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Results for 'Amer Al-Roubaie'

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  1. Globalization in the light of bediuzzaman said nursi's risale-I nur : An exposition.Amer Al-Roubaie &Shaifiq Alvi -2005 - In Ian S. Markham & İbrahim Özdemir,Globalization, ethics, and Islam: the case of Bediuzzaman Said Nursi. Burlington, Vt: Ashgate.
  2.  38
    The influence of ownership structure on the extent of CSR reporting: An emerging market study.Amer Al Fadli,John Sands,Gregory Jones,Claire Beattie &Dom Pensiero -2022 -Business and Society Review 127 (3):725-754.
    To examine how different ownership structures, varying from diverse ownership bases to narrow ownership bases, influence the extent of corporate social responsibility (CSR) reporting by companies in emerging market. The motivation for this study is the reported inconsistent results for this association in developing countries and the lack of research in emerging markets. Eight hundred observations of 80 nonfinancial sector listed companies in the Amman Stock Exchange for the period 2006 to 2015 were used for a content analysis to assess (...) the extent of CSR reporting. Ordinary least square multiple regression analysis was undertaken to examine the association between five different ownership structures and their extent of CSR reporting. The results reveal three separate associations between the types of ownership and the extent of CSR reporting. First, the two types of ownership (foreign and government) have a significant and positive influence on the extent of CSR reporting. Second, another two types of ownership (Family and managerial) have a significantly negative association. Finally, institutional ownership has an insignificant and negligible influence on the extent of CSR reporting. These findings provide insights into how ownership structure influences the CSR reporting extent by emerging market companies such as Jordan. These findings suggest that policy makers, regulatory bodies, companies, and investors should increase their awareness about how different concentration of company ownership influences the extent companies voluntarily disclose CSR reporting. The evidence adds to the limited body of knowledge about different ownership groups' influence on the extent of CSR reporting in a developing country because few empirical studies have undertaken such a comprehensive analysis of this association. (shrink)
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  3.  9
    Eloquence of Argumentation in Addressing the Hypocrites in Surah Al-Tawbah: A Stylistic Study.Mohamed BinAmer Al-Swaiq -2024 -European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 16 (1):156-178.
    The Quran combines both argumentative and rational expressions to convince people to believe in Islamic principles; however, the controversy lies between the Believers and hypocrites. This study discussed the mechanisms of the Quranic Argumentation by adopting the stylistic method to address the hypocrites, citing verses from the Surah Al-Tawbah. The study tracked the mechanisms of evidences spread throughout the chapter and employed the Quranic text to elaborate the meaning in particular and general contexts. The study also highlighted the tools of (...) the linguistic arguments with their different forms, to show their effect in addressing the hypocrites and reveal the characteristics of the Quranic method as well as its suitability to the linguistic and historical context. The study revealed that the Quranic text focused much on employing the argumentative discourse using visible and hidden tools which are consistent with the meaning and the group it addresses. The most prominent group, it was argued, was the group of hypocrites, who fought bitterly with the truth. However, the truth overcame it and made hypocrites fall apart. It is hoped that the discussion and the tools of argumentation revealed in this study would convince the opponents and critics and motivate them to accept their meanings and evidences. (shrink)
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  4.  31
    Between Sanctity and Liberty.Amer Al Sabaileh -2013 -Doctor Virtualis 12.
    Il contributo intende discutere alcune questioni legate alla diversa visione del profeta dell'Islam in una prospettiva interculturale. In particolare si tentano di evidenziare le radici del problema concentrandosi sullo contesto storico in cui la questione ha preso forma. Emerge una critica alla maggior parte degli studiosi arabi che, storicamente, hanno evitato di affrontare lo studio di fonti non musulmane che potessero proporre visioni contrastanti rispetto alle credenze religiose condivise. Il contributo ha affrontato quindi il problema della traduzione di opere letterarie (...) occidentali in arabo, in particolare le opere in cui è implicata l’immagine del profeta dell'Islam: emerge una censura piuttosto diffusa che tende a omettere le parti considerate "offensive" per la sensibilità religiosa dei musulmani. La Divina Commedia di Dante Alighieri rappresenta il caso esemplare di questo atteggiamento. Obbiettivo del contributo è affrontare il concetto di diversità in modo costruttivo in modo da non nascondere i fatti attraverso la censura o la non conoscenza ma invocando un nuovo modo di confrontarsi nel contesto multiculturale.This paper discusses the frequent intercultural problems related to the different cross-cultural vision of the prophet of Islam. In particular, the paper highlights the roots of the problem; in fact, focusing on the historical background of the problem is extremely important. Moreover, the paper delivered criticism to the majority of Arab scholars who, historically, seemed to lack the willingness to study non Muslim sources that have a contradicting vision to their believes. The paper tackled the issue of the translation of western literary works into Arabic, especially those that tackles the image of the prophet of Islam, where the Arabic translation usually skip any “offensive” part related to the image of the prophet. For example, The divine comedy of Dante Alighieri. The paper tries to face the concept of diversity in constructive way, by never hiding the facts, as this can never be considered a solution, but a way to transform it into a very complex problem. (shrink)
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  5.  177
    Sine-Cosine Optimization-Based Bijective Substitution-Boxes Construction Using Enhanced Dynamics of Chaotic Map.Amer Awad Alzaidi,Musheer Ahmad,Hussam S. Ahmed &Eesa Al Solami -2018 -Complexity 2018:1-16.
