Tag Archives: Culture

AI, Smartphones, and the Student Attention Crisis in U.S. Public Schools

By Michael Cummins, Editor, August 19, 2025

In a recent New York Times focus group, twelve public-school teachers described how phones, social media, and artificial intelligence have reshaped the classroom. Tom, a California biology teacher, captured the shift with unsettling clarity: “It’s part of their whole operating schema.” For many students, the smartphone is no longer a tool but an extension of self, fused with identity and cognition.

Rachel, a teacher in New Jersey, put it even more bluntly:

“They’re just waiting to just get back on their phone. It’s like class time is almost just a pause in between what they really want to be doing.”

What these teachers describe is not mere distraction but a transformation of human attention. The classroom, once imagined as a sanctuary for presence and intellectual encounter, has become a liminal space between dopamine hits. Students no longer “use” their phones; they inhabit them.

The Canadian media theorist Marshall McLuhan warned as early as the 1960s that every new medium extends the human body and reshapes perception. “The medium is the message,” he argued — meaning that the form of technology alters our thought more profoundly than its content. If the printed book once trained us to think linearly and analytically, the smartphone has restructured cognition into fragments: alert-driven, socially mediated, and algorithmically tuned.

The philosopher Sherry Turkle has documented this cultural drift in works such as Alone Together and Reclaiming Conversation. Phones, she argues, create a paradoxical intimacy: constant connection yet diminished presence. What the teachers describe in the Times focus group echoes Turkle’s findings — students are physically in class but psychically elsewhere.

This fracture has profound educational stakes. The reading brain that Maryanne Wolf has studied in Reader, Come Home — slow, deep, and integrative — is being supplanted by skimming, scanning, and swiping. And as psychologist Daniel Kahneman showed, our cognition is divided between “fast” intuitive processing (System 1) and “slow” deliberate reasoning (System 2). Phones tilt us heavily toward System 1, privileging speed and reaction over reflection and patience.

The teachers in the focus group thus reveal something larger than classroom management woes: they describe a civilizational shift in the ecology of human attention. To understand what’s at stake, we must see the smartphone not simply as a device but as a prosthetic self — an appendage of memory, identity, and agency. And we must ask, with urgency, whether education can still cultivate wisdom in a world of perpetual distraction.


The Collapse of Presence

The first crisis that phones introduce into the classroom is the erosion of presence. Presence is not just physical attendance but the attunement of mind and spirit to a shared moment. Teachers have always battled distraction — doodles, whispers, glances out the window — but never before has distraction been engineered with billion-dollar precision.

Platforms like TikTok and Instagram are not neutral diversions; they are laboratories of persuasion designed to hijack attention. Tristan Harris, a former Google ethicist, has described them as slot machines in our pockets, each swipe promising another dopamine jackpot. For a student seated in a fluorescent-lit classroom, the comparison is unfair: Shakespeare or stoichiometry cannot compete with an infinite feed of personalized spectacle.

McLuhan’s insight about “extensions of man” takes on new urgency here. If the book extended the eye and trained the linear mind, the phone extends the nervous system itself, embedding the individual into a perpetual flow of stimuli. Students who describe feeling “naked without their phone” are not indulging in metaphor — they are articulating the visceral truth of prosthesis.

The pandemic deepened this fracture. During remote learning, students learned to toggle between school tabs and entertainment tabs, multitasking as survival. Now, back in physical classrooms, many have not relearned how to sit with boredom, struggle, or silence. Teachers describe students panicking when asked to read even a page without their phones nearby.

Maryanne Wolf’s neuroscience offers a stark warning: when the brain is rewired for scanning and skimming, the capacity for deep reading — for inhabiting complex narratives, empathizing with characters, or grappling with ambiguity — atrophies. What is lost is not just literary skill but the very neurological substrate of reflection.

Presence is no longer the default of the classroom but a countercultural achievement.

And here Kahneman’s framework becomes crucial. Education traditionally cultivates System 2 — the slow, effortful reasoning needed for mathematics, philosophy, or moral deliberation. But phones condition System 1: reactive, fast, emotionally charged. The result is a generation fluent in intuition but impoverished in deliberation.


The Wild West of AI

If phones fragment attention, artificial intelligence complicates authorship and authenticity. For teachers, the challenge is no longer merely whether a student has done the homework but whether the “student” is even the author at all.

ChatGPT and its successors have entered the classroom like a silent revolution. Students can generate essays, lab reports, even poetry in seconds. For some, this is liberation: a way to bypass drudgery and focus on synthesis. For others, it is a temptation to outsource thinking altogether.

Sherry Turkle’s concept of “simulation” is instructive here. In Simulation and Its Discontents, she describes how scientists and engineers, once trained on physical materials, now learn through computer models — and in the process, risk confusing the model for reality. In classrooms, AI creates a similar slippage: simulated thought that masquerades as student thought.

Teachers in the Times focus group voiced this anxiety. One noted: “You don’t know if they wrote it, or if it’s ChatGPT.” Assessment becomes not only a question of accuracy but of authenticity. What does it mean to grade an essay if the essay may be an algorithmic pastiche?

The comparison with earlier technologies is tempting. Calculators once threatened arithmetic; Wikipedia once threatened memorization. But AI is categorically different. A calculator does not claim to “think”; Wikipedia does not pretend to be you. Generative AI blurs authorship itself, eroding the very link between student, process, and product.

And yet, as McLuhan would remind us, every technology contains both peril and possibility. AI could be framed not as a substitute but as a collaborator — a partner in inquiry that scaffolds learning rather than replaces it. Teachers who integrate AI transparently, asking students to annotate or critique its outputs, may yet reclaim it as a tool for System 2 reasoning.

The danger is not that students will think less but that they will mistake machine fluency for their own voice.

But the Wild West remains. Until schools articulate norms, AI risks widening the gap between performance and understanding, appearance and reality.


The Inequality of Attention

Phones and AI do not distribute their burdens equally. The third crisis teachers describe is an inequality of attention that maps onto existing social divides.

Affluent families increasingly send their children to private or charter schools that restrict or ban phones altogether. At such schools, presence becomes a protected resource, and students experience something closer to the traditional “deep time” of education. Meanwhile, underfunded public schools are often powerless to enforce bans, leaving students marooned in a sea of distraction.

This disparity mirrors what sociologist Pierre Bourdieu called cultural capital — the non-financial assets that confer advantage, from language to habits of attention. In the digital era, the ability to disconnect becomes the ultimate form of privilege. To be shielded from distraction is to be granted access to focus, patience, and the deep literacy that Wolf describes.

Teachers in lower-income districts report students who cannot imagine life without phones, who measure self-worth in likes and streaks. For them, literacy itself feels like an alien demand — why labor through a novel when affirmation is instant online?

Maryanne Wolf warns that we are drifting toward a bifurcated literacy society: one in which elites preserve the capacity for deep reading while the majority are confined to surface skimming. The consequences for democracy are chilling. A polity trained only in System 1 thinking will be perpetually vulnerable to manipulation, propaganda, and authoritarian appeals.

The inequality of attention may prove more consequential than the inequality of income.

If democracy depends on citizens capable of deliberation, empathy, and historical memory, then the erosion of deep literacy is not a classroom problem but a civic emergency. Education cannot be reduced to test scores or job readiness; it is the training ground of the democratic imagination. And when that imagination is fractured by perpetual distraction, the republic itself trembles.


