Примери за използване на Rushd на Английски и техните преводи на Български
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Ibn Rushd.
Córdoban Ibn Rushd.
In 2008, he was awarded the Ibn Rushd Prize for Freedom of Thought in Berlin.
Cordoban Ibn Rushd.
You will see, as time goes by,” said Ibn Rushd,“that in the end it will be religion that will make men turn away from God.
It was Ibn Tufayl who introduced Ibn Rushd to the ruler.
Ibn Rushd was born in Córdoba to a family with a long and well-respected tradition of legal and public service.
As Dunia filled up with children andthen emptied them into the small house, there was less room for Ibn Rushd's excommunicated“lies.”.
Ikmah is what I think ibn Rushd meant when he referred to- something resembling revelation” in his Fa? l al-MaqÂl.
Andalusian philosophers, for example, usually debated within the codes of Islam, butthe 12th-century Córdoban, Ibn Rushd, occasionally transgressed them.
The events surrounding Ibn Rushd towards the end of his life, including his banishment, signaled a broader cultural shift in the Islamic world.
Double truth, the idea that there are two kinds of truth, religious and philosophical,was not held by Ibn Rushd himself but was an innovation of the Averroists.
Ibn Rushd traveled to Marrakesh and came under the patronage of the caliph'Abd al-Mu'min, likely involved in educational reform for the dynasty.
As interest in philosophy waned in the Muslim world after Ibn Rushd, his writings found new existence and intellectual vigor in the work of Christian and Jewish philosophers.
Ibn Rushd, the translator of Aristotle, did not quibble with her, knowing that it meant“the world” in enough tongues to make pedantry unnecessary.
Within the walls of the University of Paris,a group of philosophers came to identify themselves with the Aristotelian philosophy presented by Ibn Rushd, particularly certain elements of its relation to religion.
The stories of Ibn Hazm,Ibn Sina and Ibn Rushd demonstrate the potential for semi- official thought during Islam's first five hundred years.
Hence a group of scholars from Khurasaan, Iraq and the Maghreb criticized him, such as his friend Abu Ishaaq al-Margheenaani, Abu'l-Wafa' ibn‘Aqeel, al-Qushayri,al-Tartooshi, Ibn Rushd, al-Maaziri and a group of earlier scholars.
If Ibn Rushd had been a scholar of the occult arcana, he would have realized then that his children were the offspring of a non-human mother, but he was too wrapped up in himself to work it out.
We thus find here many of the great heroes, thinkers, and creative minds of ancient Greece and Rome as well as such medieval non-Christians as Saladin, Sultan of Egypt in the late twelfth century, and the great Islamic philosophers Avicenna(Ibn Sina)and Averroës(Ibn Rushd).
Ibn Rushd himself had been the qadi in both Seville and Cordoba, though he had to flee the latter when the mullahs banned him from entering the Great Mosque and ordered his books to be burned.
From such bleak circumstances emerged the Spanish-Muslim philosophers, of which the jurist andphysician Ibn Rushd came to be regarded as the final and most influential Muslim philosopher, especially to those who inherited the tradition of Muslim philosophy in the West.
Ibn Rushd, a philosopher who was no longer permitted to expound his philosophy, all of whose writing had been banned and burned, felt instantly at home among the Jews who could not say they were Jews.
Abu al-Walid Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn Rushd, well known in the Latin West as Averroes, lived during a unique period in Western logical history, in which interest in philosophy and theology was fading in the Muslim world and just beginning to display in Latin Christendom.