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  6.  17
    A multilevel investigation of leader–member exchange differentiation’s consequences: A moral disengagement perspective.Amer Ali Al-Atwi,Elham Alshaibani,Ali Bakir,Haneen M. Shoaib &Mohanad Dahlan -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    We examine the effects of leader–member exchange differentiation on team members’ outcomes by using team moral disengagement as a psychological mechanism mediating this relationship and LMX differentiation bases moderating the relationship. Analysis of multilevel data collected from 289 frontline employees organized into 76 finance-related customer service teams shows that LMX differentiation significantly reduced team moral disengagement only when the performance basis was high, and that the negative relationship between LMX differentiation and team moral disengagement was significant only when the personal (...) liking basis was low. Furthermore, we found that the LMX bases moderated the indirect effect of LMX differentiation on team members’ outcomes through team moral disengagement. The findings advance team moral disengagement as a novel mechanism for cross-level relationship between LMX differentiation and team members’ outcomes at the individual level, and project differentiation bases as a condition under which LMX differentiation unpacks the reasons for team members’ favorable or unfavorable responses. They reveal LMX differentiation as a complex and multifaceted phenomenon, whose essence can only be understood if examined from multiple levels. We also contribute to the literature by revealing the cognitive pathway through which LMX differentiation may be associated with team members outcomes. (shrink)
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  7.  157
    Patients’ perceived purpose of clinical informed consent: Mill’s individual autonomy model is preferred.Muhammad M. Hammami,Eman A. Al-Gaai,Yussuf Al-Jawarneh,HalaAmer,Muhammad B. Hammami,Abdullah Eissa &Mohammad A. Qadire -2014 -BMC Medical Ethics 15 (1):2.
    Although informed consent is an integral part of clinical practice, its current doctrine remains mostly a matter of law and mainstream ethics rather than empirical research. There are scarce empirical data on patients’ perceived purpose of informed consent, which may include administrative routine/courtesy gesture, simple honest permission, informed permission, patient-clinician shared decision-making, and enabling patient’s self decision-making. Different purposes require different processes.
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  8.  56
    Finding partnership: The benefit of sharing and the capacity for complexity.Michaela Amering -2010 -Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 17 (1):77-79.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Finding PartnershipThe Benefit of Sharing and the Capacity for ComplexityMichaela Amering (bio)Keywordsrecovery, empowerment, trialog, user involvement, schizophreniaIs There Ignorance and Arrogance? In Psychiatry? In Medicine?Adding insight to injury' is the paraphrase psychiatrist Pat McGorry (1992) coined for his reproach of 'pushing for "insight" or "acceptance of diagnosis"' without carefully taking into account the complexities of the individual situation, context, and needs. That must be about the kind of behavior (...) Marga Reimer has in mind in her paper on treatment adherence in the absence of insight, which depicts mental health professionals characterized by arrogance against the common sense of motivating compliance by perceived or anticipated benefits on different everyday life levels, but instead trying to get people to believe in a mental illness such as schizophrenia and wishing them to want treatment for that in the form of medication.In addition, Reimer presents examples from general medicine to make her point that adherence follows perceived or anticipated benefits instead of being a result of insight into a medical model of illness and McGorry (1992) also suggests that disregard for the active role that patients may play as reflected in psychiatry in terms such as 'case management' and 'compliance' "is a failing which extends to mainstream medicine and probably to most systems of human service delivery." On the other hand, Bill Anthony (2006), one of the most eminent experts on psychiatric rehabilitation and recovery in a personal report on his own medical illness, multiple sclerosis—MS, and the assistance he has been receiving in connection with it, describes the 'MS-Community' as exemplary with respect to instilling courage and hope, continually providing information and opportunities for exchange, and for never questioning a person's ultimate freedom of choice. In contrary, in mental health care he does not experience the medical profession as acting with full respect and support