Reclaiming Focus in the Classroom

What, then, is to be done? The teachers’ testimonies, amplified by McLuhan, Turkle, Wolf, and Kahneman, might lead us toward despair. Phones colonize attention; AI destabilizes authorship; inequality corrodes the very ground of democracy. But despair is itself a form of surrender, and teachers cannot afford surrender.

Hope begins with clarity. We must name the problem not as “kids these days” but as a structural transformation of attention. To expect students to resist billion-dollar platforms alone is naive; schools must become countercultural sanctuaries where presence is cultivated as deliberately as literacy.

Practical steps follow. Schools can implement phone-free policies, not as punishment but as liberation — an invitation to reclaim time. Teachers can design “slow pedagogy” moments: extended reading, unbroken dialogue, silent reflection. AI can be reframed as a tool for meta-cognition, with students asked not merely to use it but to critique it, to compare its fluency with their own evolving voice.

Above all, we must remember that education is not simply about information transfer but about formation of the self. McLuhan’s dictum reminds us that the medium reshapes the student as much as the message. If we allow the medium of the phone to dominate uncritically, we should not be surprised when students emerge fragmented, reactive, and estranged from presence.

And yet, history offers reassurance. Plato once feared that writing itself would erode memory; medieval teachers once feared the printing press would dilute authority. Each medium reshaped thought, but each also produced new forms of creativity, knowledge, and freedom. The task is not to romanticize the past but to steward the present wisely.

Hannah Arendt, reflecting on education, insisted that every generation is responsible for introducing the young to the world as it is — flawed, fragile, yet redeemable. To abdicate that responsibility is to abandon both children and the world itself. Teachers today, facing the prosthetic selves of their students, are engaged in precisely this work: holding open the possibility of presence, of deep thought, of human encounter, against the centrifugal pull of the screen.

Education is the wager that presence can be cultivated even in an age of absence.

In the end, phones may be prosthetic selves — but they need not be destiny. The prosthesis can be acknowledged, critiqued, even integrated into a richer conception of the human. What matters is that students come to see themselves not as appendages of the machine but as agents capable of reflection, relationship, and wisdom.

The future of education — and perhaps democracy itself — depends on this wager. That in classrooms across America, teachers and students together might still choose presence over distraction, depth over skimming, authenticity over simulation. It is a fragile hope, but a necessary one.

THIS ESSAY WAS WRITTEN AND EDITED UTILIZING AI

Responsive Elegance: AI’s Fashion Revolution

Responsive Elegance: How AI Is Rewriting the Code of Luxury Fashion
From Prada’s neural silhouettes to Hermès’ algorithmic resistance, a new aesthetic regime emerges—where beauty is no longer just crafted, but computed.

By Michael Cummins, Editor, August 18, 2025

The atelier no longer glows with candlelight, nor hums with the quiet labor of hand-stitching—it pulses with data. Fashion, once the domain of intuition, ritual, and artisanal mastery, is being reshaped by artificial intelligence. Algorithms now whisper what beauty should look like, trained not on muses but on millions of images, trends, and cultural signals. The designer’s sketchbook has become a neural network; the runway, a reflection of predictive modeling—beauty, now rendered in code.

This transformation is not speculative—it’s unfolding in real time. Prada has explored AI tools to remix archival silhouettes with contemporary streetwear aesthetics. Burberry uses machine learning to forecast regional preferences and tailor collections to cultural nuance. LVMH, the world’s largest luxury conglomerate, has declared AI a strategic infrastructure, integrating it across its seventy-five maisons to optimize supply chains, personalize client experiences, and assist in creative ideation. Meanwhile, Hermès resists the wave, preserving opacity, restraint, and human discretion.

At the heart of this shift are two interlocking innovations: generative design, where AI produces visual forms based on input parameters, and predictive styling, which anticipates consumer desires through data. Together, they mark a new aesthetic regime—responsive elegance—where beauty is calibrated to cultural mood and optimized for relevance.

But what is lost in this optimization? Can algorithmic chic retain the aura of the original? Does prediction flatten surprise?

Generative Design & Predictive Styling: Fashion’s New Operating System

Generative design and predictive styling are not mere tools—they are provocations. They challenge the very foundations of fashion’s creative process, shifting the locus of authorship from the human hand to the algorithmic eye.

Generative design uses neural networks and evolutionary algorithms to produce visual outputs based on input parameters. In fashion, this means feeding the machine with data: historical collections, regional aesthetics, streetwear archives, and abstract mood descriptors. The algorithm then generates design options that reflect emergent patterns and cultural resonance.

Prada, known for its intellectual rigor, has experimented with such approaches. Analysts at Business of Fashion note that AI-driven archival remixing allows Prada to analyze past collections and filter them through contemporary preference data, producing silhouettes that feel both nostalgic and hyper-contemporary. A 1990s-inspired line recently drew on East Asian streetwear influences, creating garments that seemed to arrive from both memory and futurity at once.

Predictive styling, meanwhile, anticipates consumer desires by analyzing social media sentiment, purchasing behavior, influencer trends, and regional aesthetics. Burberry employs such tools to refine color palettes and silhouettes by geography: muted earth tones for Scandinavian markets, tailored minimalism for East Asian consumers. As Burberry’s Chief Digital Officer Rachel Waller told Vogue Business, “AI lets us listen to what customers are already telling us in ways no survey could capture.”

A McKinsey & Company 2024 report concluded:

“Generative AI is not just automation—it’s augmentation. It gives creatives the tools to experiment faster, freeing them to focus on what only humans can do.”

Yet this feedback loop—designing for what is already emerging—raises philosophical questions. Does prediction flatten originality? If fashion becomes a mirror of desire, does it lose its capacity to provoke?

Walter Benjamin, in The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction (1936), warned that mechanical replication erodes the ‘aura’—the singular presence of an artwork in time and space. In AI fashion, the aura is not lost—it is simulated, curated, and reassembled from data. The designer becomes less an originator than a selector of algorithmic possibility.

Still, there is poetry in this logic. Responsive elegance reflects the zeitgeist, translating cultural mood into material form. It is a mirror of collective desire, shaped by both human intuition and machine cognition. The challenge is to ensure that this beauty remains not only relevant—but resonant.

LVMH vs. Hermès: Two Philosophies of Luxury in the Algorithmic Age

The tension between responsive elegance and timeless restraint is embodied in the divergent strategies of LVMH and Hermès—two titans of luxury, each offering a distinct vision of beauty in the age of AI.

LVMH has embraced artificial intelligence as strategic infrastructure. In 2023, it announced a deep partnership with Google Cloud, creating a sophisticated platform that integrates AI across its seventy-five maisons. Louis Vuitton uses generative design to remix archival motifs with trend data. Sephora curates personalized product bundles through machine learning. Dom Pérignon experiments with immersive digital storytelling and packaging design based on cultural sentiment.

Franck Le Moal, LVMH’s Chief Information Officer, describes the conglomerate’s approach as “weaving together data and AI that connects the digital and store experiences, all while being seamless and invisible.” The goal is not automation for its own sake, but augmentation of the luxury experience—empowering client advisors, deepening emotional resonance, and enhancing agility.

As Forbes observed in 2024:

“LVMH sees the AI challenge for luxury not as a technological one, but as a human one. The brands prosper on authenticity and person-to-person connection. Irresponsible use of GenAI can threaten that.”

