goods. People wanted freedom. They sought affluence. The Soviet Union had delivered neither. Politically it was repressive. Economically it was inefficient. For freedom you need liberal democracy. For affluence you need the market economy. 1989 marked the victory of both. From here on democratic capitalism would spread slowly but surely across the world. To adapt Francis Fukuyama's phrase of the time, it was the beginning of the end of history.

The other narrative was quite different but has the advantage of so far being proved correct. Unlike Fukuyama's, it was based not on Hegel but on the 14th-century Islamic thinker Ibn Khaldun. We don't know much about Ibn Khaldun in the West but we should. He was one of the truly great thinkers of the Middle Ages. He has every claim to be called the world's first sociologist. Not for another 300 years would the West produce a figure of comparable originality: Giambattista Vico. Both produced compelling accounts of the rise and fall of civilisations. Both knew what most people most of the time forget: that the greatest civilisations eventually fall. The reason they do so is not necessarily the rise of a stronger power. It is their own internal decay.

Most accounts of al-Qaeda focus on the intellectual influence of the 20th-century thinker and critic of the West, Sayyid Qutb. That influence was real. But the deeper story the leaders of al-Qaeda told in 1989, without which 9/11 is unintelligible, had less to do with Qutb and hatred of the West and its freedoms; and much more to do with the key precipitating event of the fall of Communism: the withdrawal, in 1989, of the Soviet army from Afghanistan.

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lazer
September 15th, 2011
6:09 PM
I agree, with the addendum that "morality" needs some sort of practical application/value, as the good rabbi here speaks only of nebulous attributes. Does the lack of TV programming on a Sunday really keep a society together? I would argue that this is mere correlation. Does the relentless pursuit of wealth, of which TV is both an attribute and a catalyst, exacerbate communal ties? You betcha. No need to go back to Khaldun; this is straight-up Marxist!

kim e. Bode
September 14th, 2011
4:09 PM
Could not the return to moral values on the part of our civilization, be over reactive and end up being similiar to Islamic law? How do we avoid that extreme? would we dare re-enact the blue laws, even if we felt they would benefit society?

Jim Rouse
September 14th, 2011
1:09 AM
good article and commentary and right on point

mike urban
September 11th, 2011
4:09 AM
Very well put, in my view. See also "The Decline of the West" (Spengler) and "The Suicide of the West" (Burnham). The education of our young has been subverted by the modern progressives and liberals. The great books have been neglected. USA

Ron
September 10th, 2011
8:09 PM
Wow, this is the most important thing I've read in quite some time. Everyone needs to know about this. An important election is coming up in the US next year and the voters need to make the right choices during the primaries and in November, 2012. I, too, was a Jew growing up in the 1950s when there was prayer in the schools. I had no problem with that but when they mentioned "our daily bread," I was hungry. Thanks, Jonathan!

DANNY, America
September 9th, 2011
10:09 PM
America won the fight against the soviets, because RIGHT was on our side. Those foolish mujaheddin are in for a rude awaking believing they are on God's side of any fight. America is not an evil empire, thus our exits from everywhere we have fought. The mujahideen my win a few battles but the will never win the war, because this is a war not just for freedom but of good against evil. We know how History plays out EVIL LOSES!

kristof
September 8th, 2011
2:09 PM
Yes, I believe we have lost sight of who we are and what we stand for. Petty grievances dominate our polity and true strength of purpose is lampooned by freeloaders and sophists.

ExOttoyuhr
September 5th, 2011
2:09 AM
You should also read Peter Turchin's _War and Peace and War_, and/or _Historical Dynamics: Why States Rise and Fall_ (which gives the underlying equations). He's an ecologist turned historian, who found that population-modeling techniques applied to asabiya explained a surprisingly great amount.

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