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  1. Al-Razi was a celebrated alchemist and Muslim philosopher who is also considered to have been the greatest physician of the Islamic world. In medicine he was an admirer of Hippocrates, and in philosophy he was a professed follower of Socrates and Plato and an opponent of Aristotle.

  2. Abū Bakr al-Rāzī (full name: أبو بکر محمد بن زکریاء الرازي, Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn Zakariyyāʾ al-Rāzī), [a] c. 864 or 865–925 or 935 CE, [b] often known as (al-)Razi or by his Latin name Rhazes, also rendered Rhasis, was a Persian physician, philosopher and alchemist who lived during the Islamic Golden Age.

  3. Al-Razi (Rhazes) Al-Razi was a doctor who helped to plan the building of a hospital in Baghdad, in modern-day Iraq. This was the first documented general hospital in the world and it opened...

  4. May 19, 2021 · Abū Bakr al-Rāzī (865–925 CE, 251–313 AH) was one of the greatest figures in the history of medicine in the Islamic tradition, and one of its most controversial philosophers.

  5. Sep 11, 2024 · Abu Bakr al-Razi, also known as Rhazes in the West, was a Persian polymath born in 865 AD in Ray, near present-day Tehran, Iran. A prominent physician, philosopher, and chemist, al-Razi...

  6. Al Razi’s fame reached to the capital of the Abbasids. He was called upon by Caliph Al Muktafi to be the chief director of the largest hospital in Baghdad. Al Razi is attributed with a remarkable method for selecting the site of a new hospital.

  7. Highlighting that Socrates came to procreate in the better phase of his life, al-Razi states, at least a couple of times, that true philosophy encourages the propagation of the human species56 and rejects solitary life.

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