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  • Fārābī

Fārābī (Nombre personal)

Forma preferida: Fārābī
Usado por/ver desde:
  • Alpharabius
  • Alfarabius
  • Abennasar
  • Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad al-Fārābī
  • Uzluk oğlu Farâbî
  • Fārābī, Muḥammad ibn Muḥammad
  • Abu Nasr Mukhammad alʹ-Farabi
  • Farabi, Abu Nasr Mukhammad
  • Abu-Nasr alʹ-Farabi
  • Abū Naṣr Fārābī
  • Alfarabi
  • Alfārābī, Abu Nasr
  • Abu Nasr Alfārābī
  • Avennasar
  • Abu Nasr Forobiĭ
  • Форобий, Абу Наср
  • Forobiĭ, Abu Nasr
  • alʹ-Farabi
  • Al-Faraby
  • Abu Nasr Muhammet ibn Muhammet ibn Tarhan ibn Uzlug Faraby
  • Faraby, Abu Nasr Muhammet ibn Muhammet ibn Tarhan ibn Uzlug
  • Abū Naṣr Muḥammad bin Muḥammad bin Ṭarhkhān bin Ūzluġ al-Fārābī
  • Fārābī, Abū Naṣr Muḥammad bin Muḥammad bin Ṭarhkhān bin Ūzluġ al-
  • Phwarabi, Abu Nassr
  • Pharabi
  • פאראבי
  • أبو نصر الفارابي
  • الفارابي
  • فارابي
  • فرابي

Non-Latin script references not evaluated.

Der Musterstaat ... 1900.

O logicheskom uchenii alʹ-Farabi, 1982: t.p. (alʹ-Farabi) p. 3 (Abu Nasr Mukhammad alʹ-Farabi; b. ca. 870; d. 950)

Abu-Nasr alʹ-Farabi, 1982.

Chāvūshī, J.Ā. Kitābshināsī-i tawṣīfī-i Abū Naṣr Fārābī, 1978.

Aristotelian logic and the Arabic language in Alfarabi, 1990: CIP introd. (Abu Nasr Alfārābī; Alfarabius; Avennasar)

Teori politik al-Farabi dan masyarakat Melayu, 1991: t.p. (Al-Farabi) p. xiv (Abu Nasr al-Farabi) p. 2 (real name: Muhammad)

Fozil odamlar shaḣri, 1993: t.p. (Abu Nasr Forobiĭ)

Dukhovnoe nasledie alʹ-Farabi, 2001: verso t.p. (Al-Faraby [in rom.])

Saz ylmy, 2006: t.p. (Abu Nasr Muhammet ibn Muhammet ibn Tarhan ibn Uzlug Faraby; Abū Naṣr Muḥammad bin Muḥammad bin Ṭarhkhān bin Ūzluġ al-Fārābī)

Zindagīʻnāmah-i mashāhīr-i Īrān, 2007: p. 75-76, 82 (Abu Nassr Phwarabi [in rom.]; b. 839 AD.; d. 918 AD.) p. 4 of cover (Pharabi [in rom.])

Ming bir ruboiĭ, 2009: p. 18 (Abu Nasr Forobiĭ; AKA Abu Nasr Muḣammad ibn Muḣammad ibn Ŭzlugh Tarkhon Forobiĭ; b. 873; d. 950)

Encyclopedia of Islam, viewed via the WWW December 13, 2012 (al-Fārābī, one of the most outstanding and renowned Muslim philosophers; is said to have died at the age of eighty or more in 339/950 in Damascus)

Wikipedia, viewed December 13, 2012 (al-Farabi, c. 872 - between 14 December, 950 and 12 January, 951 in Damascus; spent almost his entire life in Baghdad)

The Oxford Encyclopedia of African Thought, accessed November 1, 2014, via Oxford African American Studies Center database: (al-Farabi, Muhammad; Abu Nasr Muhammad ibn al-Farakh al-Farabi, or Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn Tarkhan ibn Uzalagh al-Farabi, or Alpharabius; philosopher, musicologist, physical scientist; born 0870 C.E. in Kazakhstan or Persia or Afghanistan; invented a number of musical instruments and his pure Arabian tone system is still used in Arab music; developed a philosophy of religion based on Alexandrian school, Aristotle, Plato; his education consisted of linguistic studies (Arabic, Turkish, and Persian), jurisprudence, and religious studies (the Hadith and the Qur'an), mathematics, philosophy, and music; accepted the position of Qadi (judge) in Bukhara; left for Egypt and Baghdad to further his linguistics studies (901 C.E.); invited to the Imami court of King Sayf al-Dawlah, the Hamdani ruler of Aleppo (942 or 943 C.E.) and was part of a ruler's internal circle; recognized by his peers for his mastery and originality in logic and philosophy; his fame spread throughout the Islamic world; died 0950 C.E. in Damascus, Syria)

Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León
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