1. Dedication
2. The Classical Heritage: Islamic Culture
2.1 Graeco-Arabica Christiana: The Christian Scholar ʿAbd Allāh ibn
al-Faḍl (11th c. A.D.) as Transmitter of Greek Works, Hans
Daiber
2.2 Aristo of Ceus: the Fragments concerning Eros, William W.
Fortenbaugh
2.3 Professional Medical Ethics from a Foreign Past, David
Reisman
2.4 The Arabic History of Science of Abū Sahl ibn Nawbaḫt (fl. ca
770-809) and Its Middle Persian Sources, Kevin van Bladel
2.5 The Physiology and Therapy of Anger: Galen on Medicine, the
Soul, and Nature, Heinrich von Staden
2.6 In Aristotle’s Words: al-Ḥātimī’s (?) Epistle on al-Mutanabbī
and Aristotle, Beatrice Gruendler
2.7 The Prison of Categories – Decline and Its Company, Sonja
Brentjes
2.8 Also via Istanbul to New Haven – Mss Yale Syriac 7-12, Hidemi
Takahashi
3. Classical Arabic Science and Philosophy
3.1 A Judeo-Arabic Version of Ṯābit ibn Qurra’s De Imaginibus and
Ptolemy’s Opus Imaginum, Charles Burnett and Gideon Bohak
3.2 Ibn Sīnā’s Taʿlīqāt: The Presence of Paraphrases of and
Super-commentaries on the Ilāhīyāt of the Šifāʾ, Jules
Janssens
3.3 The Invention of Algebra in Zabīd: Between Legend and Fact,
David King
3.4 Medieval and Modern Interpretations of Avicenna’s Modal
Syllogistic, Tony Street
3.5 The Distinction between Essence and Existence in Avicenna’s
Metaphysics: The Text and Its Context, Amos Bertolacci
3.6 Höfischer Stil und wissenschaftliche Rhetorik: al-Kindī als
Epistolograph, Gerhard Endress
3.7 New Philosophical Texts of Yaḥyā ibn ʿAdī: a Supplement to
Endress’ Analytical Inventory, Robert Wisnovsky
3.8 Avicenna’s Notion of Transcendental Modulation of Existence
(taškīk al-wuǧūd, analogia entis) and Its Greek and Arabic Sources,
Alexander Treiger
4. Muslim Traditional Sciences
4.1 The Revealed Text and the Intended Subtext: Notes on the
Hermeneutics of the Qurʾān in Muʿtazila Discourse as Reflected in
the Tahḏīb of al-Ḥākim al-Ǧišumī (d. 494/1101), Suleiman
Mourad
4.2 Attributing Causality to God’s Law: the Solution of Faḫr ad-Dīn
ar-Rāzī, Felicitas Opwis
4.3 Kitāb al-Ḥayda: The Historical Significance of an Apocryphal
Text, Racha El Omari
4.4 From al-Maʾmūn to Ibn Sabʿīn via Avicenna: Ibn Taymīya’s
Historiography of Falsafa, Yahya Michot
Index
Felicitas Opwis, Ph.D. (2001) in Arabic and Islamic Studies, Yale
University, is Assistant Professor of Arabic and Islamic Studies at
Georgetown University. Her publications address the development of
Islamic legal theory in light of intellectual currents and
historical environment.
David C. Reisman, Ph.D. (2001) in Arabic and Islamic Studies, Yale
University, has published extensively on Islamic philosphy, in
particular on Avicenna and his intellectual reception.
"...a rich and wide-ranging volume."
Peter Adamson in Ilahiyat Studies 3.2 (2012).
"The shape of [this Festschrift] not only reflects this breadth of
interests, but also speaks to the refreshingly old-fashioned values
that its honouree has always insisted upon: hard work, due
diligence, care and caution, and above all an attention to textual
detail."
Taneli Kukkonen in Journal of Shiʿa Studies 6.2 (2013), 219-223.
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