Results for 'Medicine, Arab History.'

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  1.  19
    Medicine and Arabic literary production in the Ottoman Empire during the nineteenth century.Nicole Khayat & Liat Kozma - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Science 55 (4):515-524.
    The selection of nineteenth-century Arabic texts on medical education, medicine and health demonstrates the significant link between the revival of the Arabic language and literary culture of the nineteenth century, known as thenahda, and the introduction of medical education to the Ottoman Empire. These include doctor Ibrahim al-Najjar's autobiographical account of his studies in Cairo (1855), an article by doctor Amin Abi Khatir advising on the health and care of infants (1877), questions and answers in the major popular Arabic journalsal-Hilalandal-Muqtataf(1877–1901) (...)
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  2.  71
    The development of Arabic logic.Nicholas Rescher - 1964 - [Pittsburgh]: University of Pittsburgh Press.
    Arabic contributions to medicine, mathematics, astronomy, and other fields have been extensively studied, yet Arabic logic has never been systematically investigated. In this book, Nicholas Rescher sheds new light on the major philosophical contribution of Arab logicians. He provides a historical account of the evolution of Arabic logic, from its inception in the early ninth century through the sixteenth century, when these tenets gained wide acceptance. The book also includes a bio-bibliography of 170 Arabic logicians, and a discussion of (...)
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  3.  16
    Sciences in CulturesChinese Science: An Informal and Irregular Journal Dedicated to the Study of Traditional Chinese Science, Technology, and Medicine. N. SivinJournal for the History of Arabic Science. Ahmad Y. al-Hassan, Sami K. Hamarneh, E. S. Kennedy. [REVIEW]Lyndsay A. Farrall - 1979 - Isis 70 (4):584-587.
  4.  41
    The Reception of Aristotle's History of Animals in the Marginalia of Some Latin Manuscripts of Michael Scot's Arabic-Latin Translation.Aafke M. I. Van Oppenraay - 2003 - Early Science and Medicine 8 (4):387-403.
    A considerable number of the thirteenth and early fourteenth-century manuscripts of Michael Scot's Arabic-Latin translation of Aristotle's De animalibus display a system of guiding marginal glosses. These glosses are usually added by a later hand with respect to the hand that had written the text. The manuscripts were not only annotated for personal use, but also so as to allow for a better use in compiling commentaries, encyclopaedias and compendia. We can say that the marginalia form the main, if not (...)
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  5.  12
    The Reception of Aristotle's History of Animals in the Marginalia of Some Latin Manuscripts of Michael Scot's Arabic-Latin Translation.M. I. van OppenraayAafke - 2003 - Early Science and Medicine 8 (4):387-403.
    A considerable number of the thirteenth and early fourteenth-century manuscripts of Michael Scot's Arabic-Latin translation of Aristotle's De animalibus display a system of guiding marginal glosses. These glosses are usually added by a later hand with respect to the hand that had written the text. The manuscripts were not only annotated for personal use, but also so as to allow for a better use in compiling commentaries, encyclopaedias and compendia. We can say that the marginalia form the main, if not (...)
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  6.  8
    Ibn Rushd le médecin: essai.Mahmoud Aroua - 2014 - Alger: Éditions Alpha.
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  7. al-Manhaj al-tajrībī al-ṭibbī ʻinda Abū Bakr al-Rāzī wa-Ibn Sīnā wa-ʻalāqtahu bi-al-manhaj al-ṭibbī al-muʻāṣir.Fayṣal Masʻūd - 2017 - al-Manṣūrah [Egypt]: al-Maktabah al-ʻAṣrīyah lil-Nashr wa-al-Tawzīʻ.
  8. Ḥafrīyāt ṭibb al-Rāzī.Mānī Saʻādah Nādiyah - 2009 - Wahrān: Dār al-Gharb lil-Nashr wa-al-Tawzīʻ.
  9.  12
    Epistles of the Brethren of Purity: on composition and the arts: an Arabic critical edition and English translation of epistles 6-8.Nader El-Bizri & Godefroid de Callataÿ (eds.) - 2018 - Oxford: Oxford University Press, in association with the Institute of Ismaili Studies.
    The Ikhwan al-Safa' (Brethren of Purity), the anonymous adepts of a tenth-century esoteric fraternity based in Basra and Baghdad, hold an eminent position in the history of science and philosophy in Islam due to the wide reception and assimilation of their monumental encyclopaedia, the Rasa 'il Ikhwan al-Safa' (Epistles of the Brethren of Purity). This compendium contains fifty-two epistles offering synoptic accounts of the classical sciences and philosophies of the age; divided into four classificatory parts, it treats themes in mathematics, (...)
