Tisʻ rasāyil fī al-ḥikmah wa-al-ṭabīʻīyāt /
: 8, 180 pages ; 20 cm : al-Tabīʻīyāt min ʻuyūn al-ḥikmah -- Fī al-ajrām al-ʻulwīyah -- Fī al-quwá al-insānīyah wa-idrākātihā -- Fī al-ḥudūd -- Fī aqsām al-ʻulūm al-ʻaqlīyah -- Fī ithbāt al-nubūwāt wa-taʼwīl rumūzihim wa-amthālihim -- Fī maʻānī al-ḥurūf al-hijāʼīyah -- Fī al-ʻahd -- Fī ʻilm al-akhlāq -- Qiṣṣat Salāmān wa-Absāl.
Muhammad 'Abduh and his interlocutors : conceptualizing religion in a globalizing world /
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In Muḥammad ʿAbduh and his Interlocutors: Conceptualizing Religion in a Globalizing World , Ammeke Kateman offers an account of Muḥammad ʿAbduh's Islamic Reformism in a context in which ideas increasingly crossed familiar geographical, religious and cultural frontiers. Presenting an alternative to the inadequate perspective of "Westernization", Kateman situates the ideas of Muḥammad ʿAbduh (Egypt, 1849-1905) on Islam and religion amongst those of his interlocutors within a global intellectual field. Ammeke Kateman's approach documents the surprising pluralism of ʿAbduh's interlocutors, the diversity in their shared conceptualizations of religion and the creativity of ʿAbduh's own interpretation. In this way, the conceptualizations of ʿAbduh and his contemporaries also shed light on the diversified global genealogy of the modern concept of religion.
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Revision of author's thesis (doctoral)--Universiteit van Amsterdam, 2016, titled Shared questions, diverging answers : Muḥammad ʻAbduh and his interlocutors on 'religion' in a globalizing world. :
1 online resource. :
Includes bibliographical references and index. :
9789004398382 :
0169-8834 ;
Writings and writing : investigations in Islamic text and script : in honour of Dr Januarius Justus Witkam, professor of codicology and palaeography of the Islamic world at Leyden...
: On title page: "In Hounour of Dr Januariius Justus Witkam, Professor of Codicology and Palaeography of the Islamic world at Leyden University. : XXVIII, 483 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm.
Pizhūhishhāʾī dar tārīkh-i ʿilm : Maqālātī dar bāra-yi tārīkh-i riyāḍiyyāt, nujūm, mikānīk, wa pizishkī /
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As is well known, large parts of the Greek sciences were assimilated by the medieval Muslim world. Equally well known is the fact that quite a number of Muslim scholars contributed to the further development of some of these sciences and also, that some of their works were translated into Latin and other western languages, leaving their imprint on late medieval and early modern science in turn. For this reason, anyone interested in the history of science in the western world will be interested in reading about the history of science in Islam and vice versa. This is why the editor of the present collection of articles has done well to bring together contributions from both fields, in French, English, and Persian. While all of these articles are interesting in their own right, the section dedicated to Naṣīr al-Dīn Ṭūsī (d. 672/1274) and a study of Descartes' (d. 1650) de Solidorum elementis deserve special mention.
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1 online resource. :
9789004405813
9786002030184