Abbasid caliphate and the golden age of Islam
The Golden Age
Abbasid Caliphate 750-1258 AD overthrew the Umayyads
Under Abbasid leadership, the Islamic world flourished, leading to a Golden Age
A centralized government dominated by a theocratic outlook helped create a sense of unity and purpose for the new caliphate
The unity of the empire allowed for the flourishing of the arts
The Golden Age
Byzantine and Sasanian knowledge was spread throughout the vast empire and impacted many European kingdoms
Persian becomes the language of the court
Stressed conversion and turned against the Shi’a and other allies to support a less tolerant Sunni Islam.
Large bureaucracy worked under the vizir, or chief administrator.
The Golden Age
The Muslim conquerors inherited a rich and diverse world from Byzantium and the Persians
At first, the new Arab rulers let the political and governmental structures in place—they just ruled over them
One of the first measures they took was to develop schools
The primary function of this was to teach and organize the practices of Islam
The Quran served as the primary text to teach people how to read
Sunna
Sunna is the oral tradition passed down of those early Muslims living in Medina
Despite the expansion and migration of Muslims across the Mediterranean, the Medinese community still provided the most important example
This is because they formed the Companions of Muhammad—those who observed the Prophet
Muslims looked at their lifestyle for guidance on how to practice Islam
These observations were known as sunna
Hadith
Out of the Islamic schools came the hadiths
Hadiths are important collections of sayings or teachings that are attributing to Muhammad
These are linked through an isnad, which is a chain of people that links the saying back to someone who heard the prophet say it or do it.
Major schools of Islamic thought developed around the study and practice of hadiths
In Sunni Islam there are four major schools, though others exist, Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi’I, and Hanbali
Sharia
The study of the Quran and sunna, the Islamic legislation, led to the creation Sharia
Sharia means path or way
It is a system of laws based upon the study of the Quran and hadith
Sharia’s main function is to instruct the believer on how to live properly and worship Allah
These new laws and regulations also led to new spiritual and ascetic practices in Islam
Here the influence of Christian, Hindi, and Zoroastrian monks are seen upon Islam such as celibacy
Possible Evolution of the Lesser Jihad
As the boundaries of the caliphate stopped growing (Battle of Tours 732 and failed sieges of Constantinople 717), new perspectives on jihad emerged
With the rise of Sufism, Islamic mystics, jihad began to take on notions of spiritual warfare
By the ninth century, two hundred years after Muhammad, ideas that jihad was an internal war against passions emerged in the writings al-Dunya and al-Muhasibi
These writings on th.
The Islamic Golden Age 1. Expansion under Muhammad, 622–632 .docxjmindy
The Islamic Golden Age
1. Expansion under Muhammad, 622–632
2. Expansion during the Rashidun Caliphate, 632–661
3. Expansion during the Umayyad Caliphate, 661–750
Islamic civilization experienced a golden age under the Abbassid Dynasty, which ruled from the mid 8th century until the mid 13th century.
Under the Abbassids, Islamic culture became a blending of Arab, Persian, Egyptian, and European traditions. The result was an era of stunning intellectual and cultural achievements.
It is said to have ended with the collapse of the Abbasid Caliphate with the Mongol invasions and the Sack of Baghdad in 1258. Several contemporary scholars, however, place the end of the Islamic Golden Age to be around the 15th to 16th centuries.
Influences for the Golden Age
Religious: The Abbasids were influenced by the Quranic injunctions and hadiths, such as "the ink of a scholar is more holy than the blood of a martyr," that stressed the value of knowledge.
Government sponsorship
The Muslim governments heavily patronized scholars. The best scholars and notable translators, such as Hunayn ibn Ishaq, had salaries that are estimated to be the equivalent of professional athletes today.
The House of Wisdom was a library, translation institute, and academy established in Abbasid-era Baghdad, Iraq by Caliph Harun al-Rashid and his son al-Ma'mun.
The House of Wisdom is where both Muslim and non-Muslim scholars sought to translate and gather all the world's knowledge into Arabic. Many classic works of antiquity that would otherwise have been lost were translated into Arabic and Persian and later in turn translated into Turkish, Hebrew and Latin.
From the translations, the Arab world became a collection of cultures which put together, synthesized and significantly advanced the knowledge gained from the ancient Roman, Chinese, Indian, Persian, Egyptian, Greek, and Byzantine civilizations.
New technology
With a new, and easier writing system, and the introduction of paper, information was democratized to the extent that, for probably the first time in history, it became possible to make a living from simply writing and selling books.
Learning from History…
During this period, the Muslims showed a strong interest in assimilating the scientific knowledge of the civilizations that had been conquered. Many classic works of antiquity that might otherwise have been lost were translated from Greek, Roman, Persian, Indian, Chinese, Egyptian, and Phoenician civilizations into Arabic and Persian, and later in turn translated into Turkish, Hebrew, and Latin.
Philosophy
Ibn Rushd founder of the Averroism school of philosophy, was influential in the rise of secular thought in Western Europe.
Ibn Rushd and Ibn Sina played a major role in saving the works of Aristotle, whose ideas came to dominate the non-religious thought of the Christian and Muslim worlds. They would also absorb ideas from China, and India, adding to them tremendous knowled.
The Islamic Golden Age 1. Expansion under Muhammad, 622–632 .docxjmindy
The Islamic Golden Age
1. Expansion under Muhammad, 622–632
2. Expansion during the Rashidun Caliphate, 632–661
3. Expansion during the Umayyad Caliphate, 661–750
Islamic civilization experienced a golden age under the Abbassid Dynasty, which ruled from the mid 8th century until the mid 13th century.
Under the Abbassids, Islamic culture became a blending of Arab, Persian, Egyptian, and European traditions. The result was an era of stunning intellectual and cultural achievements.
It is said to have ended with the collapse of the Abbasid Caliphate with the Mongol invasions and the Sack of Baghdad in 1258. Several contemporary scholars, however, place the end of the Islamic Golden Age to be around the 15th to 16th centuries.
Influences for the Golden Age
Religious: The Abbasids were influenced by the Quranic injunctions and hadiths, such as "the ink of a scholar is more holy than the blood of a martyr," that stressed the value of knowledge.
Government sponsorship
The Muslim governments heavily patronized scholars. The best scholars and notable translators, such as Hunayn ibn Ishaq, had salaries that are estimated to be the equivalent of professional athletes today.
The House of Wisdom was a library, translation institute, and academy established in Abbasid-era Baghdad, Iraq by Caliph Harun al-Rashid and his son al-Ma'mun.
The House of Wisdom is where both Muslim and non-Muslim scholars sought to translate and gather all the world's knowledge into Arabic. Many classic works of antiquity that would otherwise have been lost were translated into Arabic and Persian and later in turn translated into Turkish, Hebrew and Latin.
From the translations, the Arab world became a collection of cultures which put together, synthesized and significantly advanced the knowledge gained from the ancient Roman, Chinese, Indian, Persian, Egyptian, Greek, and Byzantine civilizations.
New technology
With a new, and easier writing system, and the introduction of paper, information was democratized to the extent that, for probably the first time in history, it became possible to make a living from simply writing and selling books.
Learning from History…
During this period, the Muslims showed a strong interest in assimilating the scientific knowledge of the civilizations that had been conquered. Many classic works of antiquity that might otherwise have been lost were translated from Greek, Roman, Persian, Indian, Chinese, Egyptian, and Phoenician civilizations into Arabic and Persian, and later in turn translated into Turkish, Hebrew, and Latin.
Philosophy
Ibn Rushd founder of the Averroism school of philosophy, was influential in the rise of secular thought in Western Europe.
Ibn Rushd and Ibn Sina played a major role in saving the works of Aristotle, whose ideas came to dominate the non-religious thought of the Christian and Muslim worlds. They would also absorb ideas from China, and India, adding to them tremendous knowled.
Since Islam originated and has developed in an Arab culture, other cultures which have adopted Islam have tended to be influenced by Arab customs. Thus Arab Muslim societies and other Muslims have cultural affinities, though every society has preserved its distinguishing characteristics. Islamic culture inherited an Arab culture born in the desert, simple but by no means simplistic. It has an oral tradition based on the transmission of culture through poetry and narrative. However, it has been the written record that has had the greatest impact on civilization. Islam civilization is based on the value of education, which both the Qur'an and the Prophet stressed.
One of the distinctive features of the Islamic tradition is its rapid expansion into a large and diverse civilization, soon becoming divided into several centers of political authority. Although the Prophet’s activities were mostly limited to the Arabian Peninsula and the Levant, after his death the first four “Rightly Guided” caliphs sent armies to conquer Syria, Egypt, Iraq and parts of Persia, which were then within the declining Byzantine and Persian empires.
Abu Yūsuf Yaʻqūb ibn ʼIsḥāq aṣ-Ṣabbāḥ al-Kindī was an Arab Muslim philosopher, polymath, mathematician, physician and musician. Al-Kindi was the first of the Islamic peripatetic philosophers, and is hailed as the "father of Arab philosophy".
The Impact of Early Muslim Thoughts on the Renaissance Movement in the WestMohd Abbas Abdul Razak
This presentation intends to explain that there was a time in the history of the Muslims known as the ‘Golden Age of Islam’. During that period of time (750-1258), Muslims built their great civilization by merging science and spirituality. They were prepared to learn all that are positive and non-contradictory to their Muslim faith from others; particularly from the Greeks, Persians and Indians. At the peak of their civilization, Europeans came to learn at the Islamic centers for leaning and scientific investigation. In modern times, the West not only failed to acknowledge the contribution of the early Muslim scholars to the Renaissance movement, but also its obsession and passion for science took the masses away from God and spirituality. Looking into the present condition of the world, this presentation calls for an ideal situation that can solve violence, backwardness and moral decadence. It calls upon the West and the Muslim world to share with one another what they have. The West needs spirituality and the Muslim world needs science and technology. It is believed that through such an exchange and sharing between the two, a better world free of violence, hatred and moral decadence can be created.
Golden age of islamic civiliation covering the perirod between the mid-8th century lasting until the Mongol conquest of Baghdad in 1258
Subtopics:
Introduction
Discussion of viewpoints
Catalysts for success
Contributions to mathematics
Contributions to mathematics
Contributions of the golden age to science and medicine
Philosophy and translation
Trade and commerce
The decline of the Islamic civilization
AFRICAResearch Paper AssignmentInstructionsOverview.docxSALU18
AFRICA
Research Paper Assignment
Instructions
Overview
In developing your expertise in transnational
organized crime (TOC) you will be writing a series of research papers. All
together the writing contained in all these papers combined would be quite
significant project! You will find that in some modules, the research papers
mimic our readings with respect to subject matter and some modules, the
research papers do not mimic the reading. Again, the goal of these research
papers is to stretch the depth and breadth of your knowledge. You should feel
well prepared to teach a course in TOCs after completing this course. The
research papers and PowerPoints you create could serve as the basis for such
class. Additionally, you will find that this course and the course CJUS701
Comparative Criminal Justice Systems complement each other very well.
Instructions
·
Each
research paper should be a minimum of 6 to 8 pages.
·
The
vast difference in page count is because some countries and/or crime/topics are
quite easy to study and some countries and/or crime/topics have very limited
information.
·
In
some instances, there will be a plethora of information and you must use
skilled writing to maintain proper page count.
·
Please
keep in mind that this is doctoral level analysis and writing – you are to take
the hard-earned road – the road less travelled – the scholarly road in forming
your paper.
·
The
paper must use current APA style, and the page count does not include the title
page, abstract, reference section, or any extra material.
·
The
minimum elements of the paper are listed below.
·
You
must use a
minimum
of 8 recent (some
countries/crimes/topics may have more recent research articles than others),
relevant, and academic (peer review journals preferred and professional
journals allowed if used judiciously) sources, at least 2 sources being the
Holy Bible, and one recent (some countries/crime/topics have more recent than
others) news article. Books may be used
but are considered “additional: sources beyond the stated minimums. You may use
.gov sources as your recent, relevant, and academic sources if the writing is
academic in nature (authored works). You may also use United Nations and
Whitehouse.gov documents as academic documents.
·
Again,
this paper must reflect graduate level research and writing style. If you need to go over the maximum page count
you must obtain professor permission in advance! Please reference the Research
Paper Rubric when creating your research paper.
These are minimum guidelines – you may expand the
topics covered in your papers.
1)
Begin
your paper with a
brief
analysis of the following elements:
a.
Country
analysis
i.
Introduction
to the country
ii.
People
and society of the country
iii.
What
is the basic government structure?
2)
Analyze
the nature of organized crime in the assigned area (you may narrow the scope of
your analysis through your introduction or thesis stat.
Adversarial ProceedingsCritically discuss with your classmates t.docxSALU18
Adversarial Proceedings
Critically discuss with your classmates the claim that adversarial proceedings can be distinguished as relying more on the government’s ability to prove guilt (following specific rules of criminal procedure the defendant’s guilt whereas the inquisitorial process spends more time on investigations to determine if the defendant truly committed the crime).
.
