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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ibn_ArabiIbn Arabi - Wikipedia

    Ibn ʿArabī (Arabic: ابن عربي, ALA-LC: Ibn ʻArabī ‎; full name: أبو عبد الله محـمـد بن عربي الطائي الحاتمي, Abū ʻAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn ʻArabī al-Ṭāʼī al-Ḥātimī; 1165–1240) was an Andalusi Arab scholar, mystic, poet, and philosopher, extremely influential within Islamic thought ...

  2. Aug 5, 2008 · Ibn ‘Arabî (1165–1240) can be considered the greatest of all Muslim philosophers, provided we understand philosophy in the broad, modern sense and not simply as the discipline of falsafa, whose outstanding representatives are Avicenna and, many would say, Mullâ Sadrâ.

  3. Jul 24, 2024 · Ibn al-ʿArabī (born July 28, 1165, Murcia, Valencia—died November 16, 1240, Damascus) was a celebrated Muslim mystic-philosopher who gave the esoteric, mystical dimension of Islamic thought its first full-fledged philosophic expression.

  4. Jul 12, 2022 · Ibn Arabi takes us on a journey to explore the mysterious relationship between existence, non-existence, God, and creation in his fascinating and controversial theory of reality, the ‘Unity of Being’.

  5. Mystic, philosopher, poet, sage, Muhyiddin Ibn Arabi (1165–1240) was one of the world’s great spiritual teachers. Ibn Arabi was born in Murcia in Arab al-Andalus, and his writings had an immense impact throughout the Islamic world and beyond.

  6. Ibn Arabi is one of the most inventive and prolific writers of the Islamic tradition, with a very large number of books and treatise attributed to him. He wrote a number of works whilst still living in Andalusia, but the majority of his writings date from the second part of his life when he was living in Mecca, Anatolia and Damascus.

  7. 2 days ago · Islam - Sufism, Mysticism, Ibn al-Arabi: 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.

  8. Ibn al-'Arabi (1165 C.E. - 1240 C.E.) was a Muslim mystic, philosopher, poet, and writer who came to be acknowledged as one of the most important spiritual teachers within Sufism, the mystical tradition of Islam.

  9. Ibn al-'Arabi was a mystic who drew on the writings of Sufis, Islamic theologians and philosophers in order to elaborate a complex theosophical system akin to that of Plotinus. He was born in Murcia (in southeast Spain) in ah 560/ ad 1164, and died in Damascus in ah 638/ ad 1240.

  10. Ibn al-ʿArabī , (born July 28, 1165, Murcia, Valencia—died Nov. 16, 1240, Damascus), Islamic mystic and theologian. Born in Spain, he traveled widely in Spain and North Africa in search of masters of Sufism.

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