Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy

Edited by Margaret Cameron (University of Melbourne)
Assistant editors: Andrew Park, Donald Collins
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  1. Steiris, Georgios. 2024. "Bessarion on the Value of Oral Teaching and the Rule of Secrecy" Philosophies 9, no. 3: 81.Georgios Steiris - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (3):1-13.
    Cardinal Bessarion (1408–1472), in the second chapter of the first book of his influential work In calumniatorem Platonis, attempted to reply to Georgios Trapezuntios’ (1396–1474) criticism against Plato in the Comparatio Philosophorum Platonis et Aristotelis. Bessarion investigates why the Athenian philosopher maintained, in several dialogues, that the sacred truths should not be communicated to the general public and argued in favor of the value of oral transmission of knowledge, largely based on his theory about the cognitive processes. Recently, Fr. Bessarion (...)
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  2. One Goodness, Many Goodnesses.Thomas M. Ward & Anne Jeffrey - forthcoming - Religious Studies.
    Some theories of goodness are descriptively rich: they have much to say about what makes things good. Neo-Aristotelian accounts, for instance, detail the various features that make a human being, a dog, a bee good relative to facts about those forms of life. Famously, such theories of relative goodness tend to be comparatively poor: they have little or nothing to say about what makes one kind of being better than another kind. Other theories of goodness—those that take there to be (...)
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  3. Problémy abstrakce a matematiky u Tomáše Akvinského.David Svoboda - 2023 - Studia Neoaristotelica 20 (3):1-29.
    Aquinas employs formal abstraction to secure the possibility of mathematics conceived as a theoretical Aristotelian science. Mathematics is a science that investigates real quantity and it grasps its necessary, universal, and changeless properties by means of formal abstraction. In accord with it the paper is divided into two parts. In the first part Aquinas’s conception of (formal) abstraction is explicated against the background of the Aristotelian theory of science and mathematics. In the second part the problems associated with formal abstraction (...)
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  4. O BRASIL DOS POUCOS DONOS DE GRANDES EXTENSÕES DE TERRAS: UMA APROXIMAÇÃO COM A PEDAGOGIA FEUDAL ENTRE SUSERANOS E VASSALOS, ANALOGIA, METÁFORA OU ELEMENTOS FEUDAIS?Marcelo Barboza Duarte - 2022 - Revista Mutirõ. Folhetim de Geografias Agrárias Do Sul V. Iii, No . 3, 2022 Id: 10.51359/2675-3472.2022.254349 3:168-200.
    A história humana possui seus processos e especificidades no e do tempo e espaço, com certas rupturas e continuidades de certos processos e elementos. Podemos citar como exemplo: Os tipos e modos de desigualdades, sistemas escravistas e sistemas coloniais etc. Mas, não sendo igual ou da mesma forma. Há especificidades e características ligadas ao tempo e ao espaço contextual. Porém, sem dúvidas, há acontecimentos e fatos históricos que ocorrem com certas semelhanças e características entre passado e presente, ainda que dentro (...)
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  5. Andrea Cesalpino's epistemology.Marco Sgarbi - 2023 - In Fabrizio Baldassarri & Craig Edwin Martin (eds.), Andrea Cesalpino and Renaissance Aristotelianism. New York: Bloomsbury.
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  6. La contradizion che nol consente. An Akratic Case in Dante's Comedy?Roberto Limonta - 2023 - Rivista di Filosofia Neoscolastica (2):355-369.
    In Inferno’s XXVII Canto, Dante meets Guido da Montefeltro. His story is related to a crucial dilemma. Asked by Boniface VIIIth to give a fraudulent advice for conquering Palestrina, with the promise of a pre-emptively forgiveness of his sin, Guido faces a conflict between two acts of the will: to want x (to give the advice) and to repent wanting x, one of which (repentance) will be not produced by Guido’s will but rather imposed by an external source. So Guido (...)
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  7. Chrysostom Javellus and Francis Silvestri on Final Causation.Erik Åkerlund - 2024 - Vivarium 62 (1):37-57.
