Philosophy, theology and mysticism in medieval Islam
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Philosophy, theology and mysticism in medieval Islam
(Variorum collected studies series, CS833 . Texts and studies on the development and history of Kalam ; v. 1.)
Ashgate, c2005
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Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto Universityグローバル専攻
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Includes bibliographical references and indexes
"This volume contains x + 392 pages"--Contents
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The first volume of the collected major articles of Richard M. Frank, pioneering student of Islamic theology (kalam), contains fifteen essays. It includes his early studies, classic but inaccessible for many in their original publication, on the text and terminology of Graeco-Arabic translations (De anima, Themistius on the Metaphysics, Plotinus in Syriac, 'anniya) and the terminology of early kalam. Other articles deal with Islamic theology and its early development, especially in its relation to philosophy (in particular the kalam of Jahm ibn Safwan and al-Ghazali), and the text and translation of two short dogmatic works by the mystic al-Qushayri. The collection is prefaced by a fascinating autobiographical memoir which traces the intellectual development of the author and the reasoning that led him, from study to study, to his discovery of the way of thinking of the theologians and to an understanding of the essential core of Islamic theology.
Table of Contents
- Contents: Foreword
- Autobiographical note
- Some fragments of Ishaq's translation of the De anima
- Some textual notes on the Oriental versions of Themistius' paraphrase of Book I of the Metaphysics
- The origin of the Arabic philosophical term 'anniya
- The use of the Enneads by John of Scythopolis
- Remarks on the early development of the kalam
- Reason and revealed law, a sample of parallels and divergences in kalam and falsafa
- Currents and counter currents [in the Mu`tazila, Ash`arites and al-Ghazali]
- The neoplatonism of Jahm ibn Safwan
- Al-Ghazali on taqlid: scholars, theologians, and philosophers
- Al-Ghazali's use of Avicenna's philosophy
- Meanings are spoken of in many ways: the earlier Arab grammarians
- 'Lam yazal' as a formal term in Muslim theological discourse
- Two short dogmatic works of abu l-Qasim al-Qushayri, part 1: Luma` al-i`tiqad
- part 2: al-Fusul fi l-usul
- Index.
by "Nielsen BookData"