Advances In Management Vol. 9 (5) May (2016)
1
Generation Gaps: Changes in the Workplace due to
Differing Generational Values
Carbary Kelly, Fredericks Elizabeth, Mishra Bharat and Mishra Jitendra*
Management Department, Grand Valley State University, 50 Front Ave, SW Grand Rapids Michigan 49504-6424, USA
*[email protected]
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to discuss the
generational gaps that are found in the workplace
today. With multiple generations working together,
and the oldest generation having to work longer and
retire later, generational changes are occurring in the
workplace and for management. There is a lack of
communication and understanding between the
different generations caused through differing values
and goals. Younger generations are also entering
different fields than those that were popular for older
generations. There is a serious new problem in the
workplace, and it has nothing to do with downsizing,
global competition, pointy-haired bosses, stress or
greed. Instead, it is the problem of distinct
generations — the Veterans, the Baby Boomers, Gen
X and Gen Y — working together and often colliding
as their paths cross.
Individuals with different values, different ideas,
different ways of getting things done and different
ways of communicating in the workplace have always
existed. So, why is this becoming a problem now? At
work, generation differences can affect everything
including recruiting, building teams, dealing with
change, motivating, managing, and maintaining and
increasing productivity All of these ideas are
explored, discussed, and evaluated, through looking
at current research on the topic and case studies that
have been conducted not only in the United States but
around the world.
Keywords: Generation gap, workplace, values.
Introduction
Throughout the years, as the population has continued to
both grow and age, it has caused generational changes to
take place in the various aspects of life. With the changes in
the demographics of the world’s population, there have also
been changes in how each group thinks and what they
value. This not only affects the way people behave in their
personal lives, but it also affects the workplace. As
generational changes occur in the workplace, a lack of
communication has caused adisconnect to occur between
the values and goals present among the different age groups
along with newer generations choosing different career
paths.
* Author for Correspondence
In order to understand where these differences stem from,
you need to analyze how each generation is different when
it comes to their beliefs and values. So, it is best to identify
the different groups present in workplace which range from
those born in 1922 to those born in the early 1990’s.
Moving chronologically, the fi.
African-American Literature An introduction to major African-Americ.docxSALU18
African-American Literature: An introduction to major African-American writers from the earliest expressions to the present. An examination of the cultural milieu from which the writing arose, the ideological stance of each writer studied, and the styles and structure of the works considered
8 wks
.
African American Women and Healthcare I want to explain how heal.docxSALU18
African American Women and Healthcare
I want to explain how healthcare is perceived in the African American community especially amongst women and if their concerns and apprehension are justified. The paper must include a title page, introduction section, abstract section, literature review section, methods section, results section, discussion section, and a signature page. I will attach some samples that were given to me.
.
Advocacy & Legislation in Early Childhood EducationAdvocacy & Le.docxSALU18
Advocacy & Legislation in Early Childhood Education
Advocacy & Legislation in Early Childhood Education
Advocating for Early Childhood Education
Rasmussen College
COURSE#: EEC 4910
Doreen Anzalone
July 15, 2019
Advocating for Early Childhood Education
· What is advocacy?
Advocacy is how we support our children. We as teachers give advice for our children or we listen. We let the children and families know that we believe in them and we will be there for them. Teachers, admin, staff can advocate for children as long as they are in school. Advocates are also trained people and they are not lawyers. One of their responsibility is to stay up to date with the regulations of the educational laws.
· Why is advocacy important to early childhood education?
Its important to help the families because they might be vulnerable in society. We as teachers need to make sure our children and families are being heard. We as teachers need to make sure their wishes and views are being considered when it’s about their child or family. Its because we are helping the family make life decisions about their children and even their family life. Its also important to make sure we are not judging the family or having or our own personal opinions about what is going on when we are helping advocate for the family, we need to make sure we are stating the facts for the family.
· What is your role as an early childhood educator in making legislative changes?
Our role is to be able to email them or decide how to get a hold of them and let them know our questions, comments or suggestions on things that need to be changed, updated. We need to let them know so we can support our school, children, and families. It is our role as educators to stay aware of the laws. The Federal laws we need to make sure we are aware of the
· Family Education Rights & Poverty Act
· The No Child Left Behind
· Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
With these laws and many more they need to hear from schools in the United States. The federal laws mean we need to address the issues. These issues usually involve infringement of the student’s rights and they are to protect the rights. The state laws depend on the state you are in. The state laws this is where you would go if you have a problem or need to voice about
· Teacher Retirement
· Teacher evaluations
· Charter schools
· State Testing requirements
· The required learning standards
· Much more
Your school board is also a great place to help with policies and regulations and any revisions that need to be done.
· What ethical issues must early childhood education professionals consider related to advocacy and why do those issues exit?
In NAEYC the code of Ethical Conduct and in their it describes how any educator is required to act and what they do and not to do. At times as an educator as staff we tend to do what is the simplest or sometimes, we want to please others but when it comes to this, we must remember to follow our responsi.
Advertising is one of the most common forms of visual persuasion we .docxSALU18
Advertising is one of the most common forms of visual persuasion we encounter in everyday life. The influence of advertising in our society is persuasive and subtle. Part of its power comes from our habit of internalizing the intended messages of words and images without thinking deeply about them. Once we begin decoding the ways in which advertisements are constructed, once we view them critically, we can understand how, or if, they work as arguments. We may then make better decisions about whether to buy products and what factors convinced us or failed to convince us.
What are the different forms of advertising?
Modern media comes in many different formats, including print media (books, magazines, newspapers), television, movies, video games, music, cell phones, various kinds of software, and the Internet. Each type of media involves both content and also a device or object through which that content is delivered.
TEAM TASK:
As a team you are going to Review Chapter 4: Visual Rhetoric: Thinking About Images as Arguments. You will
be assigned a Section of the Chapter (written, visual, unfit, political, caricature, photography-maps graphs charts ) and as a Team you willResearch
the content of that Chapter Area (you will see topic page overlap ) and implement the following:
You will look at and interpret a media campaign or advertisement. Focus on social or ethical aspects * Seek to find one or more of the FALLACY TYPES identified Chapter 9 pages 363- 380. Include this information in your findings. Consider and incorporate as many of the following 16 categories :
The objectives: What role does the ad play in the economy?
The audience: Is it targeted to a group that could be considered vulnerable?
Effectiveness: Does it promote something that is socially desirable?
Role in marketing mix: What role does the ad play in the economy?
Image, product differentiation and branding: Is the ad misleading?
Other promotion factors
The unique selling proposition.
The basis for the appeal(s).
How would you make improvements?
The creative philosophy
The slogan
Secondary or supporting points or claims
The tone or mood and manner: Is the ad misleading?
Type of presenter
The motivational appeal: Does it promote something that is socially desirable?
Executional style
Each TEAM will develop a
15 minute class presentation
about their researched area. You have
options to use
power points, maps, videos, and other resources that will help educate your audience about your research.
Your Presentation should include:
A Power Point, the media piece or some type of visual presentation~~
A Question and Answer {Q & A} & Interactive session, quiz,.
Adult Health 1 Study GuideSensory Unit Chapters 63 & 64.docxSALU18
Adult Health 1 Study Guide
Sensory Unit
Chapters 63 & 64
Remember that assigned textbook readings should be supplemental to reviewing & studying the Powerpoint presentations. Answers to these study guide questions can be obtained from the textbook chapters, Powerpoint presentations, as well as class lectures & in-class activities.
Chapter 63: Assessment & Management of Patients with Eye & Vision Disorders
Conditions to Know
: Glaucoma, Cataracts, Retinal Detachment, Macular Degeneration, Conjunctivitis, Eye trauma
· Know the basic structures & functions of the eye – lens, pupil, iris, cornea, conjunctiva, retina, and sclera
· Questions to ask patients regarding issues with the eyes/vision – Chart 63-1
· Snellen Chart is used to assess visual acuity – 20/20 is considered perfect vision (patient can read line 20 of chart while standing 20 feet away) – this is tested in each eye
1. What are some of the most common causes of blindness?
2. What is responsible for the damage to the optic nerve in patients diagnosed with glaucoma?
3. Glaucoma can lead to what primary complication if not treated properly?
4. What are the differences between open-angle & closed-angle glaucoma?
5. What are the primary signs & symptoms of glaucoma?
6. What are the primary treatment goals for patients with glaucoma?
7. What is the first line treatment of glaucoma? What medication teaching points would you want to include in your patient education?
8. What are some common risk factors for the development of cataracts? See Chart 63-7.
9. What are the primary signs & symptoms of cataracts?
10. The most common treatment for cataracts is outpatient surgery, in which the lens affected by the cataract is replaced with a man-made one. Explain the pre and post-operative nursing management & education that is needed for patients undergoing cataract surgery. See Chart 63-8.
11. Retinal detachment is considered a medical emergency. What happens during retinal detachment?
12. What are some symptoms of retinal detachment?
13. Macular degeneration is the most common cause of vision loss in people > 60 years old. What is macular degeneration?
14. What are some risk factors for dry macular degeneration?
15. What are some signs and symptoms of macular degeneration?
16. Nursing management for patients diagnosed with macular degeneration focus on safety & supportive measures. What are some accommodations we should make or educate patients on regarding how to help improve their vision & ADLs when they have this condition?
17. Conjunctivitis is also called “pink eye”. What are the different types of conjunctivitis and what are some symptoms of this condition? Are any of these types considered contagious?
18. What are some teaching points to include when educating a patient diagnosed with viral conjunctivitis? See Chart 63-11.
19. Explain the emergency nursing treatment needed when a patient presents with eye trauma.
Chapter 64: Assessment & Manag.
Advertising Campaign Management Part 3Jennifer Sundstrom-F.docxSALU18
Advertising Campaign Management
Part 3
Jennifer Sundstrom-Fitzgerald
1
Learning Objectives
Analyze advertising campaign parameters
Identify how a creative brief facilitates effective advertising
Describe the implications of advertising management in the global arena
2
Advertising Campaign Parameters
Advertising goals
Media selection
Tagline
Consistency
Positioning
Campaign duration
Effective advertising campaigns require careful planning and attention to specific parameters including Advertising goals, media selection, tagline, consistency, positioning and campaign duration. We will review each parameter beginning with goals.
3
Advertising Goals
A primary goal of advertising is to build brand awareness among existing and new customers. The creative should inform and persuade them to make purchases and build brand loyalty.
4
Build brand awareness
Inform, persuade, support marketing efforts
Encourage purchase decisions
Building Brand Awareness
Successful brands possess two characteristics. Top-of-mind are brands a consumer mentions first when asked about brands in a particular product category – these are brands in our Evoked Set. Top choice is the brand within a product category that consumers prefer the most. So top choice requires top-of-mind. Brand equity, which is the level of brand strength perceived by consumers, leads to top-of-mind and top choice brands.
This is also applicable on the B2B side when business people are faced with modified rebuy situations. A common dilemma I had was for every Fox Graduation Ceremony, there are three per year, and the need for graduation program booklets. There was a printer who I always wanted to hire because I enjoyed working with them, they always had fair prices and delivered high-quality programs in a timely manner. However, due to non-profit regulations, I had to bid the job to at least three vendors. So my top-of-mind, first choice brand was always included but I had to add two other vendors as well. Tell story about Bill DeVece and misspelled student names and how wonderful he was in fixing these issues.
5
Brand image begins with awareness
Consumers recognize the brand
Brand equity leads to top-of-mind and top choice
B2B important in modified rebuy situations
Building Brand Awareness
Successful brands possess:
Top-of-mind
Top choice
The 10 Most Valuable Brands in the World per 2018 study
Coca Cola brand is a good example of a brand with these characteristics. Here is a recent list of a top 10 most valuable and recognized list of global brands. (click link)
6
Goal to Persuade
Dare to be Devoted Campaign
Every Kiss Begins with Kay Campaign
Another common goal of advertising is to persuade consumers that a particular brand is superior to others and should be their top choice. Both of these brands, owned by the same parent company (Signet), do extensive advertising, but only Kay Jewelers has successfully used the same slogan, “Every Kiss Begins w.
More Related Content
Similar to Abbasid caliphate and the golden age of IslamThe Gol.docx
Since Islam originated and has developed in an Arab culture, other cultures which have adopted Islam have tended to be influenced by Arab customs. Thus Arab Muslim societies and other Muslims have cultural affinities, though every society has preserved its distinguishing characteristics. Islamic culture inherited an Arab culture born in the desert, simple but by no means simplistic. It has an oral tradition based on the transmission of culture through poetry and narrative. However, it has been the written record that has had the greatest impact on civilization. Islam civilization is based on the value of education, which both the Qur'an and the Prophet stressed.
One of the distinctive features of the Islamic tradition is its rapid expansion into a large and diverse civilization, soon becoming divided into several centers of political authority. Although the Prophet’s activities were mostly limited to the Arabian Peninsula and the Levant, after his death the first four “Rightly Guided” caliphs sent armies to conquer Syria, Egypt, Iraq and parts of Persia, which were then within the declining Byzantine and Persian empires.
