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Classical Islamic Philosophy A Thematic Introduction.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: López-Farjeat, Luis Xavier
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Milton : Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • 1 The Context
  • 1. The Origins of Islam
  • 2. From the First Caliphs (Rāshidūn) (632-661) to the Umayyad Era (661-750)
  • 3. The ʻAbbāsid Period
  • 4. The Transmission of Foreign Knowledge Into Islamic Lands
  • Further Reading
  • 2 The Configuration of Philosophy in the Islamic Milieu: The Translation Movement
  • 1. The Translation Movement: From Greek Into Syriac Into Arabic
  • 2. Translation of Greek Philosophy into Arabic
  • 3. Other Sources for Translators, Translations, and Philosophers: Miskawayh and Ṣāʻid al-Andalusī
  • 4. The Transmission of Aristotle's Logical Treatises
  • 5. The Connection Between Logic and Other Disciplines: Jurisprudence and Theology
  • Further Reading
  • 3 Theologians and Philosophers on Islamic Revelation
  • 1. The Muʻtazilites and Rationalism in Islam
  • 2. The Ashʻarites, the Māturīdītes, and the Recovery of the Tradition
  • 3. Religious Issues in Philosophy
  • 3.1 al-Kindī and the Muʻtazilite Theology
  • 3.2 al-Fārābī: Understanding Religious Matters Philosophically
  • 3.3 Ibn Sīnā on God, the Divine Attributes, and Determinism
  • 4. The Controversies Between al-Ghazālī and Ibn Rushd
  • 5. A Later Critical Reaction to Philosophy: Ibn Taymiyya
  • Further Reading
  • 4 The Classification of the Sciences, Logic, and Language
  • 1. The Structure of Sciences and the Methods They Employ
  • 1.1 al-Kindī and On the Quantity of Aristotle's Books
  • 1.2 al-Fārābī and the Enumeration of the Sciences
  • 1.3 The Epistles of the Brethren of Purity
  • 1.4 Ibn Sīnā and the Epistle on the Divisions of the Rational Sciences
  • 2. Logic and Language
  • 2.1 al-Fārābī's Logic and Philosophy of Language
  • 2.2 The Aristotelian-Fārābīan-Avicennian Logical Tradition
  • 3. Theory of Argumentation: Dialectic and Demonstration
  • 3.1 al-Fārābī on the Proper Methods for Philosophical Argumentation
  • 3.2 Ibn Sīnā on Philosophical Demonstrations
  • 3.3 Ibn Rushd on the Demonstrative Syllogism
  • 4. Rhetoric and Poetics
  • 4.1 al-Fārābī on Rhetorical Elocutions and Poetic Images
  • 4.2 Ibn Sīnā on Rhetoric and the Poetic Syllogism
  • 4.3 Ibn Rushd on the Art of Persuasion and the Educational Role of Poetry
  • Further Reading
  • 5 Philosophy and the Natural Science
  • 1. The Eternity of the World and Creation Ex Nihilo
  • 1.1 Greek Background on the Discussion of the Eternity of the World
  • 1.2 Islamic Approaches to the Creation of the World
  • 1.3 al-Fārābī and Ibn Sīnā on the Eternity of the World
  • 1.4 Ibn Rushd on the Eternity of the World
  • 2. Nature and Its Characteristics
  • 2.1 Nature as an Active or Passive Principle
  • 2.2 Ibn Sīnā and Nature as First Principle of Motion
  • 2.3 Ibn Rushd and Nature as Something Self-Evident
  • 2.4 Ibn Rushd Against Ibn Bājja's Views on Motion in the Void