    For many areas of philosophy, we lack an understanding of their developments between the fourteenth and seventeenth centuries. One such area is the development of the notion of final causation. The rejection of final causation is often described as one of the distinguishing hallmarks of so called Early Modern philosophy in relation to the Scholastic philosophical tradition. Our lack of understanding of the development of this notion in philosophy therefore impedes our ability to write an adequate history of philosophy spanning (...)
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  8. No Mode of Being, No Mode of Signifying.Milo Crimi - 2024 - Vivarium 62 (1):1-36.
    The Destructions of the Modes of Signifying (henceforth: dms) is an anonymous fourteenth-century polemic against modist speculative grammar (grammatica speculativa). Wielding Ockhamist logic and metaphysics, the dms repeatedly attacks the very root of modism: the claim that the grammatical features of language are grounded in the metaphysical properties of the world. I call this the Modist Correspondence Thesis (henceforth: mct). In its most general form, mct says that every mode of signifying exhibited by an utterance corresponds to a mode of (...)
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  9. Ens reale, ens rationis, or Something In-Between?Claus A. Andersen - 2024 - Vivarium 62 (1):58-89.
    The ontological status of esse cognitum was at the center of complex debates throughout the Scotist tradition (Alnwick vs. Aesculo, Mastri vs. Punch). This article investigates the Scotist Angelo Volpe’s discussion of esse cognitum enjoyed by possible creatures in the divine intellect. Volpe responds to two religious warnings, one against assuming any eternal real being for merely possible creatures, and a second against depriving God’s eternal knowledge of a corresponding object, since that would endanger this knowledge itself. Volpe opts for (...)
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Pre-1000 Medieval Philosophy
  1. Il Trattato sui sogni di Sinesio di Cirene e il commento di Niceforo Gregora.Francesco Monticini (ed.) - 2023 - Genova: Genova University Press.
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  2. Quod deterius potiori insidiari soleat. Philo - 2023 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Adam Kamesar & Philo.
    Presents the Greek text of Philo's treatise Quod deterius in a redesigned format, along with a new English translation. The commentary attempts to facilitate the reading of this sometimes difficult author by means of reconstruction of the contexts of his discussions and by accessible analyses of the train of thought.
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  3. De vita Mosis I: an introduction with text, translation, and notes.Philo Of Alexandria - 2023 - Waco, Texas: Baylor University Press. Edited by Jeffrey Michael Hunt & Philo.
    This volume, a translation of book 1 of Philo of Alexandria's De vita Mosis, with introduction and commentary, aims to introduce new readers, both students and scholars, to Philo of Alexandria through what is widely considered to be one of his most accessible works and one that Philo himself may have intended for readers unfamiliar with Judaism. The introduction provides historical, intellectual, and religious context for Philo, discusses major issues of scholarly interest, considers the relation of De vita Mosis to (...)
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  4. On the change of names.Michael B. Cover - 2023 - Boston: Brill. Edited by Philo.
    In the treatise On the Change of Names (part of his magnum opus, the Allegorical Commentary), Philo of Alexandria brings his figurative exegesis of the Abraham cycle to its fruition. Taking a cue from Platonist interpreters of Homer's Odyssey, Philo reads Moses's story of Abraham as an account of the soul's progress and perfection. Responding to contemporary critics, who mocked Genesis 17 as uninspired, Philo finds instead a hidden philosophical reflection on the ineffability of the transcendent God, the transformation of (...)
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  5. Untersuchungen zu Nemesius von Emesa..Dietrich Bender - 1898 - Leipzig,: Druck von Grimme & Trömel.
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  6. Le philosophe Thémistios devant l'opinion de ses contemporains.Louis Meridier - 1906 - Paris,: Hachette et cie.
    Excerpt from Le Philosophe Themistios Devant l'Opinion de Ses Contemporains Il ne veut pas seulement amener les philosophes a sortir de leurs ecoles pour entrer en contact avec la foule, il reve d'une association definitive et feconde entre la philosophie et'le pouvoir. Lui-meme donne l'exemple de cette double activite, en faisant en public des conferences et en accep tant des charges publiques. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This (...)
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  7. Beiträge zur geschichte der idee.Gustav Falter - 1906 - Marburg,:
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  8. Antropologīi︠a︡ i kosmologīi︠a︡ Nemezīi︠a︡, ep. Emesskago, v ikh otnoshenīi k drevneĭ filosofīi i patristicheskoĭ literaturi︠e︡.Ḟ. S. Vladimīrskīĭ - 1912 - Zhitomir: Ėlektro-tip. nasl. M. Denenmana.
