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  1. Examines one of the most controversial thinkers in Islamic history. Taqi al-Din Ibn Taymiyya (1263-1328) is one of the most controversial thinkers in Islamic history. Today he is revered by what is called the Wahhabi movement and championed by Salafi groups who demand a return to the pristine golden age of the Prophet.

  2. Ibn Taymiyyah , (born 1263, Harran, Mesopotamia—died Sept. 26, 1328, Damascus, Syria), Islamic theologian. He was educated in Damascus, where he joined the Pietist school. He sought to return Islam to a strict interpretation of its sources in the Qurʾān and the Sunnah, as well as to rid it of customs he considered contrary to the law, including the worship of saints.

  3. Ibn Taymiyya’s reflections on evil clarify the utilitarian character of God’s acts as he underlines that God sends messengers to bring preponderant benefit. Ibn Taymiyya writes (1961—1967, 8:93—94), “The messengers God bless them were raised up to obtain benefits and perfect them and to strip away detriments and reduce le.”

  4. 1 de jul. de 2019 · Introducción a la vida y obra de Ahmad ibn Taymiyyah (1263-1328) July 2019. In book: Derecho y Política en el Islam Contemporáneo (Barona Castañeda y El-Yattioui Coords.) Publisher: Vlex.

  5. 14 de feb. de 2021 · In this account Ibn Taymiyya emerges as an original political thinker who restored (and elaborated on) the central role of the community in theories of Islamic governance. This book deserves to be widely read not only by specialists in medieval Islamic history but also by all who are interested in contemporary Islamic thought."

  6. See also Ibn Taymiyya, Majmū‘ al-Fatāwā, 28:10-11. 64 65 58 Teosofi: Jurnal Tasawuf dan Pemikiran Islam Ibn Taymiyya’s Conception of Jihad: Corpus, General Aspects, and Research Perspectives As a good traditionalist, Ibn Taymiyya always supports his answer by quoting several h}adīths.67 Ibn Taymiyya provides further clarification in his epistle Mas’ala fī al-Murābata bi al-Tughūr ...

  7. 6 de feb. de 2024 · As Ibn Taymiyya’s contemporary, Imam Al-Subki, and the majority of Muslim scholars at that time would concur, “his learning exceeded his intelligence.” 11 Lamentingly, his arguments opposing Sunnī orthodoxy have been revived by fundamentalist reformists such as Ibn Abdul-Wahhab, and others, and Ibn Taymiyya remains an influential figure for many.