Hermès, by contrast, resists the algorithmic tide. Its brand strategy is built on restraint, consistency, and long-term value. Hermès avoids e-commerce for many products, limits advertising, and maintains a deliberately opaque supply chain. While it uses AI for logistics and internal operations, it does not foreground AI in client experiences. Its mystique depends on human discretion, not algorithmic prediction.

As Chaotropy’s Luxury Analysis 2025 put it:

“Hermès is not only immune to the coming tsunami of technological innovation—it may benefit from it. In an era of automation, scarcity and craftsmanship become more desirable.”

These two models reflect deeper aesthetic divides. LVMH offers responsive elegance—beauty that adapts to us. Hermès offers elusive beauty—beauty that asks us to adapt to it. One is immersive, scalable, and optimized; the other opaque, ritualistic, and human-centered.

When Machines Dream in Silk: Speculative Futures of AI Luxury

If today’s AI fashion is co-authored, tomorrow’s may be autonomous. As generative design and predictive styling evolve, we inch closer to a future where products are not just assisted by AI—but entirely designed by it.

Louis Vuitton’s “Sentiment Handbag” scrapes global sentiment to reflect the emotional climate of the world. Iridescent textures for optimism, protective silhouettes for anxiety. Fashion becomes emotional cartography.

Sephora’s “AI Skin Atlas” tailors skincare to micro-geographies and genetic lineages. Packaging, scent, and texture resonate with local rituals and biological needs.

Dom Pérignon’s “Algorithmic Vintage” blends champagne based on predictive modeling of soil, weather, and taste profiles. Terroir meets tensor flow.

TAG Heuer’s Smart-AI Timepiece adapts its face to your stress levels and calendar. A watch that doesn’t just tell time—it tells mood.

Bulgari’s AR-enhanced jewelry refracts algorithmic lightplay through centuries of tradition. Heritage collapses into spectacle.

These speculative products reflect a future where responsive elegance becomes autonomous elegance. Designers may become philosopher-curators—stewards of sensibility, shaping not just what the machine sees, but what it dares to feel.

Yet ethical concerns loom. A 2025 study by Amity University warned:

“AI-generated aesthetics challenge traditional modes of design expression and raise unresolved questions about authorship, originality, and cultural integrity.”

To address these risks, the proposed F.A.S.H.I.O.N. AI Ethics Framework suggests principles like Fair Credit, Authentic Context, and Human-Centric Design. These frameworks aim to preserve dignity in design, ensuring that beauty remains not just a product of data, but a reflection of cultural care.

The Algorithm in the Boutique: Two Journeys, Two Futures

In 2030, a woman enters the Louis Vuitton flagship on the Champs-Élysées. The store AI recognizes her walk, gestures, and biometric stress markers. Her past purchases, Instagram aesthetic, and travel itineraries have been quietly parsed. She’s shown a handbag designed for her demographic cluster—and a speculative “future bag” generated from global sentiment. Augmented reality mirrors shift its hue based on fashion chatter.

Across town, a man steps into Hermès on Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré. No AI overlay. No predictive styling. He waits while a human advisor retrieves three options from the back room. Scarcity is preserved. Opacity enforced. Beauty demands patience, loyalty, and reverence.

Responsive elegance personalizes. Timeless restraint universalizes. One anticipates. The other withholds.

Ethical Horizons: Data, Desire, and Dignity

As AI saturates luxury, the ethical stakes grow sharper:

Privacy or Surveillance? Luxury thrives on intimacy, but when biometric and behavioral data feed design, where is the line between service and intrusion? A handbag tailored to your mood may delight—but what if that mood was inferred from stress markers you didn’t consent to share?

Cultural Reverence or Algorithmic Appropriation? Algorithms trained on global aesthetics may inadvertently exploit indigenous or marginalized designs without context or consent. This risk echoes past critiques of fast fashion—but now at algorithmic speed, and with the veneer of personalization.

Crafted Scarcity or Generative Excess? Hermès’ commitment to craft-based scarcity stands in contrast to AI’s generative abundance. What happens to luxury when it becomes infinitely reproducible? Does the aura of exclusivity dissolve when beauty is just another output stream?

Philosopher Byung-Chul Han, in The Transparency Society (2012), warns:

“When everything is transparent, nothing is erotic.”

Han’s critique of transparency culture reminds us that the erotic—the mysterious, the withheld—is eroded by algorithmic exposure. In luxury, opacity is not inefficiency—it is seduction. The challenge for fashion is to preserve mystery in an age that demands metrics.

Fashion’s New Frontier


Fashion has always been a mirror of its time. In the age of artificial intelligence, that mirror becomes a sensor—reading cultural mood, forecasting desire, and generating beauty optimized for relevance. Generative design and predictive styling are not just innovations; they are provocations. They reconfigure creativity, decentralize authorship, and introduce a new aesthetic logic.

Yet as fashion becomes increasingly responsive, it risks losing its capacity for rupture—for the unexpected, the irrational, the sublime. When beauty is calibrated to what is already emerging, it may cease to surprise. The algorithm designs for resonance, not resistance. It reflects desire, but does it provoke it?

The contrast between LVMH and Hermès reveals two futures. One immersive, scalable, and optimized; the other opaque, ritualistic, and elusive. These are not just business strategies—they are aesthetic philosophies. They ask us to choose between relevance and reverence, between immediacy and depth.

As AI evolves, fashion must ask deeper questions. Can responsive elegance coexist with emotional gravity? Can algorithmic chic retain the aura of the original? Will future designers be curators of machine imagination—or custodians of human mystery?

Perhaps the most urgent question is not what AI can do, but what it should be allowed to shape. Should it design garments that reflect our moods, or challenge them? Should it optimize beauty for engagement, or preserve it as a site of contemplation? In a world increasingly governed by prediction, the most radical gesture may be to remain unpredictable.

The future of fashion may lie in hybrid forms—where machine cognition enhances human intuition, and where data-driven relevance coexists with poetic restraint. Designers may become philosophers of form, guiding algorithms not toward efficiency, but toward meaning.

In this new frontier, fashion is no longer just what we wear. It is how we think, how we feel, how we respond to a world in flux. And in that response—whether crafted by hand or generated by code—beauty must remain not only timely, but timeless. Not only visible, but visceral. Not only predicted, but profoundly imagined.

THIS ESSAY WAS WRITTEN AND EDITED UTILIZING AI

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE – AUGUST 25, 2025 PREVIEW

A child draws on a man's tattooed arm.

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE: The latest cover features ‘Sergio García Sánchez and Lola Moral’s “Artist in Training”

Pam Bondi’s Power Play

Donald Trump now has the Attorney General he always wanted—an ally willing to harness the law to enable his agenda. By Ruth Marcus

Trump Sends in the National Guard

Is the President’s takeover of D.C. a dry run for other cities? By Margaret Talbot

Bill Belichick Goes Back to School

Can the legendary former Patriots coach transform U.N.C. football? By Paige Williams

The Family Fallout of DNA Surprises

Through genetic testing, millions of Americans are estimated to have discovered that their parents aren’t who they thought. The news has upended relationships and created a community looking for answers. By Jennifer Wilson

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE – August 17, 2025

Current cover

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE: The 8.17.25 Issue features Trevor Quirk on how Hurricane Helene disconnected his community around Asheville, North Carolina from modern communication; Ben Austen on how Trump’s war on higher education is hitting community colleges; Bruce Schoenfeld on Stu Sternberg, the owner of the Tampa Bay Rays; and more.