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  10.  23
    Pharmacology The Medical Formulary of Al-Samarqandī and the Relations of Early Arabic Simples to those found in the Indigenous Medicine of the Near East and India. By Martin Levey & Noury Al-Khaledy. University of Philadelphia Press and Oxford University Press. 1967. Pp. 382. 142s. 6d. [REVIEW]M. P. Earles - 1970 - British Journal for the History of Science 5 (1):95-96.
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  11.  27
    Michael W. Dols & Adil S. Gamal, eds. Medieval Islamic Medicine. Ibn Ridwan's Treatise ‘On the Prevention of Bodily Ills in Egypt’. Translated and introduced by M. W. Dols, with Arabic text by A. S. Gamal. Berkeley and London: University of California Press, 1984. Pp. xv + 186 + 63. ISBN 0-420-04836-9. $28. [REVIEW]Roger French - 1986 - British Journal for the History of Science 19 (2):211-212.
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  12.  25
    The Faculties: A History.Dominik Perler (ed.) - 2015 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    It seems quite natural to explain the activities of human and non-human animals by referring to their special faculties. Thus, we say that dogs can smell things in their environment because they have perceptual faculties, or that human beings can think because they have rational faculties. But what are faculties? In what sense are they responsible for a wide range of activities? How can they be individuated? How are they interrelated? And why are different types of faculties assigned to different (...)
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  13.  66
    Certainty, Doubt, Error: Comments On the Epistemological Foundations of Medieval Arabic Science.Dimitri Gutas - 2002 - Early Science and Medicine 7 (3):276-288.
    The article comments on the epistemological foundations of medieval Arabic science and philosophy, as presented in five earlier communications, and attempts to draw some guidelines for the study of its social history. At the very beginning the notion of "Islam" is discounted as a meaningful explanatory category for historical investigation. A first part then looks at the applied sciences and notes three major characteristics of their epistemological approach: they were functionalist and based on experience and observation. The second part looks (...)
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  14.  10
    Afyon ve İstanbul uluslararası Türk - İslam tıp tarihi ve etiği kongreleri (2018 - 2019): Bildiri kitabı = Afyon and Istanbul international Turkish - Islamic medical history and ethics congresses (2018 - 2019): Proceedings book.Berrin Okka, Ayşegül Demirhan Erdemir & Öztan Usmanbaş (eds.) - 2020 - Konya: Selçuk Üniversitesi.
  15.  11
    Mathematics and physics in classical Islam: comparative perspectives in the history and the philosophy of science.Giovanna Lelli (ed.) - 2022 - Boston: Brill.
    This book highlights the emergence of a new mathematical rationality and the beginning of the mathematisation of physics in Classical Islam. Exchanges between mathematics, physics, linguistics, arts and music were a factor of creativity and progress in the mathematical, the physical and the social sciences. Goods and ideas travelled on a world-scale, mainly through the trade routes connecting East and Southern Asia with the Near East, allowing the transmission of Greek-Arabic medicine to Yuan Muslim China. The development of science, first (...)
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  16.  4
    Abū Bakr al-Rāzī.ʻAzīz ʻAẓmah - 2001 - Beirut: Riyāḍ al-Rayyis lil-Kutub wa-al-Nashr.
  17.  7
    Tvorcha spadshchyna Ibn Siny ta suchasnistʹ.Mykola Popov, M. S. Vatankha & Avicenna (eds.) - 2009 - Kyïv: Vidavnychyĭ dim "Askanii︠a︡".
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  18. The Syriac Galen Palimpsest and the Role of Syriac in the Transmission of Greek Medicine in the Orient.Siam Bhayro & Sebastian Brock - 2012 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 89 (1):25-43.
    This paper presents the newly rediscovered ‘Syriac Galen Palimpsest’. The manuscript has been subjected to the latest imaging techniques, which has allowed scholars to identify its undertext as containing a Syriac translation of Galens Book of Simple Drugs. After discussing the history, imaging and identification of the manuscript, we proceed to consider its significance for our understanding of the transmission of Greek medical lore in Syriac and Arabic, for which the Book of Simple Drugs serves as a convenient model. Several (...)
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  19. Ustād Muḥammad Zakariyā-yi Rāzī: va bardāshthā-yi dānishmandān-i ʻilm-i pizishkī-i dahahʹhā-yi ākhir-i qarn-i bīstum az ū.Sayf al-Dīn Nabavī - 1987 - [Tehran]: Iqbāl.
