Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hace 4 días · Ibn al-Haytham, Alhacén (965-1040) Con respecto al problema clásico de la mesa de billar a una o varias bandas, nuestro comentarista habitual Rafael Granero ha enviado un análisis exhaustivo...

  2. Hace 4 días · The result is, as we all know too well, a flood of books and pamphlets that look so frighteningly alike: Lists of discoveries and inventions, ascribed to people of whom we seldom get to know much...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Al-Kindial-Kindi - Wikipedia

    Hace 3 días · Abū Yūsuf Yaʻqūb ibn ʼIsḥāq aṣ-Ṣabbāḥ al-Kindī (/ æ l ˈ k ɪ n d i /; Arabic: أبو يوسف يعقوب بن إسحاق الصبّاح الكندي; Latin: Alkindus; c. 801–873 AD) was an Arab Muslim polymath active as a philosopher, mathematician, physician, and music theorist.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AverroesAverroes - Wikipedia

    Hace 3 días · Averroes served various official positions in the Almohad Caliphate, whose territories are depicted in this map. By 1153 Averroes was in Marrakesh, the capital of the Almohad Caliphate (now in Morocco), to perform astronomical observations and to support the Almohad project of building new colleges.

  5. 26 de jul. de 1999 · Mathematics - Greek, Arabic, Learning: In the 11th century a new phase of mathematics began with the translations from Arabic. Scholars throughout Europe went to Toledo, Córdoba, and elsewhere in Spain to translate into Latin the accumulated learning of the Muslims. Along with philosophy, astronomy, astrology, and medicine, important mathematical achievements of the Greek, Indian, and Islamic ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AvicennaAvicenna - Wikipedia

    Hace 1 día · Ibn Sina ( Persian: ابن سینا, romanized : Ibn Sīnā; c. 980 – 22 June 1037 CE), commonly known in the West as Avicenna ( / ˌævɪˈsɛnə, ˌɑːvɪ -/ ), was a preeminent philosopher and physician of the Muslim world, [4] [5] flourishing during the Islamic Golden Age, serving in the courts of various Iranian rulers. [6] .

  7. 29 de jul. de 2024 · These theologians continued and intensified al-Ghazālīs attacks on Avicenna and Aristotle (especially their views on time, movement, matter, and form, the nature of the heavenly bodies, and the relation between the intelligible and sensible worlds).