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Consequences of dietary cinnamon and ginger oils supplementation on blood biochemical parameters, oxidative status, and tissue histomorphology of growing Japanese quails. [PDF]
Abd El-Hack ME +13 more
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Diversity of bacteria within the human gut and its contribution to the functional unity of holobionts. [PDF]
Rosenberg E.
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Targeted radioligand therapy: physics and biology, internal dosimetry and other practical aspects during <sup>177</sup>Lu/<sup>225</sup>Ac treatment in neuroendocrine tumors and metastatic prostate cancer. [PDF]
Dadgar H +31 more
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Ibn ‘Arabi and the Contemporary West: Beshara and the Ibn ‘Arabi Society
Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations, 2014Muhyiddin ibn ‘Arabi (561–638/1165–1240) is well known in the West, where he is taken to exemplify the philosophy of Islamic mysticism, or Sufism.
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Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations, 2018
For over a century, Euro-American scholars and esotericists alike have heralded the thirteenth-century Spanish mystic Ibn ‘Arabi (d. 1240) as the premodern Sufi theorist of inclusive religious universalism who claimed all contemporaneous religions as equally valid beyond the religio-political divide of medieval exclusivism.
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For over a century, Euro-American scholars and esotericists alike have heralded the thirteenth-century Spanish mystic Ibn ‘Arabi (d. 1240) as the premodern Sufi theorist of inclusive religious universalism who claimed all contemporaneous religions as equally valid beyond the religio-political divide of medieval exclusivism.
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Ibn 'Arabi and the Contemporary West: Beshara and the Ibn 'Arabi Society
2012The influence of Ibn ‘Arabi, the 12th century Andalusian mystic philosopher extended beyond the Muslim world from Spain, to China, to Indonesia. Interest in Ibn ‘Arabi in the west has grown over the last century. Ibn ‘Arabi and the Contemporary West examines ‘Arabi’s teachings through the work of the Beshara Trust and the Muhyiddin Ibn ‘Arabi Society ...
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1980
Called by Moslems 'the greatest Master,' Ibn Al' Arabi (1165-1240), a Sufi born in Spain, wrote this work that was intended to be a synthesis of his spiritual doctrine.
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Called by Moslems 'the greatest Master,' Ibn Al' Arabi (1165-1240), a Sufi born in Spain, wrote this work that was intended to be a synthesis of his spiritual doctrine.
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Comparative Islamic Studies, 2005
In the past 150 years or so, there has been a notable expansion of influence and diffusion of Eastern religious ideas into a Western setting where they have been adopted and adapted to suit this new context. At the outset this happened principally with Hindu and Buddhist teachings but more recently there has been a subtle infusion of Islamic influence ...
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In the past 150 years or so, there has been a notable expansion of influence and diffusion of Eastern religious ideas into a Western setting where they have been adopted and adapted to suit this new context. At the outset this happened principally with Hindu and Buddhist teachings but more recently there has been a subtle infusion of Islamic influence ...
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Ibn ‘Arabi and the Akbarī tradition
2020Not to be confused with the Maliki jurist Qadi Abu Bakr ibn al-Arabi, there is little exaggeration in stating that the Andalusian mystic Ibn Arabi is the most influential and, at the same time, the most controversial mystic in the Islamic world. For Ibn ‘Arabi, following the path of Muhammad meant following the path of scholarship, as the Prophet had ...
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Ibn ‘Arabi and the Metaphysics of Race
2018This chapter reveals a buried order of politics underneath the Perennialist cosmology of religious universalism ironically constituted through long-held European discursive strategies of racial exclusion. Through a detailed comparison of Frithjof Schuon’s discursive practices with that of nineteenth-century Aryanist discourse, this chapter argues that ...
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