  20.  8
    Lectures and Other Papers.Andrew Cunningham, Francis Glisson & Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine - 1998
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  21.  43
    Bolatu's Pharmacy Theriac in Early Modern China.Carla Nappi - 2009 - Early Science and Medicine 14 (6):737-764.
    In early modern China, natural history and medicine were shifting along with the boundaries of the empire. Naturalists struggled to cope with a pharmacy's worth of new and unfamiliar substances, texts, and terms, as plants, animals, and the drugs made from them travelled into China across land and sea. One crucial aspect of this phenomenon was the early modern exchange between Islamic and Chinese medicine. The history of theriac illustrates the importance of the recipe for the naturalization of foreign objects (...)
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  22.  77
    Breve storia dell'etica.Sergio Cremaschi - 2012 - Roma RM, Italia: Carocci.
    The book reconstructs the history of Western ethics. The approach chosen focuses the endless dialectic of moral codes, or different kinds of ethos, moral doctrines that are preached in order to bring about a reform of existing ethos, and ethical theories that have taken shape in the context of controversies about the ethos and moral doctrines as means of justifying or reforming moral doctrines. Such dialectic is what is meant here by the phrase ‘moral traditions’, taken as a name for (...)
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  23.  86
    The Burning Mirrors of Diocles: Reflections On the Methodology and Purpose of the History of Pre-Modern Science.Jan P. Hogendijk - 2002 - Early Science and Medicine 7 (3):181-197.
    Much has been done on the publication of original sources in Arabic during the past 30 years, but much more remains to be done. Some of the recent multiple editions are unnecessary duplication of work and therefore waste of energy. This energy could be better spent on the publication of unpublished sources, and on studies involving the contextualization of Islamic sciences. Furthermore, historians of pre-modern science should work on the popularization of their wonderful subject. This exoteric work is as important (...)
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  24.  31
    Medicine and history as theoretical tools in a confucian pragmatism.Anne D. Birdwhistell - 1995 - Philosophy East and West 45 (1):1-28.
  25.  25
    Modern European sexological and orientalist assimilations of medieval Islamicate ‘ ilm al-bah to erotology.Alison M. Downham Moore - 2023 - History of the Human Sciences 36 (5):15-41.
    This article discusses the term erotology, which was applied to medieval Islamicate ‘ilm al-bah (the science of coitus), as well as other world traditions of sexual knowledge, by European sexologists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, who contrasted it with their own forms of inquiry into sexual matters in the modern field of sexual science. It argues that the homogenisation and minimisation of all ancient and non-European forms of medical knowledge about sex, even one as substantial as the (...)
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  26.  16
    Arab History and the Nation State: A Study in Modern Historiography, 1820-1980.Mahmoud Haddad & Youssef M. Choueiri - 1992 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 112 (3):530.
  27.  5
    Muntakhabī az maqālāt-i Fārsī darbārah-i Shaykh-i Ishrāq Suhravardī.Ḥasan Sayyid ʻArab (ed.) - 1999 - Tihrān: Shafīʻī.
  28.  49
    Tradizioni morali. Greci, ebrei, cristiani, islamici.Sergio Cremaschi - 2015 - Roma, Italy: Edizioni di storia e letteratura.
    Ex interiore ipso exeas. Preface. This book reconstructs the history of a still open dialectics between several ethoi, that is, shared codes of unwritten rules, moral traditions, or self-aware attempts at reforming such codes, and ethical theories discussing the nature and justification of such codes and doctrines. Its main claim is that this history neither amounts to a triumphal march of reason dispelling the mist of myth and bigotry nor to some other one-way process heading to some pre-established goal, but (...)
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  29.  18
    The Patient's Choice: A New Treatise By Galen.Vivian Nutton - 1990 - Classical Quarterly 40 (01):236-.
    The historian of ancient medicine has in recent years enjoyed one advantage over his more literary colleagues, the regular accession of substantial new texts by major authors. These have included not only fragments preserved on papyri and the membra disiecta gathered from later encyclopaedias and medical writings, but also complete treatises, some consisting of several books. There is, however, one drawback. Very few of these new texts are preserved in their original language, or even in a mediaeval Latin translation; most (...)
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  30.  9
    Makers of Arab History.George F. Hourani & Philip K. Hitti - 1969 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 89 (3):658.
  31.  27
    Was Medical Theory Heterodox in the Latin Middle Ages?G. J. Mcaleer - 2001 - Recherches de Theologie Et Philosophie Medievales 68 (2):349-370.