Abu Yūsuf Yaʻqūb ibn ʼIsḥāq aṣ-Ṣabbāḥ al-Kindī was an Arab Muslim philosopher, polymath, mathematician, physician and musician. Al-Kindi was the first of the Islamic peripatetic philosophers, and is hailed as the "father of Arab philosophy".
The Impact of Early Muslim Thoughts on the Renaissance Movement in the WestMohd Abbas Abdul Razak
This presentation intends to explain that there was a time in the history of the Muslims known as the ‘Golden Age of Islam’. During that period of time (750-1258), Muslims built their great civilization by merging science and spirituality. They were prepared to learn all that are positive and non-contradictory to their Muslim faith from others; particularly from the Greeks, Persians and Indians. At the peak of their civilization, Europeans came to learn at the Islamic centers for leaning and scientific investigation. In modern times, the West not only failed to acknowledge the contribution of the early Muslim scholars to the Renaissance movement, but also its obsession and passion for science took the masses away from God and spirituality. Looking into the present condition of the world, this presentation calls for an ideal situation that can solve violence, backwardness and moral decadence. It calls upon the West and the Muslim world to share with one another what they have. The West needs spirituality and the Muslim world needs science and technology. It is believed that through such an exchange and sharing between the two, a better world free of violence, hatred and moral decadence can be created.
Golden age of islamic civiliation covering the perirod between the mid-8th century lasting until the Mongol conquest of Baghdad in 1258
Subtopics:
Introduction
Discussion of viewpoints
Catalysts for success
Contributions to mathematics
Contributions to mathematics
Contributions of the golden age to science and medicine
Philosophy and translation
Trade and commerce
The decline of the Islamic civilization
AFRICAResearch Paper AssignmentInstructionsOverview.docxSALU18
AFRICA
Research Paper Assignment
Instructions
Overview
In developing your expertise in transnational
organized crime (TOC) you will be writing a series of research papers. All
together the writing contained in all these papers combined would be quite
significant project! You will find that in some modules, the research papers
mimic our readings with respect to subject matter and some modules, the
research papers do not mimic the reading. Again, the goal of these research
papers is to stretch the depth and breadth of your knowledge. You should feel
well prepared to teach a course in TOCs after completing this course. The
research papers and PowerPoints you create could serve as the basis for such
class. Additionally, you will find that this course and the course CJUS701
Comparative Criminal Justice Systems complement each other very well.
Instructions
·
Each
research paper should be a minimum of 6 to 8 pages.
·
The
vast difference in page count is because some countries and/or crime/topics are
quite easy to study and some countries and/or crime/topics have very limited
information.
·
In
some instances, there will be a plethora of information and you must use
skilled writing to maintain proper page count.
·
Please
keep in mind that this is doctoral level analysis and writing – you are to take
the hard-earned road – the road less travelled – the scholarly road in forming
your paper.
·
The
paper must use current APA style, and the page count does not include the title
page, abstract, reference section, or any extra material.
·
The
minimum elements of the paper are listed below.
·
You
must use a
minimum
of 8 recent (some
countries/crimes/topics may have more recent research articles than others),
relevant, and academic (peer review journals preferred and professional
journals allowed if used judiciously) sources, at least 2 sources being the
Holy Bible, and one recent (some countries/crime/topics have more recent than
others) news article. Books may be used
but are considered “additional: sources beyond the stated minimums. You may use
.gov sources as your recent, relevant, and academic sources if the writing is
academic in nature (authored works). You may also use United Nations and
Whitehouse.gov documents as academic documents.
·
Again,
this paper must reflect graduate level research and writing style. If you need to go over the maximum page count
you must obtain professor permission in advance! Please reference the Research
Paper Rubric when creating your research paper.
These are minimum guidelines – you may expand the
topics covered in your papers.
1)
Begin
your paper with a
brief
analysis of the following elements:
a.
Country
analysis
i.
Introduction
to the country
ii.
People
and society of the country
iii.
What
is the basic government structure?
2)
Analyze
the nature of organized crime in the assigned area (you may narrow the scope of
your analysis through your introduction or thesis stat.
Adversarial ProceedingsCritically discuss with your classmates t.docxSALU18
Adversarial Proceedings
Critically discuss with your classmates the claim that adversarial proceedings can be distinguished as relying more on the government’s ability to prove guilt (following specific rules of criminal procedure the defendant’s guilt whereas the inquisitorial process spends more time on investigations to determine if the defendant truly committed the crime).
.
Advances In Management Vol. 9 (5) May (2016)
1
Generation Gaps: Changes in the Workplace due to
Differing Generational Values
Carbary Kelly, Fredericks Elizabeth, Mishra Bharat and Mishra Jitendra*
Management Department, Grand Valley State University, 50 Front Ave, SW Grand Rapids Michigan 49504-6424, USA
*[email protected]
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to discuss the
generational gaps that are found in the workplace
today. With multiple generations working together,
and the oldest generation having to work longer and
retire later, generational changes are occurring in the
workplace and for management. There is a lack of
communication and understanding between the
different generations caused through differing values
and goals. Younger generations are also entering
different fields than those that were popular for older
generations. There is a serious new problem in the
workplace, and it has nothing to do with downsizing,
global competition, pointy-haired bosses, stress or
greed. Instead, it is the problem of distinct
generations — the Veterans, the Baby Boomers, Gen
X and Gen Y — working together and often colliding
as their paths cross.
Individuals with different values, different ideas,
different ways of getting things done and different
ways of communicating in the workplace have always
existed. So, why is this becoming a problem now? At
work, generation differences can affect everything
including recruiting, building teams, dealing with
change, motivating, managing, and maintaining and
increasing productivity All of these ideas are
explored, discussed, and evaluated, through looking
at current research on the topic and case studies that
have been conducted not only in the United States but
around the world.
Keywords: Generation gap, workplace, values.
Introduction
Throughout the years, as the population has continued to
both grow and age, it has caused generational changes to
take place in the various aspects of life. With the changes in
the demographics of the world’s population, there have also
been changes in how each group thinks and what they
value. This not only affects the way people behave in their
personal lives, but it also affects the workplace. As
generational changes occur in the workplace, a lack of
communication has caused adisconnect to occur between
the values and goals present among the different age groups
along with newer generations choosing different career
paths.
* Author for Correspondence
In order to understand where these differences stem from,
you need to analyze how each generation is different when
it comes to their beliefs and values. So, it is best to identify
the different groups present in workplace which range from
those born in 1922 to those born in the early 1990’s.
Moving chronologically, the fi.
African-American Literature An introduction to major African-Americ.docxSALU18
African-American Literature: An introduction to major African-American writers from the earliest expressions to the present. An examination of the cultural milieu from which the writing arose, the ideological stance of each writer studied, and the styles and structure of the works considered
8 wks
.
African American Women and Healthcare I want to explain how heal.docxSALU18
African American Women and Healthcare
I want to explain how healthcare is perceived in the African American community especially amongst women and if their concerns and apprehension are justified. The paper must include a title page, introduction section, abstract section, literature review section, methods section, results section, discussion section, and a signature page. I will attach some samples that were given to me.
.
Advocacy & Legislation in Early Childhood EducationAdvocacy & Le.docxSALU18
Advocacy & Legislation in Early Childhood Education
Advocacy & Legislation in Early Childhood Education
Advocating for Early Childhood Education
Rasmussen College
COURSE#: EEC 4910
Doreen Anzalone
July 15, 2019
Advocating for Early Childhood Education
· What is advocacy?
Advocacy is how we support our children. We as teachers give advice for our children or we listen. We let the children and families know that we believe in them and we will be there for them. Teachers, admin, staff can advocate for children as long as they are in school. Advocates are also trained people and they are not lawyers. One of their responsibility is to stay up to date with the regulations of the educational laws.
· Why is advocacy important to early childhood education?
Its important to help the families because they might be vulnerable in society. We as teachers need to make sure our children and families are being heard. We as teachers need to make sure their wishes and views are being considered when it’s about their child or family. Its because we are helping the family make life decisions about their children and even their family life. Its also important to make sure we are not judging the family or having or our own personal opinions about what is going on when we are helping advocate for the family, we need to make sure we are stating the facts for the family.
· What is your role as an early childhood educator in making legislative changes?
Our role is to be able to email them or decide how to get a hold of them and let them know our questions, comments or suggestions on things that need to be changed, updated. We need to let them know so we can support our school, children, and families. It is our role as educators to stay aware of the laws. The Federal laws we need to make sure we are aware of the
· Family Education Rights & Poverty Act
· The No Child Left Behind
· Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
With these laws and many more they need to hear from schools in the United States. The federal laws mean we need to address the issues. These issues usually involve infringement of the student’s rights and they are to protect the rights. The state laws depend on the state you are in. The state laws this is where you would go if you have a problem or need to voice about
· Teacher Retirement
· Teacher evaluations
· Charter schools
· State Testing requirements
· The required learning standards
· Much more
Your school board is also a great place to help with policies and regulations and any revisions that need to be done.
· What ethical issues must early childhood education professionals consider related to advocacy and why do those issues exit?
In NAEYC the code of Ethical Conduct and in their it describes how any educator is required to act and what they do and not to do. At times as an educator as staff we tend to do what is the simplest or sometimes, we want to please others but when it comes to this, we must remember to follow our responsi.
Advertising is one of the most common forms of visual persuasion we .docxSALU18
Advertising is one of the most common forms of visual persuasion we encounter in everyday life. The influence of advertising in our society is persuasive and subtle. Part of its power comes from our habit of internalizing the intended messages of words and images without thinking deeply about them. Once we begin decoding the ways in which advertisements are constructed, once we view them critically, we can understand how, or if, they work as arguments. We may then make better decisions about whether to buy products and what factors convinced us or failed to convince us.
What are the different forms of advertising?
Modern media comes in many different formats, including print media (books, magazines, newspapers), television, movies, video games, music, cell phones, various kinds of software, and the Internet. Each type of media involves both content and also a device or object through which that content is delivered.
TEAM TASK:
As a team you are going to Review Chapter 4: Visual Rhetoric: Thinking About Images as Arguments. You will
be assigned a Section of the Chapter (written, visual, unfit, political, caricature, photography-maps graphs charts ) and as a Team you willResearch
the content of that Chapter Area (you will see topic page overlap ) and implement the following:
You will look at and interpret a media campaign or advertisement. Focus on social or ethical aspects * Seek to find one or more of the FALLACY TYPES identified Chapter 9 pages 363- 380. Include this information in your findings. Consider and incorporate as many of the following 16 categories :
The objectives: What role does the ad play in the economy?
The audience: Is it targeted to a group that could be considered vulnerable?
Effectiveness: Does it promote something that is socially desirable?
Role in marketing mix: What role does the ad play in the economy?
Image, product differentiation and branding: Is the ad misleading?
Other promotion factors
The unique selling proposition.
The basis for the appeal(s).
How would you make improvements?
The creative philosophy
The slogan
Secondary or supporting points or claims
The tone or mood and manner: Is the ad misleading?
Type of presenter
The motivational appeal: Does it promote something that is socially desirable?
Executional style
Each TEAM will develop a
15 minute class presentation
about their researched area. You have
options to use
power points, maps, videos, and other resources that will help educate your audience about your research.
Your Presentation should include:
A Power Point, the media piece or some type of visual presentation~~
A Question and Answer {Q & A} & Interactive session, quiz,.
Adult Health 1 Study GuideSensory Unit Chapters 63 & 64.docxSALU18
Adult Health 1 Study Guide
Sensory Unit
Chapters 63 & 64
Remember that assigned textbook readings should be supplemental to reviewing & studying the Powerpoint presentations. Answers to these study guide questions can be obtained from the textbook chapters, Powerpoint presentations, as well as class lectures & in-class activities.
Chapter 63: Assessment & Management of Patients with Eye & Vision Disorders
Conditions to Know
: Glaucoma, Cataracts, Retinal Detachment, Macular Degeneration, Conjunctivitis, Eye trauma
· Know the basic structures & functions of the eye – lens, pupil, iris, cornea, conjunctiva, retina, and sclera
· Questions to ask patients regarding issues with the eyes/vision – Chart 63-1
· Snellen Chart is used to assess visual acuity – 20/20 is considered perfect vision (patient can read line 20 of chart while standing 20 feet away) – this is tested in each eye
1. What are some of the most common causes of blindness?
2. What is responsible for the damage to the optic nerve in patients diagnosed with glaucoma?
3. Glaucoma can lead to what primary complication if not treated properly?
4. What are the differences between open-angle & closed-angle glaucoma?
5. What are the primary signs & symptoms of glaucoma?
6. What are the primary treatment goals for patients with glaucoma?
7. What is the first line treatment of glaucoma? What medication teaching points would you want to include in your patient education?
8. What are some common risk factors for the development of cataracts? See Chart 63-7.
9. What are the primary signs & symptoms of cataracts?
10. The most common treatment for cataracts is outpatient surgery, in which the lens affected by the cataract is replaced with a man-made one. Explain the pre and post-operative nursing management & education that is needed for patients undergoing cataract surgery. See Chart 63-8.
