Abu Zayd al-Dabusi | |
|---|---|
| Died | 1038/39 |
| Academic work | |
| Notable works | Asrār ('Mysteries'),Takwīm lil Adilla (‘System of demonstrations’),Taalīkas. |
| Notable ideas | dialectics |
| Influenced | Salah al-Dīn al-Ṣafadi |
Abū Zayd al-Dabūsī; he isAbd Allāh, orUbaid Allāh ibn Umar ibn ‘Īsa al-Dabūsi al-Bukhārī Hanafī al-Qadī (عبد الله أو عبيد الله بن عمر بن عيسى الدّبوسي البخاري الحنفي القاضي); a founding jurist and most eminent scholar of theHanafī school in the eleventh century.[citation needed] His reputation for learning was proverbial. He established the science ofdialectics supporting his analysis and argument on examples extracted from scripture. He composed severaltaalīkas.[n 1] Among his writings wereAsrār ('Mysteries')[n 2] and theTakwīm lil Adilla (‘system of demonstrations’)[n 3]. Ad-Dabūsi died in the city of Bukhara in 430 AH / 1038–9.
The name Dabūsi derives from the town Dabūsiya, which lies between Bukhāra andSamarkand, and from where a number of scholars hailed.[1]
Kitāb Wafayāt al-Ayān (وفيات الأعيان) byIbn Khallikān (ابن خلكان); vol.II, p. 28
Al-Bidayah wa’l-Nihāyat (البداية والنهاية) byIbn Kathīr (ابن كثير) vol.12, p. 46
Shuḍrāt al-ḍahab (شذرات الذهب) byIbn al-‘Amād al-Hanbali (ابن العماد) vol.3, p. 245
Al-Fawā’id al-Baḥīa (الفوائد البهية) byAbd al-Hayy al-Lucknawi (لكنوي) p. 109
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