for its patients and suggests a great deal more work and transformation—especially concerning coercive treatments—ahead to follow this example. Similarly, it has been suggested that psychiatry should be better integrated into medicine to overcome stigma and discrimination of psychiatric health problems and interventions. A pertinent example of an initiative in this direction is the proposal of a fusion of mental health and incapacity legislation to arrive at ethically consistent legal situations with regard to involuntary [End Page 77] treatment across medicine (Dawson and Szmukler 2006).Is There Something Called Schizophrenia? and How Much Longer?Reimer's main example—schizophrenia—is the diagnosis that poses some of the greatest problems to the field and to the recognition of psychiatry as a scientific medical discipline. The current concept as well as the term 'schizophrenia' will probably not be around much longer; 'a century of schizophrenia is enough' (Kelly and Murray 2002). Suggested solutions for the problems of the diagnosis of schizophrenia concern the urgent complement of the categorical with a dimensional approach (Allardyce et al. 2007), a change also put forward as one of the essential remedies to undermine the stigma of mental illness that is often exacerbated by clinical diagnosis (Corrigan 2007). Such a move would also clearly help against the still prevalent experiences of users of services and their families and friends, whose hopes and dreams have been crushed and whose resilience has been undermined by clinical situations, which in times of psychotic crises, not only forced diagnoses but also prognoses—often scientifically unfounded—on them (Amering and Schmolke 2009).Is There a Solution? Can We Use Our Talents? And Those of People With a Lived Experience of Mental Health Problems and Care?Clinicians as well as scientists know that health, illness, and recovery occur in complex ways and contexts. People faced with mental health problems clearly realize the complexities of their situation and are especially motivated to appreciate the variety of factors and interactions that need to be integrated to arrive at a valid assessment. Ideally, the therapeutic relationship—essentially a partnership—holds a formidable chance of sharing efforts and creating the wisdom for finding and facing the truths necessary to develop solutions that can uphold and work in line with the complexities of human life.I would argue that psychiatric professionals are certainly part... (shrink)
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  9.  165
    Consenting options for posthumous organ donation: presumed consent and incentives are not favored. [REVIEW]Muhammad M. Hammami,Hunaida M. Abdulhameed,Kristine A. Concepcion,Abdullah Eissa,Sumaya Hammami,HalaAmer,Abdelraheem Ahmed &Eman Al-Gaai -2012 -BMC Medical Ethics 13 (1):32-.
    Background Posthumous organ procurement is hindered by the consenting process. Several consenting systems have been proposed. There is limited information on public relative attitudes towards various consenting systems, especially in Middle Eastern/Islamic countries. Methods We surveyed 698 Saudi Adults attending outpatient clinics at a tertiary care hospital. Preference and perception of norm regarding consenting options for posthumous organ donation were explored. Participants ranked (1, most agreeable) the following, randomly-presented, options from 1 to 11: no-organ-donation, presumed consent, informed consent by donor-only, (...) informed consent by donor-or-surrogate, and mandatory choice; the last three options ± medical or financial incentive. Results Mean(SD) age was 32(9) year, 27% were males, 50% were patients’ companions, 60% had ≥ college education, and 20% and 32%, respectively, knew an organ donor or recipient. Mandated choice was among the top three choices for preference of 54% of respondents, with an overall median[25%,75%] ranking score of 3[2,6], and was preferred over donor-or-surrogate informed consent (4[2,7], p vs. 11[6,11], respectively, p = 0.002). Compared to females, males more perceived donor-or-surrogate informed consent as the norm (3[1,6] vs. 5[3,7], p vs. 8[4,9], p vs. 5[2,7], p Conclusions We conclude that: 1) most respondents were in favor of posthumous organ donation, 2) mandated choice system was the most preferred and presumed consent system was the least preferred, 3) there was no difference between preference and perception of norm in consenting systems ranking, and 4) financial (especially in females) and medical (especially in males) incentives reduced preference. (shrink)
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  10.  11
    Hilo y discurso escéptico en la creación contemporánea a través del bordado y la instalación artística: las obras de GhadaAmer y Chiharu Shiota.Marisa Vadillo Rodríguez -forthcoming -Thémata Revista de Filosofía.
