Description

Book Synopsis

Even well after his lifetime, Ibn Sina was renowned, not just in medicine or philosophy, but in other areas, especially in the Islamic world. In brief, he was an authority in the Islamic East, or an “auctoritas”. However, in the west, his work was massively influential in not only the medical education curricula, but also in the important, innovative doctrines in philosophy. The most fundamental sections of his major encyclopedia, al-Shifâ being translated into Latin as early as the 12th and 13th centuries and spreading throughout universities dispersed this impact rapidly. Known as “the prince of physicians”, Ibn Sina is the writer of the Canon of Medicine (al-Qa¯nu¯ n fi ‘al-Tibb), which became a medical standard in the Christian west as well as the Islamic world.



Table of Contents

Medieval era – Ibn Sina – Avicenna – Canon of Medicine Al-Shifa Early Renaissance – Musical theory – Alchemical texts – Self-knowledge – Suspended man in space – ophthalmology – Astronomy studies – Medical crises – Body politic metaphor – Creation and sustaining, Medical teaching in European universities

Revisiting Ibn Sina's (Avicenna) Heritage

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A Hardback by Kadircan Hidir Keskinbora

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    View other formats and editions of Revisiting Ibn Sina's (Avicenna) Heritage by Kadircan Hidir Keskinbora

    Publisher: Peter Lang AG
    Publication Date: 23/09/2021
    ISBN13: 9783631830567, 978-3631830567
    ISBN10: 3631830564

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Even well after his lifetime, Ibn Sina was renowned, not just in medicine or philosophy, but in other areas, especially in the Islamic world. In brief, he was an authority in the Islamic East, or an “auctoritas”. However, in the west, his work was massively influential in not only the medical education curricula, but also in the important, innovative doctrines in philosophy. The most fundamental sections of his major encyclopedia, al-Shifâ being translated into Latin as early as the 12th and 13th centuries and spreading throughout universities dispersed this impact rapidly. Known as “the prince of physicians”, Ibn Sina is the writer of the Canon of Medicine (al-Qa¯nu¯ n fi ‘al-Tibb), which became a medical standard in the Christian west as well as the Islamic world.



    Table of Contents

    Medieval era – Ibn Sina – Avicenna – Canon of Medicine Al-Shifa Early Renaissance – Musical theory – Alchemical texts – Self-knowledge – Suspended man in space – ophthalmology – Astronomy studies – Medical crises – Body politic metaphor – Creation and sustaining, Medical teaching in European universities

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