They Want You to Get Off Your Couch, and Go Set a World Record

When it comes to mass-participation events, would-be record setters are finding it harder than ever to draw a crowd. But it’s still fun to try.

Strawberry Picking Is Thankless Work. That’s What Makes It Worth Watching.

On TikTok Live, workers stream video of themselves doing manual labor, providing glimpses of the human effort that powers our world. By J Wortham

I Never Understood Our Data-Saturated Life Until a Hurricane Shut It Down

When Helene disconnected my part of North Carolina for weeks, my neighbors and I had to relearn old ways of knowing what was happening — and what wasn’t. By Trevor Quirk

THE COURAGE TO QUESTION: HOW AN EMPIRE WAS BUILT

By Michael Cummins, Editor, August 16, 2025

The memory of the Islamic Golden Age evokes powerful images: Baghdad’s legendary House of Wisdom, a beacon of scholarship for the world’s greatest minds; the astronomical observatories of Samarkand, mapping the heavens with unprecedented precision; the grand libraries of Córdoba, containing more books than all of Europe combined. For roughly five centuries, from the 8th to the 13th, the Islamic world was the undisputed global epicenter of science, philosophy, and culture. Its innovations gifted humanity algebra and algorithms, advanced surgical techniques, and the classical Greek philosophy that would later fuel the European Renaissance.

This flourishing was no accident. It was the direct result of a powerful, synergistic formula: the fusion of a voracious, institutionalized curiosity with strategic state patronage and a climate of relative tolerance. Yet, its eventual decline offers an equally crucial lesson—that such a vibrant ecosystem is fragile. Its vitality is contingent on maintaining an open spirit of inquiry, the closing of which precedes stagnation and decay. The story of the Islamic Golden Age, told through its twin centers of Baghdad and Córdoba, is therefore both an inspiring blueprint for civilizational greatness and a timeless cautionary tale of how easily it can be lost.

The Engine: A Genius for Synthesis

The foundation of the Golden Age was its genius for synthesis. It was an institutionalized curiosity that understood new knowledge is forged by actively seeking out, challenging, and combining the wisdom of others. As the scholar Dimitri Gutas argues in his seminal work, Greek Thought, Arabic Culture, this was not a random burst of energy but a deliberate, state-sponsored project driven by the “social and political imperatives of a new empire.” The Abbasid Caliphs, having established their capital in Baghdad in 762, sat at the crossroads of the Persian, Byzantine, and Indian worlds. Rather than view the intellectual traditions of these conquered or rival lands as a threat, they saw them as an invaluable resource for building a universalist imperial ideology.

This conviction gave rise to the Translation Movement, a massive, state-funded effort to translate the great works of science, medicine, and philosophy into Arabic. The nerve center of this project was Baghdad’s House of Wisdom (Bayt al-Hikmah). Far more than a library, it was a dynamic academy, a translation bureau, and a research institute where scholars from across the known world collaborated.

Their goal was never mere preservation. As the historian George Saliba demonstrates, they were active innovators who critically engaged with, corrected, and vastly expanded upon ancient texts. Ptolemy’s astronomical model in the Almagest was not just translated; it was rigorously tested in new observatories, its mathematical errors identified, and its cosmological assumptions challenged by thinkers like Ibn al-Haytham (Alhazen), whose work on optics overturned centuries of classical theory.

He did not simply import knowledge; he synthesized it into something new.

This process created a powerful intellectual alchemy. In mathematics, Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi, a Persian scholar at the House of Wisdom, encountered the revolutionary numeral system from India, which included the concept of zero. He fused this with the geometric principles of the Greeks to create a new discipline he outlined in his landmark book, The Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing. From the title’s key term, al-jabr (‘completion’ or ‘restoring’), the world received algebra—a tool for abstract problem-solving that would transform the world.

This same engine of synthesis, fueled by a competitive spirit, was humming thousands of miles away in Al-Andalus. In its capital, Córdoba, the physician Al-Zahrawi (Abulcasis), often called the father of modern surgery, compiled the Al-Tasrif, a thirty-volume medical encyclopedia. It was a monumental synthesis of classical medical knowledge with his own pioneering innovations, introducing the use of catgut for internal stitches and designing dozens of new surgical instruments that would define European medical practice for centuries. In philosophy, the Córdoban thinker Ibn Rushd (Averroes) produced radical commentaries on Aristotle that were so influential he became known simply as “The Commentator” in medieval Europe. He sought to demonstrate that reason and revelation were not in conflict but were two paths to the same truth, a bold intellectual project that would profoundly reshape Western scholasticism.

The Fuel: Strategic Investment in Knowledge

This intellectual engine was deliberately and lavishly fueled by rulers who saw investment in knowledge as a cornerstone of state power, prestige, and practical advantage. The immense wealth of the Abbasid Caliphate, derived from its control of global trade routes, made this grand-scale patronage possible. This power was materialized in Baghdad itself, Caliph al-Mansur’s perfectly circular “City of Peace,” an architectural marvel with the caliph’s palace and the grand mosque at its absolute center, symbolizing his position as the axis of the world. Later Abbasid palaces were sprawling complexes of exquisite gardens, cool marble halls, and courtyards filled with intricate fountains and exotic animals—dazzling stages for courtly life where poets, musicians, and scholars vied for the caliph’s favor.

It was within these opulent settings that legendary patrons like Harun al-Rashid and his son, al-Ma’mun, held court. Al-Ma’mun, a rationalist thinker himself, is said to have been inspired by a dream in which he conversed with Aristotle. He poured vast resources into the House of Wisdom, funding expeditions to Byzantium to acquire rare manuscripts and reportedly paying translators their weight in gold.

This model of state-sponsored knowledge was pursued with competitive fervor in Al-Andalus. In Córdoba, the Umayyad Caliph Abd al-Rahman III sought to build a capital that would eclipse all rivals. A few miles outside the city, he constructed a fabled palace-city, Madinat al-Zahra (“the shining city”). It was a breathtaking statement of power, built in terraces on a mountainside with thousands of imported marble columns. Its audience chambers were adorned with ivory and ebony, and at the center of the most magnificent hall lay a basin filled with shimmering quicksilver, which, when agitated, would flood the room with dazzling reflections of light.

This was a “war of culture” in which libraries were arsenals and palaces were declarations of supremacy. It was in this environment that Al-Hakam II, Abd al-Rahman’s son, amassed his legendary library of over 400,000 volumes, a beacon of knowledge designed to outshine Baghdad itself. This rivalry between distant capitals created a powerful ecosystem for genius, establishing a lasting infrastructure for discovery that attracted the best minds from every corner of the globe.

The Superpower: Pragmatic and Inclusive Tolerance

The era’s intellectual and financial investments were supercharged by a climate of relative tolerance. This was not a modern, egalitarian pluralism, but a practical and strategic inclusion that prevented intellectual monocultures and proved to be a civilizational superpower. As María Rosa Menocal writes in The Ornament of the World, this was a culture capable of a “first-rate pluralism,” where contradictions were not just tolerated but were often the source of creative energy.

