Karl Opitz has written:
'Die Medizin im Koran' -- subject(s): Islamic Medicine, Koran, Medicine, Islamic, Medicine, hygiene
1 answer
Islam established Islamic medicine and only Iranian Muslims like Avesina and others have wrote near 5000 book in medicine like "the cannon of medicine" and may other books.
Islam has its own medicine.
1 answer
Hassan Hathout has written:
'Reading the Muslim mind' -- subject(s): Islam
'Topics in Islamic medicine' -- subject(s): Arab Medicine, Islamic ethics, Medical ethics, Medicine, Arab
1 answer
their advancements in medicine
1 answer
The connection of medicine to the Islamic religion is that the Third Pillar talked about charity and helping others, and medical scientists all over the world feel the same way, thus inventing new types of medicine every year.
1 answer
Hard to say, but it happened in Islamic countries in the 9th century.
1 answer
Medicine, Astronomy, Math, & Science.
1 answer
Hassan Kamal has written:
'Encyclopaedia of Islamic medicine, with a Greco-Roman back-ground' -- subject(s): Arab Medicine, Encyclopedias, Medicine, Arab
1 answer
They produced important advances in mathematics, science, and medicine.
1 answer
Crusaders brought Islamic culture, architecture, and medicine back to Europe.
1 answer
They produce important advances in mathematics, science, and medicine
2 answers
Departments of Islamic International Medical College in Rawalpindi
IIMC has a number of departments that offer undergraduate and postgraduate programs in medicine, dentistry, and other health professions. The departments include:
Medicine
Dentistry
Nursing
Allied Health Sciences
For detailed Article: alluniversities.pk/listing/islamic-international-medical-college-in-rawalpindi/
1 answer
In the history of medicine, Islamic medicine, Arabic medicine, Greco-Arabicand Greco-Islamic refer to medicine developed in the Islamic Golden Age, and written in Arabic, the lingua franca of Islamic civilization. The emergence of Islamic medicine came about through the interactions of the indigenous Arab tradition with foreign influences.[1] Translation of earlier texts was a fundamental building block in the formation of Islamic medicine and the tradition that has been passed down.[1]
Latin translations of Arabic medical works had a significant influence on the development of medicine in the high Middle Ages and early Renaissance, as did Arabic texts which translated the medical works of earlier cultures.[2]
In the early Islamic and Mack's period (661-750 AD), Muslims believed that Allahprovided a treatment for every illness.[3] Around the ninth century, the Islamic medical community began to develop and utilize a system of medicine based on scientific analysis.[3] The importance of the health sciences to society was emphasized, and the early Muslim medical community strived to find ways to care for the health of the human body. Medieval Islam developed hospitals, expanded the practice of surgery. Important medical thinkers and physicians of this time were Al-Razi (Rhazes) and Ibn Sina (Pur Sina). Their knowledge on medicine was recorded in books that were influential in medical schools throughout Muslim world and Europe, and Ibn Sina in particular (under his Latinized name Avicenna) was also influential on the physicians of later medieval Europe. Throughout the medieval Islamic world, medicine was included under the umbrella of natural philosophy, due to the continued influence of the Hippocratic Corpus and the ideas of Aristotle and Galen. The Hippocratic Corpus was a collection of medical treatises attributed to the famous Greek physician Hippocrates of Cos(although it was actually composed by different generations of authors). The Corpus included a number of treatises which greatly influenced medieval Islamic medical literature.
1 answer
Cloth and Islamic glass werre major ancient exports. They also exported pearls, grain, metals, wood, horses, camels, medicine, paper, and sugar.
1 answer
They contributed to algebra, astrology and to the field of medicine. Also, major contributions to astronomy and philosophy.
1 answer
They are many in astronomy, medicine, physics, mathematics, biology, .... refer to related question and link below.
1 answer
It was the Muslim physicians and doctors who studied the Scientific Method:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicine_in_medieval_Islam
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_method
1 answer
Aida Abd Elazim Elbanna has written:
'Islamic religion as a basis for a health education program' -- subject(s): Health education, Islam, Medicine, Medicine in the Koran, Religious aspects, Religious aspects of Medicine
1 answer
Unani-tibbi denotes Arabic or Islamic medicine, also known as prophetic medicine. It traditionally makes use of a variety of techniques including diet, herbal treatments, manipulative therapies, and surgery.
