Antique Hand carved Wood Sculpture Head of Ibn Sina Avicenna

Antique Hand carved Wood Sculpture Head of Ibn Sina Avicenna
Antique Hand carved Wood Sculpture Head of Ibn Sina Avicenna
Antique Hand carved Wood Sculpture Head of Ibn Sina Avicenna
Antique Hand carved Wood Sculpture Head of Ibn Sina Avicenna
Antique Hand carved Wood Sculpture Head of Ibn Sina Avicenna
Antique Hand carved Wood Sculpture Head of Ibn Sina Avicenna

Antique Hand carved Wood Sculpture Head of Ibn Sina Avicenna
This antique hand-carved wood sculpture features a striking depiction of Ibn Sina [Avicenna], a renowned Middle Eastern philosopher and scientist. The sculpture is made of high-quality wood and is a true masterpiece of art. It will make a great addition to any home or office and is a must-have for collectors of Middle Eastern and Asian antiques. Whether you are looking for a unique decorative piece or a valuable addition to your collection, this antique wood sculpture is sure to impress. Black base not included. 7 High- In very good condition. Abu-? Ali al-? Usayn ibn-? Abdallah Ibn-Sina [Avicenna] ca. In his work he combined the disparate strands of philosophical/scientific. Thinking in Greek late antiquity and early Islam into a rationally rigorous and self-consistent scientific system that encompassed and explained all reality, including the tenets of revealed religion and its theological and mystical elaborations. In its integral and comprehensive articulation of science and philosophy, it represents the culmination of the Hellenic tradition, defunct in Greek after the sixth century, reborn in Arabic in the 9. It dominated intellectual life in the Islamic world for centuries to come, and the sundry reactions to it, ranging from acceptance to revision to refutation and to substitution with paraphilosophical constructs, determined developments in philosophy, science, religion, theology, and mysticism. In Latin translation, beginning with the 12. Century, Avicenna’s philosophy influenced mightily the medieval and Renaissance philosophers and scholars, just as the Latin translation of his medical. (GMed 1), often revised, formed the basis of medical instruction in European universities until the 17. The Arabophone Jewish and Christian scholars within Islam, to the extent that they were writing for their respective communities and not as members of the Islamic commonwealth, accepted most of his ideas notably Maimonides in his Arabic. Guide of the Perplexed. And Barhebraeus in his Syriac. The Jewish communities in Europe used Hebrew translations of some of his works, though they were far less receptive than their Roman Catholic counterparts, preferring Averroes instead. The Roman Orthodox in Constantinople were quite indifferent to philosophical developments abroad (and inimical to those at home) and came to know Avicenna’s name only through its occurrence in the Greek translations of the Latin scholastics that began after the 4. In his influence on the intellectual history of the world in the West (of India), he is second only to Aristotle, as it was intuitively acknowledged in the Islamic world where he is called “The Preeminent Master”. , after Aristotle, whom Avicenna called “The First Teacher”.
Antique Hand carved Wood Sculpture Head of Ibn Sina Avicenna
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