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Discussing Avicenna, Roy Mottahedeh refers to the 'tradition of so many premodern writers who saw intellectual modesty as appropriate only for the intellectually modest.' Had he himself belonged to that tradition he might well have described his own work as an attempt to do for Iran's Islamic revolution what Edmund Wilson did in To The Finland Station for the Bolshevik revolution: to trace its intellectual pedigree, and to do so in a way that makes it not only accessible but exciting for the general reader.
Review, 2874 words
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