11. Retinal detachment is considered a medical emergency. What happens during retinal detachment?
12. What are some symptoms of retinal detachment?
13. Macular degeneration is the most common cause of vision loss in people > 60 years old. What is macular degeneration?
14. What are some risk factors for dry macular degeneration?
15. What are some signs and symptoms of macular degeneration?
16. Nursing management for patients diagnosed with macular degeneration focus on safety & supportive measures. What are some accommodations we should make or educate patients on regarding how to help improve their vision & ADLs when they have this condition?
17. Conjunctivitis is also called “pink eye”. What are the different types of conjunctivitis and what are some symptoms of this condition? Are any of these types considered contagious?
18. What are some teaching points to include when educating a patient diagnosed with viral conjunctivitis? See Chart 63-11.
19. Explain the emergency nursing treatment needed when a patient presents with eye trauma.
Chapter 64: Assessment & Manag.
Advertising Campaign Management Part 3Jennifer Sundstrom-F.docxSALU18
Advertising Campaign Management
Part 3
Jennifer Sundstrom-Fitzgerald
1
Learning Objectives
Analyze advertising campaign parameters
Identify how a creative brief facilitates effective advertising
Describe the implications of advertising management in the global arena
2
Advertising Campaign Parameters
Advertising goals
Media selection
Tagline
Consistency
Positioning
Campaign duration
Effective advertising campaigns require careful planning and attention to specific parameters including Advertising goals, media selection, tagline, consistency, positioning and campaign duration. We will review each parameter beginning with goals.
3
Advertising Goals
A primary goal of advertising is to build brand awareness among existing and new customers. The creative should inform and persuade them to make purchases and build brand loyalty.
4
Build brand awareness
Inform, persuade, support marketing efforts
Encourage purchase decisions
Building Brand Awareness
Successful brands possess two characteristics. Top-of-mind are brands a consumer mentions first when asked about brands in a particular product category – these are brands in our Evoked Set. Top choice is the brand within a product category that consumers prefer the most. So top choice requires top-of-mind. Brand equity, which is the level of brand strength perceived by consumers, leads to top-of-mind and top choice brands.
This is also applicable on the B2B side when business people are faced with modified rebuy situations. A common dilemma I had was for every Fox Graduation Ceremony, there are three per year, and the need for graduation program booklets. There was a printer who I always wanted to hire because I enjoyed working with them, they always had fair prices and delivered high-quality programs in a timely manner. However, due to non-profit regulations, I had to bid the job to at least three vendors. So my top-of-mind, first choice brand was always included but I had to add two other vendors as well. Tell story about Bill DeVece and misspelled student names and how wonderful he was in fixing these issues.
5
Brand image begins with awareness
Consumers recognize the brand
Brand equity leads to top-of-mind and top choice
B2B important in modified rebuy situations
Building Brand Awareness
Successful brands possess:
Top-of-mind
Top choice
The 10 Most Valuable Brands in the World per 2018 study
Coca Cola brand is a good example of a brand with these characteristics. Here is a recent list of a top 10 most valuable and recognized list of global brands. (click link)
6
Goal to Persuade
Dare to be Devoted Campaign
Every Kiss Begins with Kay Campaign
Another common goal of advertising is to persuade consumers that a particular brand is superior to others and should be their top choice. Both of these brands, owned by the same parent company (Signet), do extensive advertising, but only Kay Jewelers has successfully used the same slogan, “Every Kiss Begins w.
Adopt-a-Plant Project guidelinesOverviewThe purpose of this.docxSALU18
Adopt-a-Plant Project guidelines
Overview:
The purpose of this project is for you to choose a plant, conduct online research into the biology of the plant, and communicate what you have learned. You will be preparing an annotated bibliography on the plant you choose. The entire project is worth 50 points
Annotated Bibliography (50 points)
You will prepare an annotated bibliography with a list of the top 10 most interesting facts about your plant.
· Each fact should be paraphrased (i.e. written in your own words, no quotations allowed).
· Then tell me why this is interesting to you – make connections to your life or to currents issues in our world.
· Finally, give a full citation and tell me why you think this is a reliable, trustworthy source. Use this libguide to help you come up with reasons why your source is trustworthy.
· At least one of your sources should be from a peer-reviewed, science journal article.
Here is an example:
Fact 1: Taxol is a chemotherapy agent derived from the bark of the Pacific Yew Tree. The chemical itself is derived from a fungal endophtye within the bark. I thought this was very interesting, because the Pacific Yew tree is native to the state of Washington, and my aunt Jane received Taxol while undergoing chemotherapy for ovarian cancer. I also thought it was interesting because of the mutualistic relationship between the plant and the fungus.Citation: Plant natural products from cultured multipotent cells
Roberts, Susan; Kolewe, Martin. Nature Biotechnology28.11 (Nov 2010): 1175-6.
This is a reliable source because it is published in a peer-reviewed science journal article, written by two PhDs that are providing a review of the current literature on the topic
To complete the assignment, you should first choose a plant, gather articles discussing your plant, read the articles sufficiently enough to discuss the plant, and finally write the annotated bibliography. You are expected to produce original work, and any plagiarism will receive a zero. The paper should be double-spaced, and typed in 12 point font size, with normal margins. The instructions for how to properly cite your sources are at the end of this handout.
*** Reminder: The scientific name of a plant should always be typed in italics, with the first letter of the Genus capitalized. For ex.: Digitalis lanata. When you search for information on your plant online, make sure to use the scientific name, which will bring back a wider variety of results
The bibliography is worth 50 points and will be graded on:
1. Effort
• Quality of references
•Depth/breadth/quality of material covered
2. Following directions/ requirements
I will use the following rubric to grade your bibliography:
Research, Critical Reading and Documentation
Balanced, authoritative sources; correctly cited sources; effectively integrated outside sources. Most sources from science journals
10 pts
Effective sources, correctly cited, Could have a few more.
ADM2302 M, N, P and Q Assignment # 4 Winter 2020 Page 1 .docxSALU18
ADM2302 M, N, P and Q Assignment # 4
Winter 2020 Page 1
Assignment # 4
Decision Analysis and Project Scheduling
ADM2302 students are reminded that submitted assignments must be typed (i.e. can NOT be hand
written), neat, readable, and well-organized. Assignment marks will be adjusted for sloppiness, poor
grammar, spelling, for technical errors as well as if you submit a PDF file.
The assignment is to be submitted electronically as a single Word Document file via Brightspace by
Friday April 3rd prior to 23:59. Front page of the Word document has to include title of the assignment,
course code and section, student name and student number. Second page is the individual/group
statement of integrity that must be signed.
E-mail questions related to the assignment should be sent to the Teaching Assistant or posted on the
Brightspace course website “Discussion page” (viewed by all).
Section M: Parisa Keshavarz ([email protected])
Section N: : Niki Khorasanizadeh ([email protected])
Section P: Makbule Kandakoglu ([email protected])
Section Q: Afshin Kamyabniya ([email protected])
Problem 1: Payoffs/Decision Table (13 points)
A small building contractor has recently experienced two successive years in which work opportunities
exceeded the firm’s capacity. The contractor must now make a decision on capacity for next year.
Estimated profits (in $ thousands) under each of the two possible states of nature are as shown in the
table below.
NEXT YEAR’S DEMAND
Alternative Low High
Do nothing
Expand
Subcontract
$50**
20
40
$60
80
70
** Profit in $ thousands.
Which alternative should be selected if the decision criterion is:
a. The optimistic approach? (3 points)
b. The conservative approach? (3 points)
c. Minimize the regret? (7 points)
Problem 2: Payoffs/Decision Table (15 points)
Dorothy Stanyard has three major routes to take to work. She can take Tennessee Street the entire way,
she can take several back streets to work, or she can use the expressway. The traffic patterns are,
however, very complex. Under good conditions, Tennessee Street is the fastest route. When Tennessee
is congested, one of the other routes is preferable. Over the past two months, Dorothy has tried each of
route several times under different traffic conditions. This information is summarized in minutes of
travel time to work in the following table:
mailto:[email protected]
mailto:[email protected]
mailto:[email protected]
mailto:[email protected]
ADM2302 M, N, P and Q Assignment # 4
Winter 2020 Page 2
No Traffic Congestion
(Minutes)
Mild Traffic
Congestion
(Minutes)
Severe Traffic
Congestion
(Minutes)
Tennessee Street
Back roads
Expressway
15
20
30
30
25
30
45
35
30
In the past 60 days, Dorothy encountered severe traffic congestion 10 days and mild traffic congestion
20 days. Assume that the past 60 days are typical of traffi.
After completing the assessment, my Signature Theme Report produ.docxSALU18
After completing the assessment, my Signature Theme Report produced the following results: Communication, Relator, Individualization, Consistency, and Strategic. When I first saw the themes presented, I was a little skeptical at first but after reading the detailed descriptions I felt like it made a lot of sense and mirrored a lot of what I had already thought about myself.
A core value that I would like to continue to strengthen would be the value of acceptance. One of my top five themes was relator which explained that I have a comfortability with gravitating towards people I already know and building relationships from there. I don’t have issues with making new relationships, but I can see that sometimes I close myself off initially to embracing new ones. With acceptance, you have to understand that there are some situations you can control and some that you can’t but embracing the latter can lead to new experiences that could be beneficial (Riley, 2021). Another core value that I would like to improve upon would be calmness. This fits in well with my theme of consistency. While I am a firm believer of things being fair and consistent, I can get easily upset when things don’t balance out like they are expected to. I know that working on being calm in tense situations will help me adapt easier when things don’t always work out as they should.
One of the strengths that I would like to embrace fully and continue to improve upon is communication. It was no surprise to me that communication was at the top of my list for my themes. When I am in a position of leadership at work, I make it a priority to keep my staff updated on everything that is going on for that night and it is something I expect from my charge nurse when I am working the floor also. A communicator is only effective when they are aware of their style of communicating and how others perceive or respond to it (Marshall & Broome, 2021). As a communicator I know that I can always work on how I communicate non-verbally and with body language especially. The other strength that I would like to continue to work on is of being strategic. The report explained that the strategic theme fit me because I am able to sort through the clutter and find the best route when I am trying to accomplish something. I really believe this about myself because when I have a task I need to accomplish, whether I am in a leader position or not, I will break everything down and reorganize it to make sure I have come up with the best solution. I feel like the best way to do something is the way that makes it concise and without a lot of excess getting in the way.
A characteristic of mine that I would like to strengthen would be that of instinct. My theme of individualization points out that I have an instinct about others and how they work and function. I have always felt that I easily read people and can get a sense of who they truly are and for example in the workplace how they are as a staff member. S.
After careful reading of the case material, consider and fully answe.docxSALU18
After careful reading of the case material, consider and fully answer the following questions:
1. What were the primary reasons for changing the current system at Butler?
2. What role did Butler's IS department play?
3. List the objectives of the pilot. Were there any problems?
4. Do you think Butler made the right decision to utilize this new technology? What implications does this decision hold for Butler's IT department in the long run?
NOTE: Butler refers to it's IT department as IR. You may consider these two acronyms as synonymous (i.e. IT = IS = IR for purposes of this assignment)
.
Affluent
Be unique to
Conform
Debatable
Dominant
Enforce
Ethnic
Internalize
Rank
Restrict
You will write your own sentences using each of the vocabulary words. The sentence
must be an
original sentence
created by you, AND it must use the vocabulary word correctly.
Your sentence
MUST
demonstrate that you understand the meaning of the word.
.
Advanced persistent threats (APTs) have been thrust into the spotlig.docxSALU18
Advanced persistent threats (APTs) have been thrust into the spotlight due to their advanced tactics, techniques, procedures, and tools. These APTs are resourced unlike other types of cyber threat actors.
Your chief technology officer (CTO) has formed teams to each develop a detailed analysis and presentation of a specific APT, which she will assign to the team.
.
Your report should use
The Cybersecurity Threat Landscape Team Assignment Resources
to cover the following five areas:
Part 1: Threat Landscape Analysis
Provide a detailed analysis of the threat landscape today.
What has changed in the past few years?
Describe common tactics, techniques, and procedures to include threat actor types.
What are the exploit vectors and vulnerabilities threat actors are predicted to take advantage of?
Part 2: APT Analysis
Provide detailed analysis and description of the APT your group was assigned. Describe the specific tactics used to gain access to the target(s).
Describe the tools used. Describe what the objective of the APT was/is. Was it successful?
Part 3: Cybersecurity Tools, Tactics, and Procedures
Describe current hardware- and software-based cybersecurity tools, tactics, and procedures.
Consider the hardware and software solutions deployed today in the context of defense-in-depth.
Elaborate on why these devices are not successful against the APTs.
Part 4: Machine Learning and Data Analytics
Describe the concepts of machine learning and data analytics and how applying them to cybersecurity will evolve the field.
Are there companies providing innovative defensive cybersecurity measures based on these technologies? If so, what are they? Would you recommend any of these to the CTO?
