نبذة عن حياة ابن سينا باللغة الانجليزية
أبو علي الحسين بن
عبد الله بن الحسن بن علي بن
سينا، عالم وطبيب مسلم من بخارى
بحث جاهز باللغة الانجليزية عن إبن سينا (Avicenna (ibn Sinعلماء عرب .. نطرح الموضوع باللغة العربية واللغة
الانكليزية أبرز إنجازات ابن سينا
كتب ومؤلفات ابن سينا
بحث عن ابن سينا سيرة ابن سينا ابن سينا نشأة ابن سينا وحياته علوم ابن سينا
العلوم الفلكية علم الأحياء علم النبات
الفلسفة أبوطيلون ابن سينا في الإنجليزية عن ابن سينا بالانجليزي ومترجم موضوع
انجليزي عن عالم مشهور موضوع انجليزي عن العالم
معلومات عن ابن سينا مختصرة موضوع انجليزي عن العالم
الرازي تعبير عن شخص مشهور بالانجليزي قصير تعبير عن قدوتي
ibn sina
بن سينا معلومة عن ابن سينا معلومات عن ابن سينا
مختصرة
الكتب ملحد شيعي انجازات ابن سينا وفاة
ابن سينا
Avicenna
a biography 1878
Avicenna Muslim philosopherAbu Ali
Houssen Ben Abdallah Ben Sina (known as)
Famous philosopher and doctor Arab, was
born, 980 year of Jesus Christ, Afschema, dependent town of Shiraz, and whose
father was governor. He began his studies at the age of five, in Bokhara, where
his father had taken him, and at eighteen he was already well educated to
compete with his masters. He was only a student when he cured the emir of a
serious illness. This cure laid the foundations of his reputation, and he
deserved the favor of the prince. After several vicissitudes arrived in his
fortunes after setbacks suffered by his protectors, he had retired to Rei,
where he had become at once the first physician and the vizier of Madj de-Eddaulah;
forced to abandon the Irac which Mahmoud Sebektegni threatened with his arms,
he went to Hamadan, where he obtained the same confidence and the same honors
from Chams-Eddaulah. It was in this eminent post that he conceived the plan of
his treatise on metaphysics, entitled Ketab-el-Shefa, and he composed the first
part of his canons, which for nearly six centuries were followed exclusively in
Europe in all the worlds. schools. He resists his duties as vizier at the death
of Chams-Eddaulah; but one of the ministers of the successor of this prince,
suspecting him of keeping in touch with Ala-Eddaulah, Sultan of Isfahan, had
Avicenna shut up in a castle. The latter only came out when the sultan had
defeated the successor of Chams-Eddaulah. The conqueror showered him with good
deeds, and conferred on him the same dignity with which many princes had
already honored him. Scientific work, the care he was obliged to give to
politics, and some excesses committed at the table and in the women's trade,
had begun to bring a fatal blow to his health, when one of his slaves, who
wanted seize his wealth, bore him the mortal blow by mixing a large dose of
opium with the potion he took to calm his attacks of epilepsy. He died soon
after, the year 428 of the Hegira (1037 of Jesus Christ), to Hamadan, where we
still see the ruins of his tomb.
Endowed with a prodigious memory and a
rare facility, Avicenna was unquestionably one of the most extraordinary men
produced by the East. He has composed on every kind of science works of which
only one seems to have filled the life of a laborious man. In addition to his
treatise on philosophy entitled Adouych-Felasyfch, he is the author of several
treatises on alchemy (or rather chemistry), physics and mineralogy. In all
these productions, Avicenna shines less by the originality than by the
intelligence with which he was able to choose and draw from the works of the
Greek authors at a time when the knowledge of the Greek language was not
widespread.
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