The work of the Golden Age was a multi-faith and multi-ethnic endeavor. In Baghdad, the chief translator at the House of Wisdom and the most important medical scholar of his time, Hunayn ibn Ishaq, was a Nestorian Christian. A master of four languages—Syriac, Arabic, Greek, and Persian—he established a rigorous methodology, collecting multiple manuscript versions of a text to ensure the most accurate translation. For generations, Christian physicians from the Bakhtishu’ family served as personal doctors to the Abbasid caliphs.

This principle was just as potent in the West. In Córdoba, the court of Abd al-Rahman III thrived on the talents of figures like Hasdai ibn Shaprut, a Jewish physician and scholar who rose to become the caliph’s most trusted diplomat and vizier. He not only managed foreign policy but also used his position to patronize Hebrew poets and grammarians, fostering a golden age of Jewish culture that flourished in the heart of Islamic Spain. This was made possible by the dhimmi (protected peoples) system, which, while hierarchical, guaranteed non-Muslims the right to practice their faith and participate in intellectual life. In the realms of science and philosophy, merit and skill were often the ultimate currency. This diversity was the Golden Age’s secret weapon.

The Cautionary Tale: The Closing of the Mind

The Golden Age did not end simply with the hoofbeats of Mongol horses in 1258. Its decline was a prolonged grinding down of the audacious spirit of open inquiry. The Mongol sack of Baghdad was a devastating blow, but it struck a body already weakened by an internal intellectual malaise.

This cultural shift is often symbolized by the brilliant 11th-century theologian, Abu Hamid al-Ghazali. His influential critique of Hellenistic philosophy, The Incoherence of the Philosophers, was not an attack on reason itself—he was a master of it, who championed Aristotelian logic as a necessary tool for theology. Rather, it was a powerful argument against what he saw as the metaphysical overreach of philosophers on matters that he believed could only be known through divine revelation. His work, however, was a symptom of a decisive cultural turn. The intellectual energy of the elite, and the patronage that supported it, began to be re-channeled—away from speculative, open-ended philosophy (falsafa) and towards the preservation and systematization of established religious doctrine.

The central questions shifted from “What can we discover?” to “How do we defend what we know?”

This was compounded by political fragmentation. As the central authority of the Abbasid Caliphate waned, insecure local rulers, like the Seljuk Turks, increasingly sought legitimacy by patronizing conservative religious scholars. Funding flowed toward madrasas focused on theology and law rather than independent scientific academies. When a culture begins to fear certain questions, it loses its ability to generate new answers. The great North African historian Ibn Khaldun, writing in the 14th century from the ruins of this intellectual world, diagnosed the decline with stunning clarity in his Muqaddimah. He observed that when civilizations become too comfortable and focused on preserving past glories, they lose the “group solidarity” and intellectual dynamism that made them great. This growing intellectual rigidity created a civilizational brittleness, leaving it vulnerable to catastrophic external shocks.

Conclusion: A Timeless Blueprint

The legacy of the Islamic Golden Age is a double-edged one. Its rise in both the East and West provides a clear blueprint for greatness, built on relentless curiosity, wise patronage, and pragmatic inclusion. This formula demonstrates that progress is a product of openness and investment. Its decline, however, is a stark warning. The erosion of that most crucial pillar—the open, questioning mind—preceded the civilization’s fall.

The essential lesson of this epic is that culture precedes power. The wealth, military strength, and political influence of the caliphates were not the cause of the Golden Age; they were the result of a culture confident enough to be curious, strong enough to tolerate dissent, and wise enough to invest in knowledge. The engine of its greatness was not the treasury, but the House of Wisdom and the Library of Córdoba. Consequently, its decline was not merely a political or military failure, but the late-stage symptom of an intellectual culture that had begun to value orthodoxy over inquiry. When the questions stopped, the innovations stopped, and the foundations of power crumbled from within.

This narrative is not a historical artifact. It is a timeless blueprint, revealing that the most critical infrastructure any society can build is not made of stone or steel, but of the institutions and values that protect and promote the open pursuit of knowledge. In our modern world, the House of Wisdom finds its echo in publicly funded research universities, in international scientific collaborations, and in the legal frameworks that protect free speech and intellectual inquiry. The patronage of al-Ma’mun is mirrored in the grants that fund basic research—the kind of open-ended exploration that may not have an immediate commercial application but is the seedbed of future revolutions. The tolerance of Córdoba is the argument for diversity in our labs, our boardrooms, and our governments, recognizing that a multiplicity of perspectives is not a liability to be managed, but a strategic asset that fuels innovation.

The open secret of the Golden Age is therefore not a secret at all, but a choice. It is the choice to believe that greatness is born from the courage to question, to synthesize, and to explore. It is the choice to see knowledge not as a finite territory to be defended, but as an infinite ocean to be discovered. The moment a society decides it already has all the answers—the moment it values certainty over curiosity—is the moment its decline becomes inevitable.

THIS ESSAY WAS WRITTEN AND EDITED UTILIZING AI

REBUILDING A BROKEN PATH FROM BOYHOOD TO MAN

By Michael Cummins, Editor, August 14, 2025

Imagine a world where, in a single decade, half the laughter shared between friends vanishes. Imagine a childhood where time spent outdoors is cut by a third and the developmental benefits of reading are diminished by two-thirds. This is not a dystopian fantasy. According to social psychologist Jonathan Haidt, in a “Prof G Podcast with Scott Galloway published on August 14, 2025, it is the stark reality for a generation that has been systematically disconnected from the real world and shackled to the virtual. “We have overprotected our children in the real world,” Haidt argues, “and underprotected them in the virtual world.”

This profound dislocation is the epicenter of a “perfect storm” disproportionately harming boys and young men—a crisis fueled by predatory technology, economic precarity, and the collapse of institutions that once guided them into manhood. It is a crisis, as a growing chorus of thinkers like Haidt, Brookings scholar Richard Reeves, and professor Scott Galloway have illuminated, born not from a single cause, but from a collective, intergenerational failure. It is a betrayal of the implicit promise that each generation will leave the world better for the next, a promise broken by a society that has become, in Galloway’s stark assessment, “a generation of takers, not givers.”

The Digital Dislocation: A Generation Adrift Online

The most abrupt change to the landscape of youth has been technological. Haidt identifies the years between 2010 and 2015 as the “pivot point” when a “play-based childhood” was supplanted by a “phone-based childhood.” This was not a simple evolution from the television sets of the past. The smartphone is a uniquely invasive tool—a supercomputer delivering constant, algorithmically curated interruptions. It extracts data on its user’s deepest desires while creating a feedback loop of social comparison and judgment, resulting in a documented catastrophe for mental health. It is no coincidence that between 2010 and 2021, the suicide rate for American boys aged 10-14 nearly tripled, according to CDC data highlighted by Haidt.

The Lure of the Manosphere

This digital vacuum has been eagerly filled by what Scott Galloway calls the “great white sharks” of the tech industry. The most insidious outcome of their engagement-at-all-costs model is the weaponization of social validation into a system of industrialized shame. “Imagine growing up in a minefield,” Haidt suggests. “You would walk really carefully.” This pervasive fear suppresses healthy risk-taking, a crucial component of adolescent development, particularly for boys who learn competence through trial, error, and recovery.