Part 5: Using Machine Learning and Data Analytics to Prevent APT
Describe how machine learning and data analytics could have detected and/or prevented the APT you analyzed had the victim organization deployed these technologies at the time of the event. Be specific.
Part 6: Ethics in Cybersecurity.
Ethical issues are at the core of what we do as cybersecurity professionals. Think of the example of a cyber defender working in a hospital. They are charged with securing the network, medical devices, and protecting sensitive personal health information from unauthorized disclosure. They are not only protecting patient privacy but their health and perhaps even their lives. Confidentiality, Integrity, Availability - the C-I-A triad - and many other cybersecurity practices are increasingly at play in protecting citizens in all walks of life and in all sectors. Thus, acting in an ethical manner is one of the hallmarks of cybersecurity professionals.
Do you think the vulnerability(ies) exploited by the APT constitutes an ethical failure by the defender? Why or why not?
For the APT scenario your group studied, were there identifiable harms to privacy or property? How are these harms linked to C-I-A? If not, what ethically si.
Advanced persistent threatRecommendations for remediation .docxSALU18
Advanced persistent threat
Recommendations for remediation of the threat
Research the use of network security controls associated to your threat and industry
Do Not use topics network security,VPN,FIREWALL,ETC
10-12 pages. Double spaced APA style
At least 10 REFERENCES
5 ATLEASt PEER REVIEWED SCHOLARLY
.
Adultism refers to the oppression of young people by adults. The pop.docxSALU18
Adultism refers to the oppression of young people by adults. The popular saying "children should be seen and not heard" is used as a way to remind a child of his or her place and reaffirm the adult's power in the relationship. The saying suggests that children's voices are not as important or as valid as an adult's and they should remain quiet. Children are often relegated to subordinate positions due to socially constructed beliefs about what they can or cannot accomplish or what they should or should not do; this in turn compromises youth's self-determination. This oppression is further highlighted when considering the intersection of age with race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and sexual orientation. You will be asked to consider all of these when reviewing the Logan case and Parker case.
By Day 3
Post
an analysis of the influence of adultism in the Logan case. Then, explain how gender, race, class, and privilege interact with adultism to influence the family's discourse related to Eboni's pregnancy as well as other family dynamics.
.
ADVANCE v.09212015
•
APPLICANT DIVERSITY STATEMENT IN FACULTY SEARCH PROCESS
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
1) How does University of California define “diversity?”
A: The academic senate adopted in 2009 the following broad definition of diversity:
Diversity - defining features of California past, present and future - refers to a variety of
personal experiences, values, and worldviews that arise from differences of culture and
circumstance. Such differences include race, ethnicity, gender, age, religion, language,
abilities/disabilities, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, geographic region and more.
2) Why does UC Irvine expect a diversity statement from applicants for faculty positions?
A: UC Irvine’s commitment to inclusive excellence is integral to our ascendancy among globally
preeminent universities. It provides applicants with an opportunity to discuss how their past or
future contributions will advance this enduring campus commitment. For more information,
please see the Provost’s memo on Inclusive Excellence.
3) Is the diversity statement consistent with University of California policy?
A: Yes. APM 210.1-d, which governs appointment, appraisal and promotion, recommends that
faculty be both encouraged and rewarded for activity that promotes inclusive excellence:
“The University of California is committed to excellence and equity in every facet of its mission.
Teaching, research, professional and public service contributions that promote diversity and
equal opportunity are to be encouraged and given recognition in the evaluation of the
candidate's qualifications. These contributions to diversity and equal opportunity can take
a variety of forms including efforts to advance equitable access to education, public
service that addresses the needs of California's diverse population, or research in a
scholar's area of expertise that highlights inequities.”
4) Is UC Irvine alone among UC campuses in adopting this statement?
A: No. UC San Diego adopted this statement in 2010.
5) How will applicants learn about the diversity statement expectation?
A: Per Provost Gillman’s memo of June 2014, all ads for faculty positions will include the following
sentence: “Applicants are encouraged to share how their past and/or potential contributions to
diversity, equity and inclusion will advance UC Irvine’s commitment to inclusive excellence.”
6) How do applicants provide their diversity statement?
A: There is a dedicated field in UC Recruit for applicants to submit their diversity statement.
7) If an applicant does not provide a diversity statement, will his or her application be considered
incomplete?
A: Yes
http://www.provost.uci.edu/news/InclusiveExcellence.html
http://www.ucop.edu/academic-personnel/_files/apm/apm-210.pdf
http://www.provost.uci.edu/news/Diversity-Statement-June-2014.html
ADVANCE v.09212015
8) What are the components of a diversity statement?
.
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
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Abbasid caliphate and the golden age of IslamThe Gol.docx
1. Abbasid caliphate and the golden age of Islam
The Golden Age
Abbasid Caliphate 750-1258 AD overthrew the Umayyads
Under Abbasid leadership, the Islamic world flourished, leading
to a Golden Age
A centralized government dominated by a theocratic outlook
helped create a sense of unity and purpose for the new caliphate
The unity of the empire allowed for the flourishing of the arts
The Golden Age
Byzantine and Sasanian knowledge was spread throughout the
vast empire and impacted many European kingdoms
Persian becomes the language of the court
Stressed conversion and turned against the Shi’a and other allies
to support a less tolerant Sunni Islam.
Large bureaucracy worked under the vizir, or chief
administrator.
The Golden Age
2. The Muslim conquerors inherited a rich and diverse world from
Byzantium and the Persians
At first, the new Arab rulers let the political and governmental
structures in place—they just ruled over them
One of the first measures they took was to develop schools
The primary function of this was to teach and organize the
practices of Islam
The Quran served as the primary text to teach people how to
read
Sunna
Sunna is the oral tradition passed down of those early Muslims
living in Medina
Despite the expansion and migration of Muslims across the
Mediterranean, the Medinese community still provided the most
important example
This is because they formed the Companions of Muhammad—
those who observed the Prophet
Muslims looked at their lifestyle for guidance on how to
practice Islam
These observations were known as sunna
Hadith
Out of the Islamic schools came the hadiths
Hadiths are important collections of sayings or teachings that
are attributing to Muhammad
3. These are linked through an isnad, which is a chain of people
that links the saying back to someone who heard the prophet say
it or do it.
Major schools of Islamic thought developed around the study
and practice of hadiths
In Sunni Islam there are four major schools, though others exist,
Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi’I, and Hanbali
Sharia
The study of the Quran and sunna, the Islamic legislation, led to
the creation Sharia
Sharia means path or way
It is a system of laws based upon the study of the Quran and
hadith
Sharia’s main function is to instruct the believer on how to live
properly and worship Allah
These new laws and regulations also led to new spiritual and
ascetic practices in Islam
Here the influence of Christian, Hindi, and Zoroastrian monks
are seen upon Islam such as celibacy
Possible Evolution of the Lesser Jihad
As the boundaries of the caliphate stopped growing (Battle of
Tours 732 and failed sieges of Constantinople 717), new
perspectives on jihad emerged
With the rise of Sufism, Islamic mystics, jihad began to take on
notions of spiritual warfare
By the ninth century, two hundred years after Muhammad, ideas
that jihad was an internal war against passions emerged in the
writings al-Dunya and al-Muhasibi
These writings on the lesser jihad are outside the canonical
texts
4. In most cases the spiritual aspects continued to be linked to the
greater aspects of battle and holy war
Baghdad
Baghdad was the greatest Muslim center of learning. Harun al-
Rashid builds the House of Wisdom in Baghdad
The Abbasids created Baghdad and built it near the proximity of
the old Persian highways
The city flourished and was unrivaled in its size and prosperity
Baghdad continued as a major center until the Mongols sacked
the city in 1258
Banks: Created partnerships, bought and sold on credit, formed
banks for exchange of currency
The House of Wisdom
Al-Mansur founded a library in the city of Baghdad
This became known as the House of Wisdom and served as a
private library to the Abbasid dynasty
Scholars from all over the empire came to study and learn at the
House of Wisdom
Jews, Christians, and Muslims worked under the patronage of
the Abbasid Caliphate
The library was completely destroyed in 1258 by the Mongols
It was said that so many manuscripts were thrown into the river
that it turned black from the ink
5. Al-Andalus: Cordoba
The Islamic conquest expanded west and eventually included
the Visigoth kingdom of Spain
The invading Berbers were astonished at the great cities of
Toledo, Cordoba, and Seville
Cordoba became the Umayyad capital of Al-Andalus, which is
present day Spain
It continued as an important center of learning, architecture, and
arts for centuries
The library of Caliph al-Hakam II contained tens of thousands
of volumes
Cordoba
Cordoba flourished as one of the most influential cities in the
west
Cordoba at its height had a population of around 500,000, which
surpassed that of Constantinople
The Muslim conquers built palaces and mosques throughout the
region that rivaled the cathedrals of the Latin west
The city became an important city of banking, commerce, and
agriculture, pioneering forms of irrigation
The famous Islamic scholars Ibn Rushd and Ibn Sina both
resided in Cordoba
Medieval Cairo
Cairo was founded in 969 by the Fatimids
It became the capital of Egypt
The mosque al-Azhar was built in 970
The Islamic school associated with mosque became the central
6. school for Sunni Islam
Jews and Christians continued to work under Islamic rule
The Christians in Egypt were known as Copts and were part of
the Coptic Church
The Golden Age: Leading Figures
Great literary tradition emerges in this period
The caliphate patronized many scholars and providing funding
for the translation of many works
This resulted in many lost works of Greek, Syriac, Persian, and
other languages to be recovered
Firdawsi- He wrote Book of Kings which tells the history of
Persia.
Medical advances were also made thanks to the contributions of
Syrian Christians, who served at the Abbasid court
Bukhtishu-This Nestorian Christian family served the court for
over 250 years
The Golden Age: Leading Figures
Ibn Khaldun: Set standards for the scientific study of history
He stressed that economics and social structure were the causes
of historical events.
Philosopher- Ibn Rushd: Put all knowledge, except the Quran, to
the test of reason--would influence Christian scholars.
Omar Khayyam- Muslim scholar, astronomer and writer.
He also wrote about Aladdin and his Magic Lamp and Ali Baba
and the Forty Thieves.
Ibn al-Haytham- was a polymath who developed ideas on optics
and the eye. He also created a new understanding of human
anatomy
7. One Thousand and One Nights
It is a collection of stories that have origins in Persian and Arab
tradition
Stories such as Aladdin and the Lamb, Sinbad, and Ali Baba and
the Forty-Thieves were later editions
Story revolves a Sasanian king who is betrayed and only wants
to marry virgins and then have them killed the next day
His new wife begins a story each night and does not complete it
to extend her life
Her stories are filled with romance, horror, comedy, lovers,
jinn, ghouls, and other creatures
Islamic Poetry
Poetry played an important role in the Bedouin culture and
continued to play an important role across the Near East
Themes of battle, intense love and sexual intercourse provided
rich themes for poetry
Sufi poetry also developed during the Islamic Golden Age
These spiritual and mystical poems often describe man’s
relationship with God
Science and Technology Innovations
1005- A science library was founded in the major city of Cairo
1030- Ibn al-Haytham publishes major work on optics
1035- Ibn Sina publishes Canon of Medicine, which contained
Greek and Arab remedies and explanations for sicknesses
8. 1075- Astronomers posit the elliptical orbits of the planets
1150- Al-Idrisi prepares a geographical survey of world maps
Golden Age of Islam Overview
Political decline and social disturbances were pacified by urban
wealth, incentives, and artistic creativity
Increase in trade and intellectual creativity
Schools, libraries, and institutions are created in large numbers
by the 12th century in Cairo, Baghdad, and Cordoba
Ancient Greek, Roman, and Persian knowledge is preserved by
Muslim, Jewish, and Christian scholars living in the Abbasid
Caliphate
The flowering of knowledge under the ‘Abbasids
As we have seen, the establishment of the ‘Abbasid caliphate
entailed a
geographical shift away from Syria, with its strongly Byzantine
associa-
tions, and an ideological reorientation away from the
Umayyads’ Arab-
centrism towards a more universal Muslim sense of identity. In
the religious
sphere, the ranks of non-Arab scholars began to grow, while in
the domain
of secular knowledge and culture, translations from Greek,
Syriac, Pahlavi
Persian and even Sanskrit nurtured the development of areas of
scientific
9. enquiry neglected for centuries. Although it is tempting to
consider reli-
gion and science separately, in the ‘Abbasid case it makes more
sense to see
them as existing on a social and intellectual continuum with a
distinct over-
lap between theology and philosophy, where friction sometimes
occurred.
Moreover the limited numbers of scientists or philosophers
should not
automatically be taken as a sign of disparagement for their
professions.
Professional philosophers are hardly a large group in any
society, nor were
scientists before the modern age, and the fact that Ibn al-Qifti
–
names to
mention is therefore rather impressive. The question is the
degree to which
their learning penetrated society as a whole, and in the ‘Abbasid
case one
can see scientific and philosophical influences at work in many
domains,
despite the concern some religious scholars later felt about
engagement with
knowledge of non-Muslim provenance.
