Toby E. Huff (born April 24, 1942) is an American academic and emeritus professor at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. He was born in Portland, Maine. He was trained as a sociology but has research interests in the history, philosophy and sociology of science. He has published Max Weber-inspired studies of the Arab and Muslim world, as well as China, including field work in Malaysia.The Writer's Directory, 2010; Who's Who in American Education, 2007–2008 He is best known for his book The Rise of Early Modern Science: Islam, China and the West. Now in a third edition, it has been translated into Arabic (twice), Chinese, Korean, and Turkish. His explanation of the cultural and scientific divergence between Arabic/Islamic and European science in the medieval period has been widely influential, especially among economic historians such as Richard Lipsey,Economic Transitions. General Technologies and Long Term Economic Growth. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. Jan Luiten van Zanden,The Long Road to the Industrial Revolution. The European Economy in a Global Perspective. Leyden: Brill, 2009. Peer Vries,Escaping Poverty. The Origins of Modern Economic Growth. Vienna: University of Vienna Press, 2013. among others.
Huff's sociological approach to the European development, its legal transformation, along with the rise of the universities and modern science has been incorporated in several mainstream history texts.Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks, Clare Haru Crowston, Joe Perry, A History of Western Society., 13th ed. McMillan.
Huff has been a visiting scholar at the National University of Singapore, the University of Malaya, and the Max Weber College in Erfurt, Germany. He taught sociology for thirty-four years at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth before becoming chancellor professor emeritus in 2005. Since then he has been a research associate in the Department of Astronomy at Harvard University.
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