1 answer
The Muslims were amazing in medicine, one Muslim wrote a book on medicine that became the basic book in European universities. They knew how the body systems worked. They had natural medicine. They drew pictures of the inside of human body. They translated Greek and Roman books into other languages to be understood.
1 answer
The Islamic world contributed to the Renaissance in Europe through the transfer of knowledge in areas such as science, mathematics, medicine, and philosophy. Islamic scholars preserved and translated ancient Greek texts, which were later reintroduced to Europe and influenced the development of new ideas and advancements during the Renaissance.
1 answer
Europeans learned from Islamic advances in math, science, and medicine. The Crusades also temporarily reduced the amount of fighting in Europe because everyone was busy in the Middle East.
1 answer
The University of Al Karaouine in Fez, Morocco is thus recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the oldest degree-granting university in the world with its founding in 859 by woman called Fatima al-Fihri. Also in the 9th century, Bimaristan medical schools were founded in the medieval Islamic world, where medical degrees and diplomas were issued to students of Islamic medicine who were qualified to be a practicing Doctor of Medicine. Al-Azhar University, founded in Cairo, Egypt in 975, was a Jami'ah university which offered a variety of post-graduate degrees (Ijazah), and had individual faculties for a theological seminary, Islamic law and jurisprudence, Arabic grammar, Islamic astronomy, early Islamic philosophy, and logic in Islamic philosophy. Some scholars such as George Makdisi, John Makdisi and Hugh Goddard argue that Europian medieval universities were influenced in many ways by the medieval university institutions in Islamic Spain (when it was part of the Islamic country between 711 and 1492 and it was called Al-Andalus) such as the Emirate of Sicily, and also the Middle East in general.
1 answer
Zulkifly bin Muda has written:
'Isu berkaitan perubatan dalam Islam' -- subject(s): Medicine, Islam
'Jenayah, hudud, dan pembunuhan menurut perundangan Islam' -- subject(s): Criminal justice, Administration of (Islamic law), Criminal law (Islamic law), Criminal procedure (Islamic law)
1 answer
Ibn Sina (known in English as Avicenna) was a Persian polymath who lived during the Islamic Golden Age in what is now Iran. He is particularly known for his writings on philosophy and medicine, with some of his medical textbooks being in use for centuries after his death. He also wrote treatises on mathematics, physics, Islamic theology, and other subjects.
1 answer
The University of Al Karaouine in Fez, Morocco is thus recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as the oldest degree-granting university in the world with its founding in 859 by woman called Fatima al-Fihri. Also in the 9th century, Bimaristan medical schools were founded in the medieval Islamic world, where medical degrees and diplomas were issued to students of Islamic medicine who were qualified to be a practicing Doctor of Medicine. Al-Azhar University, founded in Cairo, Egypt in 975, was a Jami'ah university which offered a variety of post-graduate degrees (Ijazah), and had individual faculties for a theological seminary, Islamic law and jurisprudence, Arabic grammar, Islamic astronomy, early Islamic philosophy, and logic in Islamic philosophy.
Some scholars such as George Makdisi, John Makdisi and Hugh Goddard argue that Europian medieval universities were influenced in many ways by the medieval university institutions in Islamic Spain (when it was part of the Islamic country between 711 and 1492 and it was called Al-Andalus) such as the Emirate of Sicily, and also the Middle East in general.
1 answer
Islamic scholars preserved and translated classical Greek texts during the Islamic Golden Age, leading to an exchange of knowledge between the East and the West. This influx of knowledge contributed to the European Renaissance by revitalizing interest in science, philosophy, and arts. Islamic contributions in fields such as mathematics, astronomy, and medicine also provided a foundation for further advancements in Europe.
1 answer
Al-Zahrawi's encyclopedias primarily focused on medicine and surgery, providing detailed descriptions of various medical conditions, surgical techniques, and instruments. His works were influential in both the Islamic and Western medical traditions.
2 answers
I think the most important discovers in medicine during the Middle Ages were in the East, and were contributions of Islamic physicians. They include practices of medical investigation that are quite modern sounding, such as clinical trials, animal testing and statistical analysis of results. There is a link to an article on Islamic medicine below.
2 answers
Officially, the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan is an Islamic Republic. Islamic Republics are governed by Islamic law.
