In Islam, a name of God meaning "The Last".
Names of the Essence. Names of the Qualities. Essence, first determination, eye, spring. The eye of the heart, the organ of intellectual intuition. Coexistence and co-habitation more. A famous debate in medieval philosophy according to which there are two distinct sets of truth: A legal opinion issued by a scholar of Islamic law.
Overflowing, outpouring, flux, effusion, emanation. The original, unblemished state of human nature. The foundations of the religion of Islam. Renowned 13th century Sufi treatise. Voluminous 13th century Sufi treatise. A theory of rational behavior for interaction between agents regulated by a set of rules and a set of outcomes.
The Divine Presence; also collective invocation accompanied by dancing more. Saying s of the Prophet. The Essential Nature of God. The rite of pilgrimage to Mecca more. In Islam, one who remains true to the fitrah.
Animal endowed with speech. Arabicized form of Greek Hyle. The force of decision, spiritual aspiration. The faculty of sensation, the domain of the senses.
The intellectual viewpoint increasingly prevalent in the West since the time of the Renaissance, replacing the traditional view of God. The letters of the Arabic alphabet, and the sounds they represent. The Divine Aseity or Ipseity. Sanctifying virtue, spiritual beauty. Consensus of the Muslim community on a particular legal issue. A creative but disciplined intellectual effort to derive legal rulings for new situations from the accepted juridical sources of Islam. Sincerity, purity of intention. A "means-end" view of rationality that ranks actions in terms of their likelihood to satisfy a given set of objectives more.
The world of the Divine Omnipotence or Immensity. Divine Rigor; awe-inspiring Majesty. Synthesis, union, unitive consciousness. The tax levied upon non-Muslims living within the borders of the Islamic state. The Black Cube, the primordial house of worship in Mecca that is the holiest site in Islam, and to which all Muslims orient themselves when praying.
Often translated as "unbeliever"; literally, "one who covers over," meaning 'one who covers over truth' in some way or another. Dialectical theology based upon reason and rational investigation. Vicegerent or representative of God. A Persian term for a Sufi retreat or cloister more.
A school of jurisprudence. Literally, "a place of study. One who undergoes the divine attraction al-jadhb. It is refers to people that are consulted on Islamic matters. These people are highly learned in Islam. Ahzab is used to describe the different tribes that fought the Muslims in the Battle of the Ditch in C. Allah is Great God is Great. It was frequently used by the Muslim forces as their battle cry.
This title was given to the Khalifah. These were the people of Madinah who responded to the Prophet's call to Islam and offered Islam a city-state power. A similar meeting took place the next year when more Muslims from Yathrib pledged their allegiance to the Prophet. It is on this plain that humanity will be raised on the Day of Judgement for questioning and judgement.
During the hajj on the ninth day of the month of Zhu-l-Hijjah, Muslim pilgrims gather on this plain for one day. For men this is from the navel to the knee. For the women it is all of her body except the hands, feet, and face.
"Glossary of Arabic Terms: An Islamic Dictionary" by Saul Silas Fathi. In ish this year-old Iraqi-born Jew fled Baghdad to Israel. A very informative. The following list consists of notable concepts that are derived from both Islamic and Arab tradition, which are expressed as words in the Arabic Many Arabic concepts have an Arabic secular meaning as well as an Islamic meaning.
An individual verse in the Quran. Surah Baqara Ayah of the Quran. It is called the throne of the Quran. Don't remind me for 30 days.