Philosophy And Science Abu Bekr ibn Muhammad ibn alHusayn Al-Karaji (953 - 1029) Karaji was an IranianMathematician It appears both as al-Karaji and as al-karkhi but this is not a http://www.forgani.com/my_science.htm
Extractions: A.Saiid-e-A.Kheyr 1201-1274 A.D. born in Tus Nasir al-Din Tusi 1207 A.D. born in Balkh, Persia Mevlana Jalaluddin Rumi 1194 A.D. born in Shiraz Sa'di 1320-1389 A.D. born in Shiraz Shams-od-Din Mohammad Hafez 1380-1429 A.D. in Kashan, Iran Ghiyath al-Din Jamshid Mas'ud al-Kashi Abu Bekr ibn Mohammad ibn al-Husayn
Introduction To Islam And you didn t praise him, so do not insult him. . * A man committedGheebah in the presence of Ma rouf alkarkhi. al-karkhi said http://www.iad.org/Islam/back.html
Extractions: In the Name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful "And follow not that of which you have no knowledge. Verily! The hearing, and the sight, and the heart of each of those ones will be questioned." (17:36) "Read! In the Name of your Lord Who has created. He has created man from a clot. Read! And your Lord is the Most Generous. Who has taught by the pen. He has taught man that which he knew not." (96:1-5) Be aware, my respected brothers, that whoever guards his tongue will make fewer mistakes. He will be in control of himself and avoid from falling into something wrong. The Prophet (pbuh) guaranteed Paradise for one who guards his mouth. He is reported to have said: "Whoever gives me surety to safeguard what is between his jaws and what is between his legs, I guarantee for him (entrance into) Paradise." [What is between his jaws is the Lisan (tongue); what is between the legs is the Farj (private parts)." Imam Nawawi said, "Be aware that it is incumbent upon every Mukallaf (competent person in full possession of his faculties) to guard his tongue against all kinds of talking except when it is evident that talking will be a means of beneficence. When talking and being quiet are both equal as a prudent measure, then the Sunnah is to abstain from talking. Because often even a lawful talking may lead to unlawful or distasteful matters. This is a common practice, but there is nothing equivalent to safety." If your tongue is right and straight then the extremities will be straight. But if your tongue disobeys and indulges in the private affairs and honor of people, then the extremities will disobey and Allah's prohibitions will be violated. The Prophet (pbuh) is reported to have said:
Famous Scholars Of Sufism 7. Ma ruf alkarkhi Sari was the pupil and disciple (murid) of Ma ruf al-karkhi,and the teacher and maternal uncle of Junayd of Baghdad. http://www.oneummah.net/tasawwuf/scholars.htm
Extractions: Famous Scholars of Sufism The earliest scholars of sufism, after the noble Prophet (saaws), himself, include many of his family members and companions. Imam 'Ali ibn Abu Talib, Abu Dhar al-Ghiffari, and many others are counted among them. Below is a brief history of famous sufis (urafa) since the second century of Islam. This is an excerpt from Light Within Me . This portion is by Shaheed Murtada Mutahhari 'Urafa' of the Second/Eighth Century: 1. Al-Hasan al-Basri The history of what is termed as 'irfan , like kalam , begins with al-Hasan al-Basri (d. 110/728). He was born in 22/642 and lived for eighty-eight years, having spent nine-tenths of his life in the first century H. Of course, al-Hasan al-Basri was never known by the term sufi, but there are three reasons for counting him amongst the sufis. The first is that he compiled a book called Ri'ayah li huquq Allah (Observance of the Duties to Allah), which can be recognized as the first book on sufism. A unique manuscript of this book exists at Oxford. Nicholson has this to say on the subject: The first Muslim to give an experimental analysis of the inner life was Harith al-Muhasibi of Basrah ... 'The Path' (
PUSAT PENGAJIAN TEKNOLOGI INDUSTRI Dr. Abd. Karim Alias. Profesor Madya. 2367/2221. akarim@usm.my. Dr. Abbas Fadhl Mubarekalkarkhi. Pensyarah. 2107. abbas@usm.my. Dr. Abdul Khalil Shawkataly. Pensyarah. http://registry.usm.my/teldir/industri.htm