This isolation is especially damaging for boys who, as scholar Warren Farrell argues, already suffer from a crisis of “dad-deprivation” and a lack of positive male mentorship. “A boy’s search for a father,” Farrell writes in The Boy Crisis, “is a search for a purpose-driven life.” Into this void step not fathers or coaches, but the algorithmic sirens of the “manosphere.” These figures thrive because they offer a counterfeit version of the very thing Farrell identifies as missing: a strong, authoritative male voice providing direction, however misguided. Figures like Andrew Tate have built empires by offering lonely or insecure young men a seductive, off-the-shelf identity, often paired with dubious get-rich-quick schemes that prey directly on their economic anxieties. The algorithms on platforms like TikTok and YouTube are ruthlessly efficient, creating a pipeline that can push a boy from mainstream gaming content to nihilistic or misogynistic ideologies in a matter of weeks. This is not a moral failing of young men; it is the predictable result of a human need for guidance meeting a machine optimized for radicalizing engagement.

The Economic Squeeze: A Broken Promise of Prosperity

This digital betrayal is compounded by an economic one, as the foundational promises of prosperity have been broken for an entire generation. The traditional path to stability—education, career, family, homeownership—has become fractured. As Galloway argues, older generations have effectively “figured out that the downside of democracy is that old people… can continue to vote themselves more money,” leaving the young to face a brutal housing market and stagnant wages. He describes it as a conscious “pulling up of the ladder,” where asset inflation benefits the old at the direct expense of the young.

From Precarious Work to Deaths of Despair

This economic anxiety shatters the “get rich slowly” ethos and replaces it with a desperate search for a shortcut. And in 2018, the state effectively handed this desperate generation a loaded gun in the form of frictionless, legalized sports betting. The Supreme Court decision placed, as Reeves describes it, a “casino in everyone’s pocket,” making gambling dangerously accessible to a demographic of young men who are biologically more prone to risk-taking and socially more isolated than ever. The statistics are damning: young men are the fastest-growing group of problem gamblers, and in states that legalize online betting, bankruptcy filings often spike.

The consequences are existential. This trend is the leading edge of the “deaths of despair” phenomenon identified by economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton, who documented rising mortality among men without college degrees from suicide, overdose, and alcohol-related illness. Their research concluded these deaths were “less about the sting of poverty and more about the pain of a life without meaning.” When a young man, steeped in economic anxiety and disconnected from real-world support, takes a huge financial risk and fails, the shame can be unbearable. Haidt delivers a chillingly direct warning of the foreseeable consequences: “you’re gonna have dead young men.”

The Social Vacuum: An Abandonment of Guidance and Guardrails

Underpinning both the technological and economic crises is a deeper social one: the systematic dismantling of the institutions, norms, and rituals that once guided boys into healthy manhood. Society has become deinstitutionalized, removing the “guardrails” that once channeled youthful energy.

The Crisis in the Classroom

This is acutely visible in education. The modern classroom, with its emphasis on quiet compliance and verbal-emotive skills, is often a poor fit for the learning styles more common in boys. As author Christina Hoff Sommers has argued for years, “For more than a decade, our schools have been enforcing a zero-tolerance policy for any behavior that suggests boyishness.” The result is a widening gender gap at every level. Women now earn nearly 60% of all bachelor’s degrees in the U.S. Boys are more likely to be diagnosed with a learning disability, more likely to face disciplinary action, and have largely abandoned reading for pleasure. We are, in effect, pathologizing boyhood and then wondering why boys are checking out of school.

The Search for Structure

This deinstitutionalization extends beyond the schoolhouse. The decline of institutions like the Boy Scouts, whose membership has plummeted in recent decades, local sports leagues, and church groups has removed arenas for mentorship and character formation. From an anthropological perspective, this is a catastrophic failure. “Wherever you have initiation rights,” Haidt notes, “they’re always harsher, stricter, tougher for boys because it’s a much bigger jump to turn a boy into a man.” This journey requires structure, discipline, and challenge. Yet modern society, in its quest for safety, has stripped away opportunities for healthy risk, leaving boys to “just vegetate.”

Into this vacuum has rushed a toxic cultural narrative that pits the sexes against each other. But the hunger for meaning has not disappeared. Reeves’s powerful anecdote of visiting a Latin Mass in Denver on a Sunday night and finding it “full of young men, most of them on their own,” speaks volumes. They are not seeking chaos; they are desperately searching for “structure and discipline and purpose and institutions that will help them become men.” They are looking for the very things society has stopped providing.

Forging a New Path: A Framework for Renewal

Recognizing this betrayal is the first step. The next is to act. This requires moving past the gender wars and embracing a bold, pro-social agenda to rebuild the structures that turn boys into thriving men.

1. Rebuild the Guardrails: Institutional and Economic Solutions The most immediate need is to create viable, non-collegiate pathways to success and dignity. We must champion a massive expansion of vocational and technical education, celebrating the mastery of a trade as equal in status to a four-year degree. As Mike Rowe, a vocal advocate for skilled labor, has stated, “We are lending money we don’t have to kids who can’t pay it back to train them for jobs that no longer exist. That’s nuts.” Imagine a modern Civilian Conservation Corps, where young men from all backgrounds work side-by-side to rebuild crumbling infrastructure or restore national parks—learning a trade while forging bonds of shared purpose and earning a tangible stake in the country they are helping to build.

2. Create Modern Rites of Passage: Community and Mentorship Communities must step into the void left by failing institutions. This means a national push to fund and expand mentorship programs. Research from MENTOR National shows that at-risk youth with a mentor are 55% more likely to enroll in college and 130% more likely to hold leadership positions. It means local leaders creating their own modern “rites of passage”—challenging, team-based programs that teach resilience, problem-solving, and civic responsibility through tangible projects. As Reeves bluntly puts it, “pain produces growth,” and we must reintroduce healthy, structured struggle back into the lives of boys.

3. A Pro-Social Vision: Redefining Honorable Masculinity The most crucial task is cultural. We must stop telling boys that their innate nature is toxic and instead offer them a noble vision of what it can become. We must define honorable manhood not as domination or material wealth, but as competence, responsibility, and protectiveness. This means redefining competence not just as physical strength, but as technical skill, emotional regulation, and intellectual curiosity. It means redefining protectiveness not just against physical threats, but against the digital and psychological dangers that poison our discourse and harm the vulnerable. It is a masculinity defined by what it builds and who it cares for—the courage to be a provider for one’s family, a pillar of one’s community, and a steward of a just society.

Conclusion: Repairing the Intergenerational Compact

We have stranded a generation of boys in a digital “Guyland,” a perilous limbo between a childhood they were forced to abandon and an adulthood they see no clear path to reaching. We have told them their natural instincts are a problem while simultaneously exposing them to the most predatory, high-risk temptations ever devised. This is more than a crisis; it is a profound societal malpractice.

The choice we face is stark. We can continue our slide into a zero-sum society of horizontal, gendered conflict, or we can recognize this crisis for what it is: a vertical, intergenerational failure that harms everyone. We must have the courage to declare that the well-being of our sons is not in opposition to the well-being of our daughters. As Richard Reeves has said, the goal is to “get to a world which is better for both men and women.” This is not a zero-sum game; it is a positive-sum imperative.

This requires a new intergenerational compact, one rooted in action, not grievance. It demands we stop pathologizing boyhood and start building the institutions that mold it. It requires that we offer our young men not frictionless temptation, but meaningful struggle. It insists that we provide them not with algorithmic influencers, but with real-world mentors who can show them the path to an honorable life.