1 answer
There were several different important types of medieval medicine, but there were certain types of scientific understanding none of them had. They did not have germ theory, which was developed in the 19th century, and they did not have understanding of chemistry. Both of these are used today. Also, medieval medicine had an much less complete understanding of human anatomy than today's medicine.
Medieval medicine was a mix of different traditions. They included folk medicine, the classical medicine of ancient Rome and Greece, and the medicine imported from Islamic lands.
Folk medicine was then rather like what it is today, chicken soup for a cold, and that sort of thing. It did whatever worked, even though no one really knew why it worked, or, for that matter, whether it worked.
Classical medicine prescribed whatever it said to do in a book from certain ancient authors; ultimately, the goal was to follow the book, with only secondary consideration for whether it did any good.
Islamic medicine used a primitive version of the scientific method, which recorded results, analyzed effectiveness mathematically, and shared information. But it did not have the science we have, and was only beginning to develop it.
3 answers
Muslim scholars not only studied and made advances in the field of Mathematics, Algebra, Geometry, rather they did lot of research in the field of medicine and all branches of science.
1 answer
Saya means "Shadow". It cannot be said it is an Islamic or non-Islamic name
__________________________________________
It could be an Islamic or non Islamic name
2 answers
-Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
-Islamic Republic of Iran
-Islamic Republic of Mauritania
-Islamic Republic of Pakistan
1 answer
Rhazes, also known as Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi, was a Persian polymath who made significant contributions to various fields of study. His work spanned medicine, alchemy, philosophy, and ethics, with his most notable contributions in the field of medicine. Rhazes is often considered one of the greatest physicians in the Islamic Golden Age and his medical writings had a lasting influence on Western medicine.
1 answer
The work known as an encyclopedia of social life in the eleventh century is Ibn Sina's "The Canon of Medicine." It is a comprehensive medical encyclopedia that covers various aspects of medicine, including anatomy, physiology, pathology, pharmacology, and medical ethics. It greatly influenced the field of medicine in the Islamic world and Europe during the Middle Ages.
2 answers
Islam is a religion that can be represented by Islamic Community, Islamic state, Islamic nation, or Islamic world.
2 answers
Medieval medicine consisted of teachings from different sources, including the following
The Arab medicine is particularly interesting. The following quote from the Wikipedia article, "Medicine in Medieval Islam," which is rather well documented, is interesting in this regard (there is a link to this part of the article below): Like in other fields of Islamic science, Muslim physicians and doctors developed the first scientific methods for the field of medicine. This included the introduction of mathematization, quantification, experimentation, experimental medicine, evidence-based medicine, clinical trials, dissection, animal testing, human experimentation and postmortem autopsy by Muslim physicians, whilst hospitals in the Islamic world featured the first drug tests, drug purity regulations, and competency tests for doctors.
1 answer
In the Middle Ages, especially during the Islamic Golden Age, Muslim scholars made significant advances in science, mathematics, medicine, astronomy, engineering, and many other fields. During this time, early Islamic philosophy developed and was often pivotal in scientific debates - key figures were usually scientists and philosophers.
1 answer
Hakim Mohammad. Said has written:
'Traditional Greco-Arabic medicine and modern western medicine' -- subject(s): Arab Medicine, Ancient Medicine, Greek and Roman Medicine
'Diseases of the liver' -- subject(s): History, Liver Diseases, Diseases, Arab Medicine, Greek and Roman Medicine, Liver
'Naqsh-i safar'
'Shab o roz'
'Medieval Muslim thinkers and scientists' -- subject(s): Biography, Learning and scholarship, Muslim scientists, Scholars, Muslim, Muslims, History, Muslim Scholars
'Hakim Mohammed Said'
'Medicine in China' -- subject(s): Medicine, History, Medicine, Chinese, Chinese Medicine
'1400 years of Islam and commencement of 15th century Hijri (November 1980)' -- subject(s): Addresses, essays, lectures, Study and teaching, Islam
'The employer and the employee: Islamic concept' -- subject(s): Islam and labor
'Keep on the vigil'
1 answer
Modern islamic art, Callgraphy Art, Islamic Pattern Art
1 answer
Islamic republic is of Islamic religious system and is not communistic
2 answers
it was much more advanced than the medicine practiced by other cultures of the time
2 answers