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Al-Farabi
Abu Nasr Muhammad al-Farabi (; – 14 December 950–12 January 951), known in the Latin West as Alpharabius, was an early Islamic philosopher and music theorist. He has been designated as "Father of Islamic Neoplatonism", and the "Founder of Islamic Political Philosophy".Al-Farabi's fields of philosophical interest included—but not limited to, philosophy of society and religion; philosophy of language and logic; psychology and epistemology; metaphysics, political philosophy, and ethics. He was an expert in both practical musicianship and music theory, and although he was not intrinsically a scientist, his works incorporate astronomy, mathematics, cosmology, and physics.
Al-Farabi is credited as the first Muslim who presented philosophy as a coherent system in the Islamic world, and created a philosophical system of his own, which developed a philosophical system that went far beyond the scholastic interests of his Greco-Roman Neoplatonism and Syriac Aristotelian precursors. That he was more than a pioneer in Islamic philosophy is evident from later writers calling him the "Second Master", with Aristotle as the first.
Philosophers influenced by Al-Farabi include Yahya ibn Adi, Abu Sulayman Sijistani, Abu al-Hassan al-Amiri, and Abu Hayyan al-Tawhidi; Avicenna, Suhrawardi, and Mulla Sadra; Avempace, Ibn Tufail, and Averroes; Maimonides, Albertus Magnus, and Leo Strauss. He was known in the Latin West, as well as the Islamic world. Provided by Wikipedia
Das Buch der Ringsteine al-Fārābi's (gest. 950) : mit dem Kommentare des Amīr Ismāʻīl al-Ḥusainī al-Fārānī (um 1485) /
:
Appeared in part as editor and translators̀ inaugural dissertation, Bonn, 1904.
The Arabic text of the Ringsteine was published in Zeitschrift für Assyriologie, volume 18, pages 257-300 ; the commentary of Emir Ismāʼil in volume 20, pages 16-48 ; "die philosophischen Ansichten" in volume 28, pages 113-146.
Title from ser. t.p. :
xxviii, 510 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