The hour is late, and the damage is deep. But in the quiet hunger of young men for purpose, in the fierce love of parents for their children, and in the courage of thinkers willing to speak uncomfortable truths, lies the hope that we can yet forge a new path. The work is not to turn back the clock, but to build a better future—one where we finally keep our promise to the next generation.

THIS ESSAY WAS WRITTEN AND EDITED UTILIZING AI

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – AUGUST 15, 2025 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features Sudan’s hidden horror: The inside story of a refugee camp massacre. Plus: The films that capture a nation’s soul

While the wars raging in Ukraine and Gaza have dominated global news agendas for months turning into years, relatively little attention has been paid to the ongoing civil war in Sudan – which for many western media outlets remains out of sight and largely out of mind.

This can’t be said of the Guardian’s Mark Townsend, who has reported tirelessly on the effects of the war between the Arab-led Rapid Support Forces and Sudanese military since it broke out in April 2023. It’s a conflict that has been characterised by repeated atrocities, forcing millions from their homes and causing the world’s largest humanitarian crisis.

In April this year, just as a British-led conference was being held in London to explore how to end the war, one such atrocity was unfolding in Zamzam refugee camp in North Darfur. Details were at first sketchy, but only now – thanks to the piecing together of intelligence reports and witness testimony – can it be revealed what happened during the attack on the camp by RSF forces and why it was not stopped.

As Mark’s remarkable account reveals, the 72-hour rampage in April may have taken the lives of more than 1,500 civilians in one of the most notorious war crimes of Sudan’s catastrophic conflict.

Five essential reads in this week’s edition

The big story | The ruins of Gaza, as seen from above
Guardian international correspondent Lorenzo Tondo joins a Jordanian military airdrop for a rare chance to observe a landscape devastated by Israel’s offensive. With photography by Alessio Mamo

Science | The truth about sunscreen
Too much exposure to the sun has traditionally been seen as a danger. Now claims that sunscreen is toxic flood the internet. Our science editor, Ian Sample, weighs up the evidence

Interview | Demis Hassabis, the cautious AI optimist
The head of Google’s DeepMind tells Steve Rose how artificial intelligence could usher in an era of ‘incredible productivity’ and ‘radical abundance’. But who will it benefit?

Opinion | The world is in flames. But I’ve found some hope amid the gloom
Columnist Jonathan Freedland makes a moral case for escapism, as a means of retaining the ability to see the world – and the people – around us

Culture | The films that capture a nation’s soul
What single film best represents a nation? Twelve writers choose the one work they believe most captures their home’s culture and cinema – from a bold cricket musical to a nine-hour documentary, gritty crime dramas to frothy tales of revenge

The Multi-Faith Prosperity Of 10th-Century Córdoba

By Michael Cummins, Editor, August 13, 2025

While much of Christian Europe was mired in the intellectual and economic stagnation of the so-called “Dark Ages,” 10th-century Córdoba, the capital of the Umayyad Caliphate of al-Andalus, blazed as a singular exception in the medieval world. It was not merely its population of over 250,000, its paved streets, or its public baths that made it a marvel. The true marvel of Córdoba lay in its unprecedented model of intellectual and economic collaboration, a model that harnessed the talents of its diverse Muslim, Jewish, and Christian populations. While modern historians like [suspicious link removed] have rightly challenged the romanticized notion of a perfect convivencia—or coexistence—there is no denying that the collective contributions of its Jewish and Christian communities were not peripheral. They were, in fact, integral to the caliphate’s rise as a preeminent power, forging a society so unique that it stands apart in human history.

This era’s success was a testament to a pragmatic, collaborative environment. As scholar María Rosa Menocal eloquently argued in her book, The Ornament of the World, the period was defined by a culture where “tolerance was an inherent aspect of Andalusian society,” allowing for an extraordinary degree of exchange and innovation. In this multi-faith environment, Jewish and Christian communities were not simply tolerated subjects; they were indispensable collaborators. Their contributions were so intertwined with the caliphate’s achievements that its success would have been impossible without them. This collaborative ethos also extended to the roles of women, who, despite the era’s patriarchal legal framework, rose to prominence as scholars, poets, scribes, and even political figures, further enriching the city’s intellectual and cultural life.


The Engine of Scholarship: A Shared Knowledge Base

The intellectual life of 10th-century Córdoba was a testament to the power of a shared, multilingual knowledge base, a system that was virtually without parallel in the medieval world. The Umayyad rulers, particularly Caliph al-Hakam II, created the institutional framework for learning. A dedicated bibliophile, al-Hakam II amassed a caliphal library that some sources claim numbered as many as 400,000 volumes, commissioning scribes and bookbinders to produce new copies.

While monastic libraries in Christian Europe contained only a few hundred manuscripts, often focused on religious dogma, the caliphal library was a dynamic workshop where scholars of all faiths worked side by side to translate ancient Greek and Latin texts, a process that preserved and expanded upon classical knowledge largely lost to the rest of Europe. The caliph’s agents were dispatched across the Islamic world and beyond to acquire rare manuscripts on every conceivable subject, from medicine and astronomy to poetry and philosophy.

The caliph’s patronage extended to a diverse group of intellectuals who curated the collection, and the role of women in this intellectual flowering was particularly striking. Among them was Lubna of Córdoba, a remarkable intellectual, poet, and mathematician who rose from slavery to become one of al-Hakam II’s most trusted secretaries, instrumental in the administration of the library itself. Her story is a powerful example of the city’s unique meritocratic ethos, where talent and intellect could transcend social barriers.

The contributions of women in scholarship were not limited to Lubna; records show that hundreds of women worked as professional scribes and copyists, transcribing books and manuscripts for the royal library. Beyond the library, the era produced celebrated female poets and scholars whose work was highly regarded, such as ‘A’isha bint Ahmad al-Qurtubiyya, a renowned poet and calligrapher, and the poet Wallada bint al-Mustakfi, famous for her sharp wit and love poems.

The Great Mosque of Córdoba served as the city’s de facto university, a hub of religious and secular learning where scholars and students from diverse backgrounds gathered for instruction. The caliphs funded chairs for distinguished professors, and the mosque’s courtyards provided a space for open intellectual exchange, fostering a culture of critical inquiry and debate. As Dr. Nowar Nizar Al-Ani and his colleagues noted, this institutional framework was designed to “foster a kind of intellectual pluralism that was revolutionary for its time.”

It was in this environment that Jewish and Christian scholars were not just conduits for old ideas but active contributors to new ones. The Jewish community, in particular, experienced a golden age under this system. Hasdai ibn Shaprut, a Jewish court physician and scholar, was at the forefront of medical research and botanical studies. He was also a major patron of Jewish intellectual life, sponsoring scholars and poets who would compose masterpieces of Hebrew literature and helping to establish Córdoba as a new center for Jewish scholarship, eclipsing the traditional academies in Baghdad.

This era also produced pioneering scientific advancements, such as those of the physician Abulcasis (Al-Zahrawi), a key figure of the late 10th century. He wrote a comprehensive 30-volume medical encyclopedia, Al-Tasrif, which was revolutionary for its detailed descriptions of surgical procedures and instruments, many of which he invented. His work would become a standard medical text in Europe for centuries, directly influencing the development of surgery.

