Around 1005 C.E., a scholar in Cairo sat down to solve one of the oldest puzzles in human thought: how do we actually see? The answer Ibn al-Haytham produced — methodically, experimentally, across seven volumes — would redirect the course of physics, mathematics, and the science of light for the next seven centuries.
What the evidence shows
- Book of Optics: Ibn al-Haytham’s Kitāb al-Manāẓir argued, through controlled experiments, that vision works by light entering the eye from objects — not by rays shooting outward from the eye, as Euclid and Ptolemy had claimed.
- Intromission theory: The model Ibn al-Haytham championed — that objects emit light in all directions and that some of it reaches the eye — is the foundation of how modern science understands vision today.
- Scientific method: The Book of Optics is among the earliest known works to systematically combine hypothesis, experiment, and mathematical reasoning in a way that anticipates the structure of modern scientific inquiry.
The problem with “rays from the eyes”
For roughly a thousand years before Ibn al-Haytham wrote, the dominant Western theory of vision was extramission: the idea that the eye emits invisible rays that reach out and touch objects, allowing them to be seen. Euclid defended it. Ptolemy refined it. It was intellectually elegant and geometrically useful.
It was also wrong, and Ibn al-Haytham knew it.
He pointed to a simple, observable fact: looking directly at the sun or a bright flame damages the eye. If the eye were the source of outgoing rays, why would light coming in cause harm? He also noted the near-impossibility that the eye could instantly fill the entire night sky with rays the moment the eyelids open — yet we see stars immediately upon looking up.
These weren’t philosophical objections. They were empirical ones. Ibn al-Haytham backed them with experiments using darkened rooms, controlled light sources, and careful observation — a methodology that was genuinely rare in his era and, arguably, in any era before him.
What he built in place of the old model
Ibn al-Haytham proposed that every point on a visible object radiates light outward in all directions. Some of that light reaches the eye. The eye doesn’t reach out — it receives. This intromission model explained not just how we see, but how we see clearly rather than in a blur.
The blurriness problem was real: if every point on an object sends light to every point on the eye’s surface simultaneously, the resulting image should be chaos. Ibn al-Haytham resolved this through his theory of refraction. Only the ray hitting the eye perpendicularly, he argued, passes through without bending; all other rays are refracted and weakened, effectively filtered out. The crystalline humor — what we now call the lens — receives and processes the image, transmitting it along the optic nerve to the brain.
He also described the camera obscura with precision — the principle by which a small hole in a darkened room projects an inverted image of the world outside. This was not his invention, but his careful documentation of it would later help Leonardo da Vinci, Johannes Kepler, and others build toward the telescope, the microscope, and eventually the photographic camera.
Lasting impact
The Book of Optics was translated into Latin by an unknown scholar around the late 12th or early 13th century C.E., entering European intellectual life at a pivotal moment. Roger Bacon, John Pecham, and Witelo all drew on it. Johannes Kepler, working in the early 17th century C.E., acknowledged Ibn al-Haytham’s influence directly as he worked out how the retina forms images. The book shaped European optics for at least 400 years after its Latin translation.
Ibn al-Haytham also formulated what became known as Alhazen’s problem — a geometric challenge involving reflections in curved mirrors that mathematicians would not fully solve until the 20th century C.E. His treatment of primary and secondary light, and his insistence that color, like light, travels in straight lines from objects to the eye, laid conceptual groundwork that persisted well into the modern period.
The Book of Optics was printed in Europe in 1572 C.E. by Friedrich Risner, nearly six centuries after it was written — a long delay that reflects both the filtering effects of translation history and the slow pace at which Arabic scholarship entered European libraries. That it arrived at all, and shaped so much, is a measure of how durable the ideas inside it were.
The context Ibn al-Haytham worked in
Ibn al-Haytham was a product of the Islamic Golden Age — a period roughly spanning the 8th through 13th centuries C.E. during which scholars in Baghdad, Cairo, Cordoba, and elsewhere preserved, translated, and substantially extended Greek knowledge in mathematics, astronomy, medicine, and philosophy. His work built explicitly on Ptolemy’s Optics and on Galen’s anatomical descriptions of the eye. He wasn’t working in isolation; he was working inside a rich tradition of inquiry that included Persian, Arab, and translated Greek thought.
That tradition — and the institutions, libraries, and patronage networks that supported it — made the Book of Optics possible. Scholars across the Islamic world had spent generations building the infrastructure of learning that allowed a researcher in Cairo to access the best Greek science, critique it rigorously, and surpass it.
Blindspots and limits
Ibn al-Haytham’s model of vision was a massive advance, but it was not complete. His explanation for why the eye sees clearly — that only perpendicular rays matter — was later shown to be incorrect in its mechanism; the actual solution involves the eye’s lens focusing light onto the retina in ways he couldn’t have measured. His anatomy of the eye, borrowed largely from Galen, also contained errors that persisted in European medicine for centuries. The Book of Optics was influential enough that some of its mistakes traveled as far as its insights did.
It’s also worth acknowledging that the delay in European reception meant that generations of Western scholars worked with inferior theories of vision when better ones already existed — a reminder that the history of knowledge is also a history of which ideas get translated, circulated, and credited, and which don’t. The transmission of Islamic science to Europe was uneven, partial, and often anonymous — Ibn al-Haytham’s Latin name, Alhazen, obscured his origins for centuries.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Book of Optics
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- A landmark drug trial cuts Alzheimer’s risk in half
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the Middle Ages
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