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  9. Nemesios von Emesa: Quellenforschungen zum Neuplatonismus und seinen Anfängen bei Poseidonios.Werner Jaeger - 1914 - Berlin: Weidmann.
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  10. Olympiodoros fra Alexandria og hans commentar til Platons Phaidon.William Norvin - 1915 - Gyldendal,: Nordisk forlag.
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  11. Philo's contribution to religion.Harry Angus Alexander Kennedy - 1919 - New York,: Hodder & Stoughton.
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Augustine
  1. Augustine, Time, and the Movement of Eternity.Jordan Baker - 2020 - Other Journal 31.
    Augustine’s account of time is often praised as unique among the philosophical doctrines found in late antiquity, but in the same laudatory breath, commentators almost always reject his ideas. This dual response finds popular voice in Bertrand Russell’s A History of Western Philosophy, in which he states that although he disagrees with Augustine’s conclusions, it is a “great advance on anything to be found on the subject in Greek philosophy.” According to this traditional interpretation, Augustine argues for a subjective idealism (...)
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  2. Participatory Spiritual Intelligence: A Theological Perspective.Jordan Joseph Wales - 2024 - In Marius Dorobantu & Fraser Watts (eds.), Perspectives on Spiritual Intelligence. Routledge.
    Influenced by both 17th-century philosophical developments and 21st-century computer science, intelligence today is often defined as “the ability to solve problems.” Drawing on early and medieval Christian thinkers, a theological perspective affords a richer view. For these writers, intellegentia is more than receptive or oriented towards problem-solving. It participates both in the world and in God, by coming to know the world as good not first in how it may serve us but in its kaleidoscopic refraction of the one divine (...)
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  3. A Trinitarian Ascent: How Augustine’s Sermons on the Psalms of Ascent Transform the Ascent Tradition.Mark J. Boone - 2024 - Religions 15 (5).
    Augustine’s sermons on the Psalms of Ascent, part of the Enarrationes in Psalmos, are a unique entry in the venerable tradition of those writings that aim to help us ascend to a higher reality. These sermons transform the ascent genre by giving, in the place of the Platonic account of ascent, a Christian ascent narrative with a Trinitarian structure. Not just the individual ascends, but the community that is the church, the body of Christ, also ascends. The ascent is up (...)
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  4. The Political and Social Ideas of Saint Augustine.Herbert Andrew Deane - 1963 - Columbia University Press.
    A critical essay on St. Augustine's social and political thought. In describing Augustine, the author captures the essence of the man in these words: "Genius he had in full measure... he is the master of the phrase or the sentence that embodies a penetrating insight, a flash of lightning that illuminates the entire sky; he is the rhetorician, the epigrammist, the polemicist, but not the patient, logical systematic philosopher.".
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  5. Ectogestation and Humanity’s Whence? An Exploration with Saint Augustine and Karl Barth.Matthew Lee Anderson - forthcoming - Christian Bioethics.
    This essay explores the theological and anthropological significance of birth, in order to discern what might be lost with the adoption of complete ectogestation (“artificial wombs”). Specifically, it considers both Saint Augustine and Karl Barth’s respective accounts of humanity’s whence—that is, their theological answer to the question of the nature and significance of our origins as individuals. I suggest that Augustine’s account of his origins emphasizes both his epistemic and biological dependency on his mother and nurses, while Barth’s stresses the (...)
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  6. Feeling for Augustine.Catherine Conybeare - 2024 - Classical Antiquity 43 (1):1-18.
    This essay promotes affective engagement with the texts we read, arguing that we should attend both to recognizing emotion within the texts and to allowing ourselves to feel emotion as we read. The essay thus aligns itself with contemporary theories of non-hermeneutic or surface reading. The argument is illustrated specifically by the relationship of Augustine of Hippo (354–430 CE) to the emotion of anger. The transcripts of the Council of Carthage, held in 411, show an eruption of anger on Augustine’s (...)