The fusion of knowledge and faith led to a unique intellectual environment where, as Jerrilynn D. Dodds‘s edited volume, Al-Andalus: The Art of Islamic Spain, suggests, “the arts of the mind were as celebrated as the arts of the hand.” This collaborative spirit permeated scholarly life: a Christian monk might have been translating a Greek medical treatise in one corner of a library while a Jewish botanist analyzed a new plant in another. It was this cross-pollination of ideas, made possible by the linguistic and cultural fluency of the Christian and Jewish communities, that truly powered Córdoba’s intellectual engine.


The Foundation of Prosperity: Economic and Diplomatic Contributions

The wealth and political stability of the Umayyad Caliphate did not emerge in a vacuum; they were built on the contributions of its non-Muslim subjects, who served as a vital economic and diplomatic backbone. In a period when European feudal society was strictly hierarchical and exclusive, Córdoba’s pragmatic approach was historically unique.

The Jewish community was essential to Córdoba’s sophisticated diplomatic network, with its members highly valued for their linguistic skills and relative neutrality in disputes between Muslim and Christian rulers. The elevation of Hasdai ibn Shaprut to a position of such immense influence—a Jewish diplomat and physician serving as a key advisor to the caliph—was a political innovation without parallel in the medieval West. Fluent in Arabic, Hebrew, and Latin, Hasdai was an indispensable intermediary in diplomatic missions to Christian kingdoms like León and the Holy Roman Empire, skillfully navigating political tensions and securing alliances. He also served as the head of the Jewish community, centralizing cultural life in Córdoba and fostering its independence from the Jewish academies in Baghdad.

The economic engine of Córdoba was also powered by its minorities. The Jewish community was instrumental in the city’s robust international trade, acting as merchants and financiers. Their extensive networks across Europe and the Mediterranean were crucial to Córdoba’s commercial success, helping to establish trade routes that brought precious silks, spices, and other luxury goods into al-Andalus. This immense wealth funded the caliphate’s ambitious building projects. As L. P. Harvey notes in his work, Islamic Spain, 1250 to 1500, the caliphate’s political authority rested on a “pragmatic reliance on a professional class of civil servants, many of whom came from the dhimmi communities, whose loyalty and expertise were a cornerstone of the administrative apparatus.”

Christians, known as Mozarabs, also played critical, though often different, roles. While the highest offices were reserved for Muslims, some Christians rose to positions of influence. For example, a Christian cleric named Recemund served as a civil servant for ‘Abd al-Rahman III and even undertook a diplomatic mission to the Holy Roman Emperor, Otto I. However, the majority of the Christian population was essential to the agricultural economy in the surrounding rural areas. Their contributions as farmers and artisans, who continued many of the traditions and techniques from the Visigothic period, were fundamental to the food supply and wealth of the caliphate.


The Unique Fabric: Cultural and Artistic Synthesis

The artistic and cultural identity of 10th-century Córdoba was a magnificent tapestry woven from the threads of all three religions. The caliphs’ patronage of the arts led to a unique blending of styles that is most famously showcased in the Great Mosque. Its most significant and elaborate expansion, led by Caliph al-Hakam II, featured intricate polylobed arches, ribbed domes, and the lavish use of mosaics—a technique learned directly from Byzantine Christian craftsmen. According to the article “Historical restorations of the Maqṣūrah glass mosaics from the Great Mosque of Córdoba” by J. V. Tarín et al., the caliph specifically sought out Byzantine craftsmen, a profound act of cultural confidence that integrated Christian artistic tradition into the very heart of Islamic worship. In a world often defined by sectarian art, this was a revolutionary aesthetic vision.

Beyond the grand monuments, this cultural synthesis permeated everyday life. The “Mozarabic” style of art and architecture—a blend of Christian and Islamic design—flourished. Christian artisans were not only employed on royal projects but also developed their own unique style that incorporated elements of Islamic geometric patterns and calligraphy. This fusion was also evident in language and literature. Many Christians and Jews adopted Arabic as their language for daily life and scholarship, leading to a unique body of work where Jewish poets composed in a sophisticated Hebrew deeply influenced by Arabic meter and rhyme schemes. As the volume Al-Andalus: The Art of Islamic Spain captures, the art of the period was a “visual dialogue between cultures.” The result was a truly syncretic culture, a unique and irreplaceable expression of the people who created it.

The caliphate’s immense wealth also fueled a boom in refined artistic crafts. Cordoban artisans were celebrated for their skills in calligraphy, which adorned not only architecture but also the lavish ivory caskets and boxes that were prized possessions of the caliph’s court. These caskets, often carved with intricate scenes and calligraphic inscriptions, are a perfect example of how different artistic traditions were fused. Similarly, the city was famous for its fine metalwork, glazed tiles, and high-quality textiles, which were not only major economic drivers but also expressions of a sophisticated and cosmopolitan taste. The creation of the palatine city of Madinat al-Zahra, a new capital built by ‘Abd al-Rahman III, further exemplified this artistic ambition. Its lavish palaces and gardens, described in scholarly works as “a testament to the state’s power and artistic ambition,” were a massive undertaking that drew on the combined skills of Muslim, Jewish, and Christian artisans, cementing the visual legacy of the golden age.


Conclusion

Córdoba in the 10th century was more than just a powerful city; it was a testament to the potential for a pluralistic society to flourish. Its success was a collaborative endeavor, with Jewish, Christian, and female communities providing the crucial intellectual, economic, and cultural components that enabled the Umayyad Caliphate to achieve its zenith. Through their roles as translators, scholars, diplomats, merchants, and artisans, these groups were not simply tolerated subjects but indispensable collaborators in the creation of a sophisticated civilization.

The modern scholarship of historians like Kenneth Baxter Wolf has rightly challenged the romanticized “myth of coexistence,” pointing to the complex realities of power dynamics. But even with this more critical lens, the story that emerges is not one of a failed paradise, but a more compelling and historically significant narrative: a society where, for a sustained period, deep cultural and intellectual collaboration was possible. The lessons of Córdoba continue to resonate today, reminding us that cultural exchange is often the true catalyst for progress.

This legacy is perhaps best captured by a post on the Jewish Andalusian Heritage Route, which describes how the Jewish sages of Andalusia “loved the Torah but understood existence and Judaism as a whole that encompassed religion, spirituality, science, poetry and literature, music, medicine and philosophy.” This powerful insight tells a more complete and hopeful story of how diverse people, bound together by a shared quest for knowledge and prosperity, can build an enduring legacy.

THIS ESSAY WAS WRITTEN AND EDITED UTILIZING AI

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE – AUGUST 18, 2025 PREVIEW

The illustrated cover of the August 18 2025 issue of The New Yorker in which people hike on a colorful landscape.

THE NEW YORKER MAGAZINE: The latest cover features ‘Lorenzo Mattotti’s “Summer Rays” – The art of wandering.

Can Democrats Fight Back Against Trump’s Redistricting Scheme?

Fleeing lawmakers in Texas are unlikely to stop Republicans from redrawing the state’s congressional maps, but their effort has offered a rallying cry—and a reminder of the Democratic Party’s weaknesses. By Jonathan Blitzer

How an Ultra-Rare Disease Accelerates Aging

Teen-agers with progeria have effectively aged eight or nine decades. A cure could help change millions of lives—and shed light on why we grow old. By Dhruv Khullar

How Much Is Trump Profiting Off the Presidency?

An honest accounting of our Executive-in-Chief’s runaway self-enrichment. By David D. Kirkpatrick