In the realm of religion, there was no dramatic break between
the
Umayyad and ‘Abbasid caliphates but rather a diversification
and formali-
zation of earlier trends, and a great deal of cross-fertilization
from other
religions and bodies of knowledge. During the early ‘Abbasid
caliphate,
the scholars of religion came to be collectively known as the
10. ‘ulama’ (those
who sought and disseminated ‘ ilm), an amorphous group
subdivided into
numerous categories of varying prestige of whom some of the
most influ-
ential were the collectors of hadith who, as we discovered in
became vocal critics of the caliphs’ wish to determine doctrine,
a right and
duty which they believed was their own. The scholars of hadith,
often called
traditionists, were the successors of those who had attempted to
guide the
community using the custom of Medina as an indicator of the
sunna of the
Prophet, with the difference that they preferred to write down
previously
oral testimonies and trace them back to the Prophet himself
rather than to
Medinese practice.
Oral reports were replaced by a new written corpus of
information, the
hadith or traditions of the Prophet, in a move which coincided
with a rise in
conversion to Islam, Arabic literacy and paper production.
‘Abbasid culture
was becoming a book culture and the early Islamic oral tradition
could only
maintain its credibility in that format. A written hadith
consisted of two
parts: an actual saying, known as the ‘content’ (matn), and a list
11. of people
who had conveyed the content through the generations from the
time of the
Prophet, known as a ‘chain’ (isnad). A typical hadith ran as
follows:
‘Abd Allah b. Yusuf reported to me that Malik reported on the
authority
of Nafi‘ on the authority of ‘Abd Allah b. ‘Umar – may God be
satisfied
with them both – that the Messenger of God – peace and
blessings be
upon him – forbade the muzabana which was the purchase of
date palms
with a dry measure of dates and the sale of vines for a dry
measure of
raisins.7
Or in a more political vein:
‘Ali b. ‘Abd Allah reported that Yahya b. Sa‘id reported that
Sufyan said
Mansur reported from Mujahid from Ta’us from Ibn ‘Abbas –
may God
be satisfied with them both – that the Messenger of God – peace
and
blessings be upon him – said: There is no migrating after the
conquest
[has begun], only jihad and the intention [to wage it] and when
you go to
war, hasten forward.8
By the early ninth century huge numbers of hadith were
circulating on
every imaginable topic, some of very dubious veracity, and it
was the self-
12. appointed task of hadith scholars not only to collect them but to
examine
them and weed out obvious fabrications. This process led to the
compilation
of several canonical collections of hadith still widely used by
Muslims today,
of which the most renowned are the two Sahihs of al-Bukhari
(d. 870) and
Muslim (d. 875). The first function of the hadith was to enable
scholars
to formulate the legal opinions which directed people’s
everyday lives, but
command of the Qur’an and hadith also enabled the ‘Abbasid
‘ulama’ to
pronounce on religion more generally, sometimes at the caliph’s
expense,
and to develop the text-based approach to higher truth which
became char-
acteristic of Sunnism.
While the traditionists concentrated upon gathering hadith and
verify-
ing them, jurists (fuqaha’) specialized in theoretical law and its
methodol-
ogy, applied that law in real cases as judges and legal advisors,
and trained
younger generations of jurists. It thus fell to them to develop
more system-
atic approaches to law than simply using the Qur’an or early
Muslim prac-
tices as examples to be applied elsewhere. This was partly
necessitated by
the fact that neither the Qur’an nor the sunna covered every
eventuality, but
it also reflected the maturing of Islamic law in an imperial
context where it
was no longer feasible to consult a pious Muslim from Medina
13. every time
a query arose. The scholar credited with effecting the
systematization of
Islamic law is Muhammad al-Shafi‘i (d. 820), who studied with
Malik b.
Anas of Medina and the followers of Abu Hanifa of Kufa before
producing
his definitive methodology for Islamic law in his famous Risala
or Epistle.
Although some of al-Shafi‘i’s ideas were rejected by later
jurists, his
Risala attempted to bring together conflicting views about the
law, smooth
over the contradictions evident in the Qur’an and hadith and
produce a
theoretical method for deriving legal norms from sacred texts.
At the heart
of his theory lay his concept of bayan, which he defined as a
statement from
God in the juridical context. It was the jurists’ task to identify
such state-
ments using four main sources or tools in combination with each
other.
Naturally the Qur’an was the primary source, followed by the
Qur’an
and hadith when they expressed the same rule. Then came
situations in
which the hadith explained a Qur’anic statement, followed by
statements
which appeared in the hadith alone. This was the area where
contradictions
14. abounded, a problem al-Shafi‘i resolved with a number of
methods, includ-
ing scholarly consensus (ijma‘). Finally, in situations without
precedent in
either the Qur’an or hadith, jurists should use their rational
faculty (ijtihad)
to draw analogies (qiyas).9 In other words, the primary source
of law was
the Qur’an, but in cases where the Qur’an was vague or silent,
authenticated
hadith should be used to clarify Qur’anic statements and
supplement them,
with the preferred solution being one on which a reasonable
number of
jurists were able to agree.
One of al-Shafi‘i’s students, Ahmad b. Hanbal (d. 855), whom
we have
already encountered vigorously opposing al-Ma’mun’s efforts to
impose the
doctrine of the createdness of the Qur’an in Baghdad, became
the father of
the fourth canonical Sunni school of law, the Hanbali school,
famous for
its devotion to the hadith and their literal application. In this
era, however,
there were also countless other legal specialists, many of whom
founded
shorter-lived schools which had more or less disappeared by the
end of
associated with
the historian al-Tabari, and the Zahiriyya school, one of whose
champi-
ons was Ibn Hazm in Spain. Although it has become common
amongst
modern Muslims and non-Muslims to see the Shari‘a as a code,
15. in actual
fact it developed as a common law system in which numerous
different
opinions and interpretations offered great flexibility and
adaptability to the
varied circumstances of individuals and communities.
Consensus was never
absolute, and diversity of opinion (ikhtilaf ) was as much a part
of legal life
as agreement, especially in its more theoretical dimensions
where jurists
indulged in highly intellectual problem solving using logical
tools of Greek
origin, which translators and scholars were rapidly making
available to an
Arabic-speaking audience.
The pre-eminence of the Islamic east at this time drew students
from
as far away as Spain to Fustat and Alexandria in Egypt, Medina,
and then
the cities of Iraq to study with such luminaries as al-Shafi‘i, al-
Bukhari
and Muslim. As a result, the study of hadith arrived in Spain at
almost the
same time as the great hadith collections were being compiled
in Iraq. Baqi
b. Makhlad (d. 889), a Cordoban scholar educated in the east,
produced
the first known Andalusi hadith compilation in the hopes of
weaning his
Maliki compatriots off their reliance on a narrow range of books
16. explain-
ing the works of Malik to a more flexible source-based
approach. This was
something of a reversal of the situation in Iraq, where the hadith
schol-
ars appeared as radical conservatives opposed to juridical
rationalism and
theology. Baqi b. Makhlad’s hopes were dashed when he fell
foul of the
Maliki scholars who resented the sidelining of Medinese custom
which
acceptance of the new science of hadith entailed because of the
close asso-
ciation between Malik, the founder of their law school, and his
hometown,
Medina. Another Cordoban scholar who studied abroad, Ibn al-
Waddah
(d. 900), solved the problem by making Malik’s own collection
of tradi-
tions, the Muwatta’, a canonical hadith text alongside the
eastern ones, and
retaining the enduringly popular Mudawwana of Sahnun, a legal
work
based on Medinese custom, as a compromise. The hadith as a
scriptural
version of the sunna thus came to stay across the Islamic world.
While the hadith and related materials provided Muslims with a
dense
quasi-historical account of the origins of their community, the
challenges
to Islam that arose in the early ninth century, from sophisticated
Chris-
tians of a Neoplatonic persuasion in particular, obliged Muslims
to engage
with theology and develop a more philosophical understanding
of their core
17. beliefs in God’s eternal oneness, the prophetic mission of
Muhammad and
the relationship between the ‘religions of the book’. Muslims
called theol-
ogy kalam, literally ‘speech’, and its practitioners defined it as
‘the science
which is concerned with firmly establishing religious beliefs by
adducing
the science of
tawhid, the Arabic term for oneness, unity and, by extension,
monotheistic
belief, of which Islam was seen to be the perfect example, a
designation
which hints at kalam’s function to assert Islam’s place against
Christianity
and Judaism.
This naturally took Islamic learning into abstract areas such as
the
nature of man and God, the status of the Qur’an, prophecy,
predestina-
tion and human responsibility. For theologians these questions
had to be
addressed using ‘aql, human reason, to provide answers in
harmony with
the Qur’an, but they could not be answered by reference to the
Qur’an and
sunna alone as the hadith scholars would have it. The masters of
kalam justi-
fied their approach as a response to the Qur’an’s own
injunctions that man
18. should seek to understand creation and thus should be both
scientist and
theologian at the same time.
Theology had existed in embryonic form during the Umayyad
era, but
its focus at that time was the issue of religio-political leadership
– who
should be caliph or imam – and, by extension, who should
mediate man’s
relationship with God and ensure the community’s well being
not only on
earth but also after death? However, theologians as a
professional group
adhering to a number of different schools only became a
phenomenon in
the ‘Abbasid era, which also, as a consequence, witnessed the
steady crystal-
lization of sectarian tendencies and the divergence of the Sunni
and Shi‘i
paths as their initial disagreements over leadership gained more
detailed
theological elaboration and religious depth. Soon the frequent
Muslim
taunt that Christianity’s division into endless sects showed how
Christians
had strayed from the path could be thrown in the opposite
direction too.
The most renowned theological schools were the Mu‘tazili
school,
which flourished during the ninth and tenth centuries, and the
Ash‘ari
school, established in the tenth century and influential well into
the nine-
teenth. Although necessarily Islamic, both drew on ideas and
intellec-
tual tools which the translation of Greek and Syriac materials
19. (examined
below) had brought within the Muslim purview. The amorphous
Mu‘tazili
school flourished in Basra, Baghdad and Samarra and had
adherents across
the Islamic world who upheld a wide variety of different
beliefs, making
it perhaps more appropriate to call Mu‘tazilism an ‘approach’
rather than
a ‘school’. Sometimes called the ‘people of justice and unity’,
Mu‘tazilis
rejected predestination as unjust and asserted that people were
responsi-
ble for their negative acts, which could not belong to God
because of his
absolute goodness and transcendence, and would be rewarded or
punished
as appropriate. They, like many other ninth-century Muslims,
believed in
the createdness of the Qur’an, again on the grounds of God’s
transcend-
ence, which made it a nonsense to suppose that there could be
anything
of the same eternal, uncreated quality as God. For the same
reason they
also denied that God possessed such patently animal attributes
as speech
or sight which were co-eternal with him. The caliphs al-Ma’mun
and al-
Mu‘tasim patronized Mu‘tazili theologians because they were in
favour
of their rational and discursive approach to religion, but in later
genera-
tions they did not find such overt favour. In a society where
sons followed
their fathers, however, Mu‘tazilism continued on through the
20. generations.
There were also Mu‘tazili preachers who spread the movement
beyond
the cities into the countryside, preaching the message of God’s
ineffable
goodness. As a result, Mu‘tazilism as a worldview and a
theological school
existed until the end of the ‘Abbasid caliphate and, despite its
own demise,
influenced Shi‘ism, Sufism and some branches of Judaism.
Interestingly,
there is currently a revival of liberal Muslim interest in
Mu‘tazilism as a
form of indigenous Islamic rationalism which has much to offer
Muslims
in today’s world.
While Mu‘tazilism gradually decreased in popularity over the
centuries,
its offshoot and rival Ash‘arism became the mainstream
theology of Sunnis
across Islamic lands. Named after its founding father, Abu’l-
Hasan ‘Ali
al-Ash‘ari (d. 935), who was originally a Mu‘tazili, Ash‘arism
asserted that
God did have certain eternal attributes, such as knowledge,
power, sight
and speech, in contradiction to the Mu‘tazili position that God’s
transcend-
ence prevented him from possessing any such attributes. In a
similar vein,
Ash‘ari theologians believed that the Qur’an, God’s speech, was
21. eternal
and uncreated. They also believed that God willed all human
acts, good and
bad, by empowering men to commit them, thereby moving much
closer to
predestination than the Mu‘tazilis without completely
sacrificing the notion
of human responsibility. Ash‘ari theology appealed to the Sunni
scholars of
the Qur’an and hadith and became the orthodox Sunni
theological position.
It achieved this in part by side-stepping awkward issues by ‘not
asking how’
on matters that should be accepted on faith alone because it was
beyond the
capacity of the human mind to grasp the truth of them.
Alongside the Mu‘tazilis and Ash‘aris, various groups of Shi‘i
Muslims
also elaborated their theology, concentrating on the central
status of the
imams and then the challenging matter of their disappearance
from earth.