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  7. Arendt and Augustine: a pedagogy of desiring and thinking for politics.Mark Aloysius - 2024 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This book addresses a lacuna in scholarship concerning Hannah Arendt's Augustinian heritage that has predominantly focused on her early work. It de-canonises the sources that political theology has appealed to by shifting the interpretive focus to her mature treatment in The Life of the Mind. Arendt's initial criticism of Augustinian desiring is that it generates worldlessness. In her later works, Arendt develops a more nuanced reading of the movements of thinking, desiring, and loving in her engagement with Augustine. This study (...)
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  8. The conception of a kingdom of ends in Augustine, Aquinas.Ella Harrison Stokes - 1912 - Chicago, Ill.,: The University of Chicago press.
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  9. Augustine on memory, the mind, and human flourishing.T. Parker Haratine - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Philosophy:1-21.
    Augustine maintains that the mind at least consists of memory, intellect, and will (De Trinitate 10.9.13 & 10.11.17). While it is easy to understand the intellect and will as essential to the mind’s activities, memory proves more difficult to understand. It is not immediately clear, for example, whether a human mind could operate without memory, whether people without memory have minds, and what distinguishes memory from the intellect. To understand the role of memory and its respective activities, this article addresses (...)
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  10. Augustine and the Good Life.Keith Hess & Matthew Flummer - forthcoming - B&H Academic.
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Boethius
  1. Time and Eternity in the Consolation of Philosophy.Jonathan Evans - 2024 - In Michael Wiitala (ed.), Boethius' _Consolation of Philosophy_: A Critical Guide. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
    Boethius, like his Neoplatonic predecessors, poses a challenge to contemporary readers of the Consolation seeking to understand the world he thinks we occupy. That world involves a timeless, simple, but all- knowing creator god and a time-bound, infinite creation that is patterned from the ideas in the divine mind. The purpose of this chapter is to provide a modest illumination into the world as it is conceived in the Consolation by examining two fundamental Boethian categories and their relationship: the eternal (...)
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  2. Boethius' Consolation of Philosophy: A Critical Guide.Michael Wiitala (ed.) - 2024 - Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
    Boethius's Consolation of Philosophy was one of the most widely read and influential texts in medieval Europe, considering questions such as: how can evil exist in a world governed by God? And how is happiness still attainable despite the vicissitudes of fortune? Written as a dialogue between Boethius and Lady Philosophy, and alternating between poetry and prose, the Consolation is of interest not only to philosophers, but to students of classics and literature as well. In this Critical Guide, the first (...)
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  3. Entailment and Truthmaking: The Consequentia Rerum from Boethius to the Ars Meliduna.Enrico Donato - forthcoming - History and Philosophy of Logic:1-15.
    In Categories 12 (14b11–22), Aristotle famously claims that [1] true sentences and reality stand in a mutually implicative relationship, and that [2] reality causes the truth of sentences but not vice versa. In this paper, I first argue that Boethius’ reading of the above passage led medieval logicians to assess [1] and [2] within the framework of a theory of consequence. Then, I consider two important questions raised by Boethius and later logicians in relation to [1] and [2], and, namely, (...)
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  4. La consolazione della chimera: parole e immagini negli autografi di Boezio.Fabio Troncarelli - 2022 - Roma: Artemide.
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  5. Boethius on human freedom and divine foreknowledge.Katherin Rogers - 2024 - In Michael Wiitala (ed.), Boethius' _Consolation of Philosophy_: A Critical Guide. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
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  6. The human person in the Consolation of philosophy.Mark K. Spencer - 2024 - In Michael Wiitala (ed.), Boethius' _Consolation of Philosophy_: A Critical Guide. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
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  7. Boethius' Philosophiae consolatio.John Magee - 2024 - In Michael Wiitala (ed.), Boethius' _Consolation of Philosophy_: A Critical Guide. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
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Pre-1000 Medieval Philosophy, Misc
  1. Themistius: On Aristotle : Metaphysics 12 [Lambda].Yoav Meyrav & Themistius Euphrades - 2020 - London: Bloomsbury.
    This is the only commentary on Aristotle's theological work, Metaphysics, Book 12, to survive from the first six centuries CE – the heyday of ancient Greek commentary on Aristotle. Though the Greek text itself is lost, a full English translation is presented here for the first time, based on Arabic versions of the Greek and a Hebrew version of the Arabic. -/- In his commentary Themistius offers an extensive re-working of Aristotle, confirming that the first principle of the universe is (...)
