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    • Fuller versions of his name

      • Ibn ‘Arabî referred to himself with fuller versions of his name, such as Abû ‘Abdallâh Muhammad ibn ‘Alî ibn al-‘Arabî al-Tâ’î al-Hâtimî (the last three names indicating his noble Arab lineage).
      plato.stanford.edu/entries/ibn-arabi/
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ibn_ArabiIbn Arabi - Wikipedia

    In some of his works, Ibn ‘Arabî referred to himself with fuller versions of his name as AbûAbdullâh Muhammad ibn ‘Alî ibn al-‘Arabî al-Tâ’î al-Hâtimî, [1] [6] where the last three names indicating his noble Arab lineage.

  3. Aug 5, 2008 · IbnArabî referred to himself with fuller versions of his name, such as Abû ‘Abdallâh Muhammad ibn ‘Alî ibn al-‘Arabî al-Tâ’î al-Hâtimî (the last three names indicating his noble Arab lineage).

  4. Oct 8, 2024 · The account of the doctrines of Ibn al-ʿArabī (12th–13th centuries) belongs properly to the history of Islamic mysticism. Yet his impact on the subsequent development of the new wisdom was in many ways far greater than was that of al-Suhrawardī.

  5. In a "compassionate sigh" for his unnamed Names, God conceives in Himself the latent individualities of these forms (archetypes, angels, Islamic Reality). These individualities are concretized in creatures, in which and through which God reveals Himself to Himself, contemplating Himself in them as in a mirror.

  6. Feb 20, 2023 · The Sufi Path. Ibn ‘Arabī was about sixteen when he went into seclusion. He himself never explicitly mentioned the reasons behind it. Yet the following factors are worth considering: There goes a story, heard after 150 years of his death, Ibn ‘Arabī was at a dinner party which rounded off with wine.

  7. Muhyiddin Ibn ʿArabi [/] (1165–1240) is one of the most important masters of wisdom within the Islamic spiritual tradition. Designated ‘the greatest teacher’, his vision is based on the principle of unity – the unity of being – and in his many books and writings he explores the implications of this unitive perspective at every level ...

  8. Ibn al-˓Arabi was a prolific, influential, and controversial scholar whose writings, based on close readings of the Qur˒an, combined the perspectives of jurisprudence, philosophy, kalam, and Sufism.

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