Muslims
perceived as the usurpation of the religious and political rights
of the
Prophet’s family, particularly ‘Ali and his descendants. Most
Shi‘i Muslims
doubted the legitimacy of the three Rightly Guided Caliphs who
preceded
‘Ali, and all considered the Umayyads to be completely
abominable owing
to Mu‘awiya’s opposition to ‘Ali and Yazid’s culpability in the
massacre of
Husayn and his relatives at Karbala. Several failed rebellions
later, the fifth
22. imam, Muhammad al-Baqir (d. 733), began to develop a
specifically Shi‘i
law and theology by asserting that the imams were recipients of
divinely
inspired knowledge, albeit of a lesser degree than prophecy. His
position
was taken up and elaborated by his son, the sixth imam, Ja‘far
al-Sadiq (d.
765), who asserted that the imams were infallible guides and
that one would
rise up in the future as the mahdi, a term often translated as
messiah.
Prior to the occultation or disappearance of the imams from
earth they
remained the living guides for the community in law, doctrine
and the
pursuit of inner truth. However, after the occultation of the
Isma‘ili and
Twelver imams in the ninth century, these duties were gradually
delegated
to their representatives on earth, the Shi‘i religious scholars.
Although
the Qur’an and those hadith acknowledged by the Shi‘is were
important
sources of law, Shi‘i clerics retained the right to exercise their
own judge-
ment. Moreover Shi‘ism absorbed a great deal from Islamic
philosophy,
Mu‘tazili theology and Sufism, making it intellectual heir to
many of the
trends apparent in the ‘Abbasid age, which is somewhat ironic
23. given the
Sunni character of the caliphate itself. The Buyids and Fatimids,
for exam-
ple, were great patrons of all the sciences and the latter made
Cairo a vital
centre for the study of philosophy and mysticism after Baghdad
had lost
that role.
The early ‘Abbasid caliphate also witnessed the start of
Sufism’s long
development from its ascetic beginnings in Basra into a
meditation on the
mystery of man’s relationship with God and the soul’s
aspiration to return
to its source, influenced by Zoroastrianism and Christian
Neoplatonism.
Unlike law with its communal focus or theology with its
abstract meta-
physical deliberations, Sufism became a highly individualistic
enterprise
which eschewed Islam’s increasingly powerful public edifice in
favour of a
personalized approach in which men and women sought God by
following
the example of Muhammad and other exemplary characters. At
this stage,
Sufism was pietistic and easy to understand in its call for
Muslims to live in
simplicity, do good works and contemplate God, and there was
little differ-
ence between those later labelled ‘Sufis’ or ‘scholars’ beyond
the former’s
otherworldliness.
In Iraq the ascetics of Basra were succeeded by such retiring
characters
as Harith b. Asad al-Muhasibi (d. 857), a pietistic hadith
24. scholar who was
perhaps unfairly said to have been the son of a Zoroastrian by
those keen
to suggest that his religious approach was tainted by un-Islamic
influences.
Although a native of Basra, like so many others of his
generation al-Muha-
sibi migrated to Baghdad, where he taught Junayd, one of the
most famous
of the so-called sober mystics who combined their personal
search for God
with respect for the outward rituals of Islam propagated by the
legal schol-
ars. Nonetheless al-Muhasibi fell foul of Ahmad b. Hanbal, who
disliked
his pietistic ways intensely, probably because he saw him as a
rival for the
support of the Baghdad crowd.
In many areas, especially Iran and Khurasan, early Sufism
mediated the
transition ordinary people made when they converted from
Zoroastrianism
or Christianity to Islam. In many of these cases it took quite
another form
from the sober, self-mortifying approach of Rabi‘a or al-
Muhasibi, gaining
it the label of ‘ecstatic’ or ‘drunken’ Sufism. The experience of
Abu Yazid
Bayazid al-Bistami (d. c. 874), son of a Zoroastrian Persian,
instructed in
the mystical way by a mystic to whom he taught the Qur’an in
return, is
representative. Al-Bistami became notorious for claiming to
have achieved
25. union with the divine and for uttering blasphemous statements
such as
‘glory to Me’ which implied that he and God were
indistinguishable. His
ecstatic approach to mysticism, however, bore some
resemblance to Zoro-
astrian ritual, in which the priest would drink sacred mead to
become one
with the deity, and thus he made sense to converts from
Zoroastrianism
and their children, among whom memories of the old faith
persisted.
Another famous Sufi of this ilk was Abu’l-Mughith al-Husayn
al-Hallaj
(d. 922), known as the ‘carder of consciences’, a Persian who
grew up in Iraq
where his father had moved in search of work. (This is a pun on
al-Hallaj’s
name since hallaj is the Arabic term for a wool or cotton carder
who combs
the fibres to remove impurities, just as al-Hallaj was believed to
cleanse the
consciences of his adherents.) He was a devout man but only
became a fully
fledged mystical preacher after performing the pilgrimage and
spending
a year praying and fasting in the Meccan sanctuary. He then
returned to
southern Iran and began to preach to growing crowds how they
could find
God in their own hearts. He attracted some followers in high
places and
was able to move his family to Baghdad where he gathered the
26. same mass
following as in Iran, arousing great consternation among
government offi-
cials and scholars alike. Al-Hallaj increasingly presented
himself as ready
to die for the sake of his fellow Muslims while also entering
into trances in
which he asserted, ‘I am the Truth’. The parallels with the
passion of Christ
are unmistakable, and when al-Hallaj was eventually arrested
and a warrant
for his execution issued, it is said that he prepared for
martyrdom sure of his
resurrection.
For the common people, the ‘amma, ecstatics like al-Hallaj and
pious
scholars busy compiling hadith collections provided more
satisfying guid-
ance and leadership than the theologians whose subtleties meant
little to
them. That is not to say that the rich corpus of knowledge
circulating among
the elite had no impact at a popular level, since the ways in
which tradition-
ists and early Sufis thought were shaped by the intellectual
trends current
in Islam’s great centres of learning, but there was nonetheless
an intellec-
tual hierarchy. The theologians, although not men of the people,
stood on
the cusp between the teeming population of Baghdad and other
cities and
the cultural elite surrounding the caliphs and those who
emulated them.
While they addressed some of the same matters as the
traditionists, they
27. also adopted rational methods of proof similar to those used in
philoso-
phy, and were among the assortment of intellectuals, scholars
and scientists
patronized by the caliphs and their courtiers who constituted the
vanguard
of the ‘Abbasid intelligentsia. It is to this eclectic intellectual
elite, whose
hallmark effort was the translation movement which so signally
shaped the
‘Abbasid cultural matrix, that we now turn.
The ‘Abbasid translation movement
In addition to the importance of religious learning and the sway
of the
‘ulama’ and mystics over the hearts and minds of the populace,
Muslims of
the elite showed a firm appreciation for the knowledge of the
older cultures
of the Mediterranean, Middle East and India, which were
described as
the ‘rational sciences’ (al-‘ulum al-‘aqliyya), the ‘philosophical
sciences’ (al-
‘ulum al-falsafiyya) or the ‘natural sciences’ (al-‘ulum al-tabi‘
iyya). Inter-
est in this body of knowledge stimulated the translation
movement, two
centuries of feverish intellectual activity during which Muslims
and non-
Muslims worked together to seek out ancient sciences, make
them acces-
28. sible in Arabic, elaborate on them, apply them and circulate the
resulting
knowledge across the Islamic world. These sciences included
mathematics,
physics, metaphysics and philosophy, medicine, astronomy and
what are
now considered pseudo-scientific pursuits such as astrology,
alchemy and
magic.
Astrological works written in Pahlavi Persian were the first to
be trans-
lated, along with a few Sanskrit texts, but the Greek heritage
was the most
significant in proportion and included almost all the works of
Aristotle as
understood by Greek commentators such as Alexander of
Aphrodisias and
Themistius, and the sixth-century Christian philosopher John
Philoponus;
digests of Plato’s works, for the most part via the great
Neoplatonists, Ploti-
nus, his disciple, Porphyry, and Proclus and maybe a few
Platonic political
works in close to their original form; the complete works of the
physician
and philosopher Galen, which included much from Hippocrates;
math-
ematical works by Euclid; in addition to Ptolemaic astronomy
and an array
of other materials. Some works were readily available in
Christian monas-
teries and academic libraries now in Islamic lands, others had to
be sought
in the storerooms and archives of Byzantium, and a fair
proportion were not
in common circulation by the eighth century. Their retrieval and
29. translation
was therefore a directed effort promoted by Muslim society over
a period of
200 years.
As well as being of inestimable value within the Islamic
milieu, this
corpus of knowledge was of universal significance in two
intertwined ways.
Firstly, by seeking out Greek, Persian and Indian learning,
Islamic civiliza-
tion acted as a vital link in the developmental trajectory of
human civiliza-
tion as a whole. Secondly, by engaging with earlier traditions
and taking
them in new directions, Muslims simultaneously made their own
unique
contribution to the sum of human knowledge. Although the
process by
which Hellenic knowledge passed to medieval Europe is often
described
as transmission via the Arabs, this downplays the innovative
and path-
breaking additions made to the body of knowledge which
eventually passed
on to other civilizations and peoples, and the extent to which
factors in early
‘Abbasid culture and society drove scholars to seek out and
translate more
and more arcane scientific materials which were by no means
easy to find in
either Byzantium or the Sasanian Empire prior to the Islamic
30. conquest. It is
a fact that some works or versions of them would have been
totally lost if it
were not for their survival in the Arabo-Islamic environment.
This process,
commonly known by the rather humble title of the translation
movement,
ranks with other major cultural movements in our shared history
in terms
of its impact.
When translation began in earnest in the mid-eighth century,
three
general categories of knowledge or science were most
prominent. On the one
hand, the young ‘Abbasid administrative service which had to
levy revenue
from agriculture, among many other tasks, needed a range of
mathemati-
cal and astronomical skills to apply in land surveying, revenue
assessment,
the calculation of harvests and the maintenance of irrigation
systems. On
the other hand, the ‘Abbasid caliphs themselves showed a keen
interest in
astrology, which served state purposes by providing auspicious
dates for
important public undertakings, and medicine, which was
necessary for
their personal well being. Dialectical and philosophical texts
joined them as
Muslims found it necessary to develop arguments to support
Islamic beliefs
against non-Muslim ridicule or attack. As we shall see, the
order in which
works were translated was not haphazard and works of sustained
utility
31. and application in ‘Abbasid high society were re-translated
several times as
research agendas matured and shifted.
Two questions have exercised scholars of the translation
movement:
first, whether the movement was a top-down process initiated by
the caliphs
themselves or a bottom-up one triggered by a combination of
governmental
utility and an intensification of competition between
administrators; second,
the related question of who should take the credit – the Arabs or
those of
Persian and Christian origin? Such questions are not without
their agendas
and the answers are sometimes politically motivated. Even at
the time of
the translation movement, its coincidence with the Shu‘ubiyya
encouraged
the Persians to vaunt their contributions in contrast to the paltry
cultural
capital the Arab bedouin brought to Islamic civilization. Persian
promi-
nence at this time, and their claim to be possessors of a much
greater level
of civilization than the uncouth Arabs of the desert, has
encouraged the
assumption that most aspects of ‘Abbasid culture, including the
translation
movement, can be attributed to Persian influence.
Early studies of the movement such as De Lacy O’Leary’s How
Greek
astonishingly little atten-
tion to the translation movement at all and see the Arabs as
lucky and
32. chance recipients of other people’s knowledge, mostly that of
the Chris-
tian communities who had preserved Greek learning in their
libraries and
monasteries in Alexandria, Antioch, Edessa and Gundeshapur.
More
recent books by Dimitri Gutas and George Saliba, in contrast,
celebrate
the active and creative way in which Muslims sought, translated
and inter-
rogated knowledge from other civilizations. They, however,
differ in their
depiction of the motivating forces behind the movement. On the
one hand,
Dimitri Gutas sees the caliphs themselves as heavily involved in
direct-
ing the movement, encouraging the court to follow their lead
and person-
ally commissioning translations, in emulation of the Sasanian
monarchs
hand, George
Saliba sees translation as being triggered by social change and
competition
among officials and administrators. He therefore attributes a
much more
passive role to the caliphs themselves, whom he sees as
supporting a more
purely Arab movement already under way in the Umayyad
33. roles of the
different players in the translation movement and to perceive
whether it
was a top-down initiative promoted by the ‘Abbasid caliphs as
individuals
or a more amorphous bottom-up process triggered by the
specific social
and cultural environment in ‘Abbasid Iraq, where both Baghdad
and the
Islamic intellectual centres of Kufa and Basra were situated, in
addition to
older centres of Nestorian and pagan learning such as Nisibis,
Edessa and
Harran. It was perhaps natural for historians of the day to
personalize the
phenomenon by linking it to various caliphs, most notably al-
Ma’mun, but
their actions did not take place in a vacuum and depended on a
certain social
and cultural environment which, even if it was not the original
catalyst of
the movement, certainly perpetuated it long after the caliphs
had lost power
to their Turkish commanders and the Buyids. Whoever takes the
credit, the
great achievement of the ‘Abbasids and the regimes which
emerged in their
shadow was to synthesize and build on the intellectual traditions
which the
early Islamic conquests had brought under their sway by not
simply allow-
ing converts to rediscover their heritage in an Arabo-Islamic
idiom but also
by creating an elite culture in which scientific knowledge and
philosophy
were actively sought out to be rigorously analysed and
34. criticized in a new
Arabo-Islamic environment.