    All intellectual histories of the Middle Ages note that Greek and Arabic science, medicine, commentary and philosophy had an enormous influence upon the great intellectual achievements of the later Middle Ages in the Latin West. Yet, these same histories also tend to cast the condemnations of 1277 as a watershed moment when the Christian West rejected the science and philosophy of pagans and infidels, and especially the synthesis of the two, the commentaries on Aristotle’s works by Averroes. Recognizing the oddness (...)
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  32.  9
    Science, Medicine, and History. Essays on the Evolution of Scientific Thought and Medical Practice, Written in Honour of Charles SingerE. Ashworth Underwood.George Sarton - 1954 - Isis 45 (2):202-204.
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  33.  13
    Medicine The History of Medical Education. U.C.L.A. Forum in Medical Sciences No. 12. Ed. by C. D. O'Malley. Berkley, Los Angeles & London: University of California Press. 1970. Pp. xii + 548. £9.50. [REVIEW]S. W. F. Holloway - 1971 - British Journal for the History of Science 5 (4):410-410.
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  34.  7
    O vitae experientia dux. Die Rolle der Erfahrung im theoretischen und praktischen Weltbezug des frühen Humanismus und ihre Konsequenzen.Eckhard Keßler - 2012 - Das Mittelalter 17 (2):60-74.
    The essay is divided into five sections: the first section gives a short overview of the history of “experience” – Greek empeiria, Latin experientia – which takes Aristotle’s theory of knowledge as its starting point. Within its theoretical framework, experience served as a crucial mediator between sensory perception and intellectual knowledge. In the philosophy of Late Antiquity and the High Middle Ages the category of experience then was reduced to marginal importance under neo-Platonic and Arabic influences. At the dusk of (...)
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  35.  7
    One medicine: The dynamic relationship between animal and human medicine in history and at present.Tjaart Schillhorn van Veen - 1998 - Agriculture and Human Values 15 (2):115-120.
    The relation and collaboration of human and animal medicine had its ups and downs throughout history. The interaction between these two disciplines has been especially fruitful in the broad areas of patho-physiology and of epidemiology. An exploration of the interaction between the two disciplines, using historical and contemporary examples in comparative medicine, zoonoses, zooprophylaxis, and human-animal bond, reveals that a better understanding of animal and human disease, as well as societal changes such as interest in non-conventional medicine, are leading to (...)
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  36.  17
    Religion and Medicine: A History of the Encounter between Humanity’s Two Greatest Institutions by Jeff Levin.Dina Nasri Siniora - 2022 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 22 (2):401-403.
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  37.  17
    Two Centuries of Medicine: A History of the School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. George W. Corner.John B. Blake - 1965 - Isis 56 (3):379-379.
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  38.  24
    A Proper Diet: Medicine and History in Crescas Caslari's "Esther".Susan L. Einbinder - 2005 - Speculum 80 (2):437-463.
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  39.  10
    Science, Medicine, and History. Essays on the Evolution of Scientific Thought and Medical Practice, Written in Honour of Charles Singer by E. Ashworth Underwood. [REVIEW]George Sarton - 1954 - Isis 45:202-204.
  40.  42
    Origins and History of Darwinian Medicine.Fabio Zampieri - 2009 - Humana Mente 3 (9):13-38.
    Contemporary Darwinian medicine is a still-expanding new discipline whose principal aim is to arrive at an evolutionary understanding of aspects of the body that leave it vulnerable to disease. Historically, there was a precedent; between 1880 and 1940 several scientists tried to develop a general evolutionary theory of disease as arising from deleterious traits that escape elimination by natural selection. In contrast, contemporary Darwinian medicine uses evolutionary theory to consider all the possible reasons why selection has left human vulnerable to (...)
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  41.  6
    La médecine de Maïmonide: quand l'esprit guérit le corps.Ariel Toledano - 2018 - Paris: Éditions In Press.
    Maïmonide (Cordoue 1138 - Fostat 1204) fait partie de ces rares penseurs du Moyen Age à avoir franchi les siècles en laissant une oeuvre encore très actuelle. Les écrits médicaux de ce philosophe, talmudiste et médecin, puisent dans les sagesses juives, grecques et arabes. Son sens de l'observation, son intérêt pour la clinique, son besoin permanent d'associer expérience pratique et savoir théorique, sa vision de la prévention font de ce grand médecin l'un des précurseurs de la médecine moderne. Il a (...)
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  42.  16
    Poetry and History: The Value of Poetry in Reconstructing Arab History. Edited by Ramzi Baalbaki, Saleh Said Agha, and Tarif Khalidi. [REVIEW]Adam Talib - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 134 (3):534-536.