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11th/12th Century Philosophy
  1. Sufismo y política en María Zambrano.David Fernández Navas - 2024 - Anales Del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofía 41 (2):393-403.
    Se ofrece una interpretación de la filosofía política de María Zambrano desde el sufismo deIbnʿArabī. Primero, explicaremos tres nociones centrales en la obra del Šayḫ, como la doble fidelidad a la dimensión de la «incomparabilidad» (tanzīh) y de la «similaridad» (tašbīh), la «nueva creación» (ḫalq al-ǧadīd) y el «hombre perfecto» (insān al-kāmil). Después, trataremos algunos de los textos más políticos de Zambrano, como Horizonte del liberalismo(1929), Isla de Puerto Rico (1940), «Martí, camino de su muerte» (1953) y Persona y democracia (...)
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  2. The text-building function of names and nicknames in 'Sverris saga' and 'Boglunga sogur'.Anton Zimmerling - 1994 - In Sverrir Tómasson (ed.), The Ninth International Saga Conference. The Contemporary sagas. Akureyri, 1994. Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar. pp. 892-906.
    This paper explores the hypothesis that proper names serve as anchors identifying the individuals in the possible or real world. This hypothesis is tested on Old Icelandic narratives. A prominent feature of Old Icelandic sagas is that the narrative matter is not quite new. A Saga is reliable iff it refers to the events relevant for its audience and accepted as true by the whole community. I argue that proper names must be regarded as references to the background knowledge of (...)
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Peter Abelard
  1. The Dictionary of Literary Biography.Peter King (ed.) - 1992
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Anselm
  1. Der Gottesbegriff und die erkennbarkeit Gottes von Anselm von Canterbury bis zu René Descartes..Otto Emil Oskar Jasniewicz - 1906 - Erlangen,: Universitätsbuchdr. von E.T. Jacob.
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  2. Anselm von Feuerbach.Maximilian Fleischmann - 1906 - München,: Kgl. hofbuchdr. Kastner & Callwey.
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Al-Ghazali
  1. The First Islamic Reviver: Abu Hamid al-Ghazali and His Revival of the Religious Sciences.Kenneth Garden - 2014 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The First Islamic Reviver presents a new biography of al-Ghazali's final decade and a half, presenting him not as a reclusive spiritual seeker, but as an engaged Islamic revivalist seeking to reshape his religious tradition.
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  2. Al-Munqiḏ/Al-Munqaḏ min al-Ḍalāl wa al-muṣil ʾila ḏi-al-ʾizza wa al-ǧalāl.Abū Ḥāmid Al-Ġazālī - 1967 - Beirut: Dār al-Āndulus.
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  3. Iḥyāʾ al-ʿulūm al-dīn.Abū Ḥāmid Al-Ġazālī - 2002 - Beirut: Dār al-kutub al-ʿilmiyya.
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  4. al-Mustasfâ min ‘ilm al-usûl.Abū Ḥāmid al-Ġazālī - 1904 - Bûlâq: al-Matba’a al-Amîriyya.
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  5. Al-Ghazali’s Path to Sufism: His Deliverance from Error (al-Munqidh min al-Dalal).Abū Ḥāmid Al-Ġazālī - 2000 - Louisville, KY: Fons Vitae.
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Averroes
  1. Jadal al-dīn wa-al-siyāsah ʻinda Ibn Rushd.al-ʻAlawī Rashīd - 2018 - al-Jazāʼir: Ibn al-Nadīm lil-Nashr wa-al-Tawzīʻ.
    Averroës, 1126-1198; criticism and interpretation; Islamic philosophy; Religion and ploitics.
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  2. Tagargūst suktānah wa-muḥīṭuhā: dhākirat qaryah min al-Maghrib al-ʻamīq.Rashīd al-Ḥusayn Yaʻqūbī - 2019 - al-Rabāṭ: Dār al-Salām lil-Nashr.
    Taguergoust (Morocco), history; Cities and towns; Morocco; history.
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