Two essential factors in creating the context for the translation
movement
were the Arabization of the administration of the empire by the
Umayyad
caliph ‘Abd al-Malik in the last decades of the seventh century,
which initi-
ated the process by which Arabic became the Muslim lingua
franca, and
the steady conversion of non-Arabs to Islam. Once the
administration had
shifted from local languages to Arabic, the participation of
Persian, Greek
and Aramaic-speaking groups in government service naturally
entailed
their application of their knowledge in Arabic. To some degree,
then, the
act of translating was incidental to the continuity which
naturally resulted
from the adoption of Arabic by non-Arabs. As the ranks of
Muslims
increased, however, Arabized non-Muslims in government
service began
to fear that their positions were no longer secure. Many such
employees,
or their children, therefore converted to Islam to maintain their
positions,
thus recasting their knowledge in the light of their new religion
as well as
their new language. In the first decades of the ‘Abbasid
35. caliphate, Chris-
tians, Zoroastrians and Jews were all to be found in the imperial
service
working in administrative, scholarly, scientific and medical
capacities, but
many of their descendants converted to Islam. For instance, the
descend-
ants of at least two of al-Mansur’s Zoroastrian Persian
astrologers became
Muslim, as did members of the originally Christian Bakhtishu‘
family of
physicians, and the descendants of Hunayn b. Ishaq, the most
celebrated
ninth-century Christian translator of texts.
It is George Saliba’s contention that these social changes
created such
a competitive environment that officials and state employees
began to seek
out texts which they could translate or have translated in order
to keep
ahead of the game by acquiring skills and knowledge superior to
those of
their colleagues. Texts on mathematics, astronomy, astrology
and medicine
all fell into this category, and the knowledge gained was not for
the greater
good of mankind but for the advancement of individuals or
individual fami-
probably has some
truth to it but it was very hard to keep new knowledge under
wraps, and
the participation of courtiers, ministers, military commanders
and some
caliphs themselves in the translation movement ensured that no
branch
36. of learning could be monopolized by individuals or lineages in
the long
term. A coterie of highly talented and meticulous Christian and
Muslim
scholars, many bilingual or trilingual in combinations of
Arabic, Pahlavi
Persian, Syriac and Greek, made numerous manuscripts
available in Arabic
and, as a larger body of scholars, scientists and translators
formed, scholars
themselves made or sought out additional translations to
comment on and
criticize.
A close analysis of the way these scholars worked indicates
that they
were actually operating in a research environment that strikes a
modern
note even at the distance of a millennium. Christian and Muslim
research-
ers developed projects related to the specific needs of the early
‘Abbasid
governing class for astronomy and astrology, mathematics,
philosophy and
medicine, and then identified the Greek texts which could be
relevant.
Once translated such texts were used to enhance or develop
ideas already
being tested by ‘Abbasid scientists and scholars. Some scholars
worked as
individuals but there were also numerous research teams
working in differ-
37. ent areas such as medicine, optics and astronomy. This research
culture
explains the mutual interest of bureaucrats and caliphs in
translation, the
fact that many texts were re-translated for new purposes and the
fact that
translation ultimately became redundant in the late tenth
century as Arabo-
Islamic science outstripped its forerunners and translations from
Greek
Before looking at the translations and the translators
themselves we
should briefly consider the institutional and technological
framework that
facilitated translation and other scholarly activities. An
institution often
considered integral to the translation movement was the famous
but shad-
owy bayt al-hikma, the ‘house of wisdom’, founded by the
‘Abbasid caliphs
in Baghdad. Although very little is known about its practical
functioning,
the bayt al-hikma has been variously described as a royal
archive, a library
and the nerve centre of the translation movement. Traditionally
its founda-
tion has been attributed to al-Ma’mun, the golden boy of the
translation
movement, but some chance references suggest that it was
established at
least 50 years earlier by al-Mansur or his Persian ministers who
were actu-
ally following the Sasanian practice of maintaining royal
archives of dynas-
38. been part of
al-Mansur’s larger project to portray the ‘Abbasids as the
legitimate succes-
sors of the Sasanians in Iraq, Iran, Khurasan and Transoxania, a
project
equally evident in the design of Baghdad itself, discussed in
Chapter 2,
and al-Mansur’s public reliance on Jewish and Zoroastrian
astrologers from
previously Sasanian territories.
By the reign of al-Ma’mun, the bayt al-hikma is said to have
had a staff
of translators – mainly Persians interested in astrology –
copyists and book
binders who assisted in the task of creating and maintaining the
collection,
but mention of it ceases a few decades later in the reign of al-
Mutawakkil.
Although al-Mutawakkil is often seen as a conservative who did
not wish to
promote ‘foreign’ sciences, it is equally evident that some
important transla-
tions were made during his reign. It is more likely that the
apparent demise
of the bayt al-hikma actually reflected a diminution in the state
role which it
could play after the caliphs moved to Samarra. Nonetheless, in
creating an
academic institute modelled on pre-Islamic libraries and
academies of learn-
ing from Gundeshapur to Alexandria, the ‘Abbasids set a
precedent rapidly
adopted by the Muslim elite around them. Even if the bayt al-
hikma had a
relatively short life as an institution in its own right, the
concept of a library
39. with a reading room for scholars to meet and study outside the
confines of
the mosques had come to stay. Wealthy private individuals
began to set up
their own libraries, and rulers in Iraq and elsewhere competed
to maintain
the most splendid and varied collections, which complemented
the more
narrowly legal and religious titles held in mosque libraries.
This sudden efflorescence of libraries was made possible by the
Muslim
acquisition of paper-making technology from China by way of
Transoxa-
nia, which made book production cheaper and easier than in the
days of
parchment. It also enabled authors and copyists to work more
quickly, lead-
ing to a dramatic increase in the availability of works and
copies of them,
alongside older, rarer and more expensive parchment
manuscripts. This in
turn contributed to an important shift from the oral culture of
earlier times,
in which memorization was valued as more sound than written
and possibly
altered materials, to a new ‘Abbasid written culture that
cherished books as
the repositories of true knowledge, a process we have already
encountered
in the religious realm with the committing of the hadith to
paper.
40. In the environs of Baghdad itself, a courtly lineage, the Banu
Munajjim,
established their own library, the khizanat al-hikma, ‘the
treasury of wisdom’,
which was open to scholars who were not only allowed to read
the books
but also offered free board and lodging in deference to their
commitment
to the pursuit of knowledge. In the tenth century the Samanids
established
a fine library in Bukhara where the philosopher and physician
Ibn Sina,
known in the Latin West as Avicenna, acquired his knowledge
of Greek
science. He described the library as:
a building with many rooms in each of which were chests of
books opposite
each other. In one room there were books on Arabic language
and poetry,
in another jurisprudence and each room was similarly
[dedicated] to a
He adds that there was a catalogue for each subject, including
the books
of the ancient Greeks, and staff who brought the books to him
when he
requested them. In Mosul the governor Ja‘far b. Muhammad (d.
935)
founded a library which provided free paper for readers to make
notes on,
and Basra, Hurmuz and Rayy possessed similar facilities. The
Buyid ruler
of Fars, ‘Adud al-Dawla (d. 977), set up a splendid library for
persons of
41. distinction in an upper storey of his palace in Shiraz, described
in detail by
al-Muqaddasi:
There is a manager, a librarian and a supervisor from among the
people of
good repute in the town, and there was not a book written up to
that time,
of all the various sciences, but happened to be there. It consists
of a long
oblong gallery in a large hall with rooms on every side. He
attached to all
the walls of the gallery and rooms bookcases six feet in height
and three
cubits long, made of wood and decorated. … For every subject
there are
bookcases, and catalogues in which are the names of the
Meanwhile in al-Andalus the Umayyad caliphs ‘Abd al-Rahman
III (d.
-Hakam II (d. 976) built up their own royal
library to rival
those of Baghdad. To such major collections must be added
countless small
private libraries which sometimes held unique works. Avicenna
mentions
that an otherwise unknown jurist of Khwarazmian origin, Abu
Bakr al-
Baraqi, commissioned two books on philosophy from him for
his personal
library but that these were not commonly available because Abu
42. Bakr never
owever,
and Cordoba
alone was reputed to have 70 libraries and a thriving trade in
book copying
and selling which enabled wealthy collectors to acquire all the
bestsellers of
their day, including the translated Greek classics.
Such libraries reached their apogee in Egypt, where the Fatimid
caliphs
established a vast library and study centre in their palace with
40 rooms
the knowl-
edge of the Greeks. It was only surpassed by the caliph al-
Hakim’s great dar
al-hikma or dar al-
‘state’ libraries were
accompanied by private foundations, an example of which was
the academy
of the minister Ibn Killis. In the case of the Fatimids and their
courtiers,
the great Hellenic academies in Alexandria, which had not been
destroyed
by Muslims despite the myth to that effect, provided as much of
a model as
the ‘Abbasid libraries further east. Sadly the Fatimid dar al-
hikma suffered
many vicissitudes in the turbulent last century of the Fatimid
caliphate and
was finally closed by Salah al-Din after he assumed power in
its books sold, destroyed and dispersed forever.
The other institution which underpinned Baghdad’s Golden Age
was
the salon or majlis, a word which denoted both a place and the
43. gathering
which took place within it. The idea of gathering together
scholars, intel-
lectuals, poets and other interesting types on a regular basis for
a session
of stimulating conversation and witty repartee was hardly new
to Islam but
it came to take very diverse forms under the ‘Abbasids, from
ribald poetic
recitations with slave girls to extremely intellectual debates
about religion
and reason. While the Umayyad caliphs had patronized poets
and culti-
vated an interest in the religious sciences, intellectual salon
culture was the
product of the ‘Abbasid court in Baghdad, and temporarily
Samarra, in the
ninth to tenth centuries. The caliphs themselves presided over
some salons,
but soon the number multiplied as chief ministers and other
court person-
nel competed to hold their own such gatherings.
It was understood that people of differing views would attend a
majlis
and that debates and even polemics might ensue. Christians,
Muslims and
Jews mixed at such gatherings and it is a measure of the
academic free-
dom of the time that individuals of very different backgrounds
felt able to
express themselves. The Christian scholar and translator Matta
44. b. Yunus was
apparently attacked fiercely for his belief in logic at the salon
of the minister
Ibn al-Furat by Abu Sa‘id al-Sirafi, who was opposed to the
infiltration of
philosophical ideas into Islam, while Matta’s Christian student
Yahya b.
‘Adi criticized the logical premises of Islamic theology in a
The tenets of Mu‘tazilism too were debated in the salons.
Attendance at
a majlis resulted in patronage and was the consequence of it.
Newcomers
who entertained the host with their acuity could expect
remuneration while
those who already enjoyed the favours of the patron would be
required to
attend. It was therefore not simply a social and intellectual
institution but
also a way in which aspiring intellectuals and scholars made
their mark and
found patrons willing to pay them, offer them board and lodging
or help
them secure access to more permanent employment as ministers,
physi-
cians, librarians and ‘royal’ scholars.
Translations, translators and scientists
It is generally although not universally accepted that the first
tranche of
‘Abbasid translations related to astrology and astronomy. Near
Eastern
society was saturated by astrology, which was used to write
horoscopes and
determine auspicious and inauspicious days for activities, and,
45. although not
condoned by Islam, such practices soon entered Islamic culture.
It is related
that in choosing the site of Baghdad and the date for the
commencement of
construction, al-Mansur consulted a team of Persian astrologers.
Nawba-
kht, a Zoroastrian astrologer, assisted by the Jewish astrologer
Masha’allah
and other members of the astrological team, provided him with
an auspi-
cious date. In the ensuing years, astrology took pride of place
among the
sciences patronized by the caliph, and several Persian
astrological works,
some translations of Greek originals, were duly translated into
Arabic.
Astrologers soon began to author new works, the best known of
which is the
Great Introduction [to Astrology] of Abu Ma‘shar (d. 886), a
native of Balkh
in Khurasan, which soon found its way to Spain, where the
Umayyads had
cultivated local astrology of Roman or Byzantine derivation
from the early
ninth century but eagerly added Arab-Greek works to that
corpus.
Although a pseudo-science, astrology depended on a firm
astronomical
understanding of the positions of the sun, moon and planets.
Astronomical
manuals, known as zij, provided this information for particular
locations
in the form of tables and explanation, and the ‘Abbasids eagerly
sought out
manuals such as the Sasanian Zik-i Shariyar and Zik-i Arkand
46. and Ptolemy’s
Almagest. Manuals of Indian origin may have been added in the
early 770s
when a scholar accompanying an embassy from Sind supposedly
brought