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al-Kindi

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al-Kindī (lived 9th century)

Arab philosopher. He was the first of the so-called Arabian school, and introduced into the Islamic world a system which combined Aristotelianism and neo-Platonism. His outlook was fundamentally religious, and he considered philosophy as the ‘handmaiden of revelation’.

Of his numerous works, some moral treatises and an introduction to the study of Aristotle have been published.


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(12) Much earlier, right at the very dawn of Arabo-Islamic philosophy, al-Kindi (d.
Presenting more then fifty major figures, Eastern Philosophy offers readers a succinct understanding of the lives and messages of such influential sages as Mohandas Gandhi, Laozi, Al-Hallaj, Confucius, Al-Kindi, Zoroaster and the histories of such philosophies as Indian and Hindi, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Islamic, and Zoroastrianism.
Fascinated by the centuries-old music of the Islamic world, Weiss began a personal exploration that culminated with his own conversion to Islam and then, in 1983, the founding of Al-Kindi.
 
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