Extractions: PUSAT PENGAJIAN TEKNOLOGI INDUSTRI School of Industrial Technology) NO. BANGUNAN G07 Nama Jawatan No. Sambungan Profesor Madya Wan Rosli Wan Daud Dekan Faks E-Mail dean_ind@usm.my Puan Kalsom Din Pembantu Tadbir (Kesetiausahaan) kalsom@notes.usm.my Dr. Abd. Karim Alias Timbalan Dekan Akademik/ Pembangunan Pelajar akarim@usm.my Profesor Madya Rozman Hj. Din Timbalan Dekan ( Pengajian Siswazah rozman@usm.my Encik Muhamad Tarmizi Rahim Penolong Pendaftar tarmizi@notes.usm.my Puan Sardara Baby Rahmat Ali Pembantu Tadbir (Kesetiausahaan) sardara@notes.usm.my Encik Zolkiflei Yahya Pembantu Tadbir (N7) Pejabat Am Dr. Mohd Azemi Mohd Noor Profesor mazemi@usm.my Dr. Mohd. Omar Abd Kadir Profesor akmomar@usm.my
Informativo E-CIAT Raquel Ayala Doval; Gerente de Administración Interna, Enma de al-karkhi. http://www.ciat.org/noti/index_espanol.asp
Informativo E-CIAT Raquel Ayala Doval; Gerente de Administração Interna, Enma de al-karkhi. http://www.ciat.org/noti/index_portugues.asp
Al-Karaji -- Encyclopædia Britannica also known as alkarkhi, in full, Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad ibn al-Husayn al-Karajimathematician and engineer who held an official position in Baghdad (c. 1010 http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=368862
Ibn Taymiyya And Sufism the followers of the Path like the majority of the early shaykhs (shuyukh al-salaf)such as Fudayl ibn `Iyad, Ibrahim ibn Adham, Ma`ruf al-karkhi, al-Sari al http://www.abc.se/~m9783/n/itaysf_e.html
Extractions: Ibn If Certainly the striver will sometimes err, falsely guided by his inspiration or intuitive perception of the situation, just as the mujtahid sometimes errs. But, he says, even when the mujtahid or the inspired striver is in error, he is obedient. Blessings and Peace on the Prophet, his Family, and his Companions.
Sufism Of Putative "Salafi" References Sufi cloak from alQushayri, from Abu `Ali al-Daqqaq, from al-Nasrabadhi, from AbuBakr al-Shibli, from al-Junayd, from al-Sari al-Saqati, from Ma`ruf al-karkhi http://www.abc.se/~m9783/o/spsr_e.html
Extractions: - Siddiq Hasan Khan al-Qinnawji. Allah have mercy on all of them. 1. IBN QUDAMA Muwaffaq al-Din- a Qadiri Sufi: 3-5. AHMAD IBN TAYMIYYA, IBN AL-QAYYIM, IBN RAJAB- all Qadiri Sufis: Also cited by by Jamal ad-Din at-Talyani in his book Targhib al-Mutahabbin fi Labs Khirqat al-Mutamayyizin. Manuscript Chester Beatty 3296 (8) in Dublin, folio 67a. The list continues: vi Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya (d. 751) vii Ibn Rajab (d. 795) 6. AL-DHAHABI -a Suhrawardi and Akbari Sufi: Al-Dhahabi said in al-Muqiza (p. 88-90): 8. AL-SAKHAWI - a Shadhili and Suhrawardi Sufi: Both al-Suyuti in al-Manhaj al-Sawi fi Tarjimat al- Nawawi and al-Sakhawi in al-Manhal al-Rawi fi Tarjimat al-Nawawi name the latter the Qutb of his time. 9. AL-SUYUTI-a Shadhili, Ahmadi, Qadiri, Suhrawardi, Uwaysi Sufi: 12. AL-QARI: On the obligation to seek purification he writes (1:78): In the last chapter al-Qari writes (2:354-355): 13. AL-SHAWKANI- A Naqshbandi Sufi:
Islam Online- News Section which burnt down during the USled attack and his brother s smithery shop becameout of kilter due to the power outage, Muhannad al-karkhi, a university http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2003-05/12/article07.shtml
Extractions: Home About Us Media Kit Contact Us ... Your Mail Search Advanced Search News People Against Prisoner Abuse The World in Pictures ... Muslim Heritage Discover Islam Introducing Islam Ask about Islam Contemporary Issues My Journey to Islam ... Qur'an Fatwa Fatwa Bank Ask the Scholar Live Fatwa Counseling Cyber Counselor Directories Site Directory Islamic Society Islamic Banks TV Channels ... Telephone Code Services Prayer Times Matrimonial Date Converter Calendar ... E-Cards Newsletter Enter your E-mail Iraqis Eke Out Living By Selling Ice Sheets, Fired Missiles An Iraqi man sells ice sheets to eke out a living By Aws al-Sharqy, IOL Iraq Correspondent BAGHDAD, May 12 (IslamOnline.net) - As feelings against the U.S. are running high in war-scarred Iraq for failing to live up to its promises of welfare and prosperity, Iraqi youth try to ride out the storm of unemployment by eking out a living of selling fuel, ice sheets and parts of the bronze statues of toppled Iraqi president Saddam Hussein. Iraqi youth assemble before overcrowded fuel stations with each one of them carrying a small tank that can barely allow for 20 liters of fuel. One can await 24 hours in a long queue to take his "ration" but it is worthwhile for them, given the boom in oil sale in postwar Iraq.