    Poetry and History: The Value of Poetry in Reconstructing Arab History. Edited by Ramzi Baalbaki, Saleh Said Agha, and Tarif Khalidi. Beirut: American University of Beirut Press, 2011. Pp. xii + 459. $40.
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  43. Medical Aphorisms: Treatises 6-9.Gerrit Bos (ed.) - 2007 - Brigham Young University.
    Maimonides, one of the most celebrated rabbis in the history of Judaism, was a prolific author of influential Arabic philosophical and medical treatises as well as two of the most important works on Jewish law. _Medical Aphorisms_ is the best-known and most comprehensive of his medical works, and Gerrit Bos offers here a masterful English translation with detailed annotations. __ _Medical Aphorisms_ consists of approximately 1,500 maxims compiled by Maimonides from the treatises of Galen, the renowned ancient Greek physician. Maimonides (...)
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  44.  5
    Medical Aphorisms: Treatises 1-5.Gerrit Bos (ed.) - 2004 - Brigham Young University.
    Maimonides, one of the most celebrated rabbis in the history of Judaism, was a prolific author of influential Arabic philosophical and medical treatises and two of the most important works on Jewish law. _Medical Aphorisms_ is the best known and most comprehensive of his works, and Gerrit Bos offers here a masterful English translation with detailed annotations. _Medical Aphorisms_ consists of approximately 1500 maxims compiled by Maimonides from the treatises of Galen, the renowned ancient Greek physician. Maimonides arranges the aphorisms (...)
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  45.  40
    Who Invented 'Avicenna's Gilded Pills'?Zbigniew Bela - 2006 - Early Science and Medicine 11 (1):1-10.
    This article questions the belief expressed in various histories of pharmacy that the tenth-century Arab physician Avicenna introduced the tradition of coating pills with gold and silver. Although an examination of his Canon documents Avicenna's interest in the medicinal application of gold and silver, no mention is made of coating pills. Nor do other Islamic physicians seem to have been familiar with this practice, any more than such medieval European authors as Arnaldus of Villanova, Raymund Lull or Johannes de (...)
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  46.  17
    Rambam: readings in the philosophy of Moses Maimonides.Moses Maimonides - 1975 - New York: Schocken Books. Edited by Moses Maimonides & Lenn Evan Goodman.
    Moses Maimonides, known by the acronym "Rambam," was unquestionably the foremost intellectual figure of medieval Judaism. Born in Cordova, Spain, forced at an early age to conceal his faith, he emigrated to Morocco and then Palestine before settling in Egypt, where financial necessity compelled him to study medicine and where he eventually became personal physician to Saladin. Although his medical skills were renowned and his writings in this field were widely studied throughout the Western world in the following centuries, Maimonides' (...)
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  47.  41
    One medicine: The dynamic relationship between animal and human medicine in history and at present.Tjaart W. Schillhorn van Veen - 1998 - Agriculture and Human Values 15 (2):115-120.
    The relation and collaboration of human and animal medicine had its ups and downs throughout history. The interaction between these two disciplines has been especially fruitful in the broad areas of patho-physiology and of epidemiology. An exploration of the interaction between the two disciplines, using historical and contemporary examples in comparative medicine, zoonoses, zooprophylaxis, and human-animal bond, reveals that a better understanding of animal and human disease, as well as societal changes such as interest in non-conventional medicine, are leading to (...)
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  48.  15
    A History of Antioch in Syria from Seleucus to the Arab Conquest.E. J. Bickerman & Glanville Downey - 1962 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 82 (2):219.
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  49.  7
    Medical Aphorisms: Treatises 1-5.Moses Maimonides - 2004 - Brigham Young University.
    Maimonides, one of the most celebrated rabbis in the history of Judaism, was a prolific author of influential Arabic philosophical and medical treatises and two of the most important works on Jewish law. Medical Aphorisms is the best known and most comprehensive of his works, and Gerrit Bos offers here a masterful English translation with detailed annotations. Medical Aphorisms consists of approximately 1500 maxims compiled by Maimonides from the treatises of Galen, the renowned ancient Greek physician. Maimonides arranges the aphorisms (...)
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  50. Ibn Khaldūn fī dirāsāt ʻaṣrīyah.Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn Basyūnī Raslān, ʻAbd al-Ghanī, Muṣṭafá Labīb & Muḥammad Ṣābir ʻArab (eds.) - 2007 - [Cairo]: Dār al-Kutub wa-al-Wathāʼiq al-Qawmīyah bi al-Qāhirah.
     
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