::: SHEIKH SALMAN AL-OADAH || AFTER IRAQ ::: plunderers. We bid farewell to Baghdad, city of alMansur, al-Rashid,al-Nu`man, Ahmad al-karkhi, al-Junayd, Ishaq, Muti`, and Hammad. http://www.muslimuzbekistan.com/eng/islam/2003/05/a03052003.html
Extractions: Source: Islam Today.Net I was stricken with grief on the day that Baghdad fell. I doubt any Muslim could feel any different while watching the fall of the city of the Caliphs at the hands of Roman plunderers. We bid farewell to Baghdad, city of al-Mansur, al-Rashid, al-Nu`man, Ahmad al-Karkhi, al-Junayd, Ishaq, Muti`, and Hammad. She was the land of our rulers, Caliphs, scholars, and poets. She was the land of our culture, faith, and nobility, and the land of our glorious history and civilization. The area of the Tigris and the Euphrates has been an important region since 5000 BC. It is where civilization first sprang forth from simple villages engaged in subsistence agriculture. There was a time when these rivers were linked by a system of canals that was a miracle of agriculture. Countless nations and peoples have come and gone upon that land. Among them were the Sumerians, one of the earliest builders of human civilization. From within Iraq arose the largest empire the world had ever known. Then came Babylon, the Assyrians, the Chaldeans. The Islamic era was the most glorious era that Iraq passed through. Iraq preserved Islam for centuries while it remained the capitol of the Caliphate for more than 600 years. Baghdad was founded during the reign of Ja`far al-Mansur to be the capitol of the Caliphate. The city reached the height of its grandeur during the reign of Harun al-Rashid. Among Baghdads other names are Dar al-Salam, al-Rashid's Capitol, al-Mudawwarah (the Circular City), and al-Zawra'.
Islam & Sufism Ma`ruf alkarkhi, one of the righteous imams of the early Muslims (salaf), said, Whoever says, Allahumma aslih Ummata Muhammad Allahumma farrij `an Ummati http://faizee.blogspot.com/
Extractions: Saturday, May 29, 2004 Just thought will compile my Shaikh's sayings as a separate blog and started on http://faizeesarkar.blogspot.com . Please visit it and let me know your comments. posted by Shahul Hameed @ 12:44 AM comments What is Sufism? Does Sufism teach a married to think and love for Allah only? How about his wife and family - in terms of his affections (love) and duties to his wife and family? Should he neglect them? I was quoted "Your first love must be for Allah". Where does a wife stands? Didn't Allah made marriage for a man and woman? Where does Sufism stands in the relationship of a husband and wife? The idea that a married Sufi should neglect duties to wife and family is not from Islam in the least and is a gross error. On the contrary, a Sufi spouse is more strictly bound to love and respect his dependents, and observe fully the rights he owes them, as should in fact any Muslim according to the Shari`a, but even more so if one claims a connection to the paths of self-purification and perfecting of the soul. As for the saying that one's first love should be for Allah, it never cancels out but rather goes together with the saying of the Prophet, upon him peace: "The best of you are those that treat their spouses best, and I treat my spouses best." In fact it is for the sake of Allah that we should be even more careful, as Sufis, to love and treat dearly those among all humanity He places in our care, beginning with dependents.
Seeker's Digest: 03/01/2004 - 03/31/2004 Making Du`a for the Umma of the Beloved of Allah (peace and blessings unlimitedbe upon him, his family, companions, and followers) Ma`ruf alkarkhi, one of http://blog.masud.co.uk/archive/faraz/2004_03_01_faraz_archive_.htm
Extractions: Useful links and articles related to Islam, current affairs, Islamic songs, literature, general interest issues... and life, gathered by Faraz Rabbani (of www.sunnipath.com), a seeker of knowledge. Making Du`a for the Umma of the Beloved of Allah (peace and blessings unlimited be upon him, his family, companions, and followers)
Gacetilla Matematica Prb001.htm Translate this page Información adicional Este problema aparece en un tratado de álgebra deal-karkhi en Bagdad a principios del siglo XI. ( 1) Dos camelleros. http://www.arrakis.es/~mcj/prb001.htm
Extractions: Class Meetings: Tu and Th, 12:30-1:45, ANA 0100. Instructor: Prof. Jonathan Rosenberg Office: Room 2114, Mathematics Building campus phone: 55166 email: jmr@math.umd.edu This course is intended to give an idea of what serious mathematical reasoning and mathematical research are all about, by looking carefully at selected writings by great mathematicians from the past, such as Euclid, Newton, Gauss, and Hilbert. At the same time, it will be in part a "humanities" course, as we will study by example the history and literature of mathematics. The course is not in any way intended as a substitute for more traditional math courses, such as the calculus sequence. Instead, it will deal with questions which are rarely if ever treated in such courses, such as what does it mean to do "research" in mathematics? how does one go about reading the original literature in science and mathematics? what makes great mathematics and mathematicians great? how are mathematicians led to their ideas?
Interactive Mathematics Miscellany And Puzzles Chapter 8. Diophantine Problems. The Pythagorean triangle; The PlimptonLibrary tablet; Diophantos of Alexandria; alkarkhi and Leonardo Pisano; http://www.cut-the-knot.org/books/ore_nums/content.shtml
Extractions: Recommend this site Preface Chapter 1. Counting and Recording of Numbers Numbers and counting Basic number groups The number systems Large numbers Finger numbers Recordings of numbers Writing of numbers Calculations Positional numeral systems Hindu-Arabic numerak Chapter 2. Properites of Numbers. Division. Number theory and numerology Multiples and divisors Division and remainders Number systems Bimu number systems Chapter 3. Euclid's Algorism Greatest conunon divisor. Euclid's algorism The division lemma Umt common multiple Greatest common divisor and least common multiple for several numbers Chapter 4. Prime Numbers Prime numbers and the prime factorization theorem Determination of prime factors Factor tables Fermat's factorization method Euler's factorization method The sieve of Eratosthenes Mersenne and Fermat primes The distribution of primes Chapter 5. The Aliquot Parts The divisors of a number Perfect numbers Amicable numbers Greatest common divisor anl least common multiple Euler's function Chapter 6. Indeterminate Problems
Extractions: One of history's greatest crimes is the almost complete omission of the debt the West owes to Islam and the Muslims. Because Europe was reacting against Islam it belittled the influence of Saracens and exaggerated its dependence on its Greek and Roman heritage. So today an important task for us is to correct this false emphasis and to acknowledge fully our debt to the Arab and Islamic world. (Ghazanfar, Islamic World and the Western Renaissance) Students in Western Universities might have heard that Muslims were once leaders in science, but their accomplishments are often belittled, and their scientists are reduced to but borrowers who translated Greek and Persian works then assumedly hid them on a bookshelf so the West can later expand and build on them once it awakes from its sleep during the dark age. Donald Cardwell, in the Fontana History of Technology, claims that technologies imported into Europe during the Dark Ages "originated in China and India and were merely passed on by the Arabs." While cultural bigotry plays a major role in this distortion of the facts, the achievements of the Muslims have been left out of Western historical records as a result of the hatred of Islam embedded in the Judeo-Christian world, which shall be traced to many factors.