    Resumen Investigación parcial del proyecto El escepticismo pirrónico-empírico y el escepticismo académico en su desarrollo histórico […] (EPADMECO) donde se explora la obra de las autoras contemporáneas GhadaAmer y Chiharu Shiota quienes han resignificado el hilo como elemento gráfico del dibujo expandido (línea bordada y en el espacio) para crear un discurso escéptico: imágenes artísticas que inducen a la duda, al conocimiento, en contraposición a las dogmáticas que nos invaden desde la posverdad. Parte del estudio de campo resultado (...) de estancias de investigación en el Centro Nacional de Arte Contemporáneo Reina Sofía y el Museo Nacional de Artes Decorativas. (shrink)
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  11.  55
    Sociología y trabajo social: Un fundamento básico para hacer ciencia social desde el Otro.Luis Alarcón &Irey Gómez -2004 -Utopía y Praxis Latinoamericana 9 (26):67-76.
    The con flict be tween postmodernidad and mo der nity has left a se ries of leg a cies that al - though not new, be gin to resurge in a con text of con stant and dis tinct sociopolitical trans for ma - tion. In the case of LatinAmer ica, ac cord ing to Wallerstein, the mo ment has ar rived for..
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  12.  25
    Crossing Borders: Love between Women in Medieval French and Arabic Literatures (review).Cary Howie -2009 -Intertexts 13 (1):156-159.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Crossing Borders: Love between Women in Medieval French and Arabic LiteraturesCary Howie (bio)SaharAmer, Crossing Borders: Love between Women in Medieval French and Arabic Literatures. Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 2008, xii + 254 pp.SaharAmer’s Crossing Borders adds to the expanding bibliography on medieval sexualities by showing the resonances between certain female same-sex relationships in medieval French literature and analogous, though generally more explicit, relationships (...) between women in the medieval Arabic tradition. In the process, sexuality becomes a way of talking about the porous boundaries that constitute the field of Old French, and perhaps even Western, literature as such.Amer’s book couldn’t have arrived at a better time, as Sarkozy’s French government once again, in the name of French values, intervenes in the debates around religion and clothing in the public sphere, debates in which the old divides between France and its constitutive others—in this case, certain kinds of Islam and certain kinds of women— have once again come to the fore. By proposing that “medieval French writing is essentially a hybrid, cross-cultural project” (163),Amer contributes not just to the emerging sense of the Middle Ages’ postcoloniality (as articulated by Jeffrey Jerome Cohen and Sharon Kinoshita, among others) but also to the work being done by intellectual historians and cultural theorists such as Joan Scott and Diane Rubenstein on the fantastic investments that take place within and around French universalism (which could be said to inform the idea of the literary no less than the idea of the citizen).Crossing Borders begins with the notion of borders as “fluid spaces of cultural exchange, adaptation, and collaboration” (ix), and it is the emphasis on a more general sense of cultural exchange, more than the fact of borders per se, that will permeate the chapters that follow. (In fact, the border, like “the lesbian,”Amer’s polemical term of choice for the women she describes, may be important for her argument precisely insofar as it resists visibility, as it remains to some extent difficult to locate.)Amer’s reading of Old French texts, in dialogue with a handful of medieval Arabic narratives and erotic compilations, proceeds from an understanding of medieval culture in which there is “a continuity rather than a rupture between medieval and modern conceptions of alternative [End Page 156] sexualities” (9), and in which it is possible to argue for influences that are tough, if not impossible, to trace empirically. According to this logic, ideas and stories may have circulated “next to” more tangible material goods taken to and from the Arab Islamicate world (13), and French authors may have “culled some elements from Arabic material and wove[n] them into a literary fabric to suit their audience’s sensibilities” (163). This attentiveness to what “may have” happened (e.g., 44, 110) is one of the signature gestures ofAmer’s critical poetics, which I am tempted to describe as an imaginative historicism, committed at once to the explanatory power of historical context and to whatAmer will repeatedly call the “imagination of the audience” (e.g., 79).After an initial chapter outlining this “cross-cultural” poetics of contextualization and imaginative investment, chapter 2, “Crossing Linguistic Borders,” is dedicated to seven stanzas of a late twelfth-century poem, Étienne de Fougères’s Livre des manières, in which a long description is given of women who go “against Nature” by “join[ing] shield to shield without a lance” (32).Amer reads these military metaphors for female homoeroticism in light of Arabic sources including, for example, al-Jurjani’s eleventh-century Anthology of Metonymic Devices, in which one of the cited commonplaces observes, “They [lesbians] manifest a war in which there is no spear-thrusting” (36). Most provocatively,Amer argues for the Arabic provenance of two otherwise untranslatable words in Étienne’s text, “trutennes,” which she traces to an Arabic root meaning “the mons of the beloved” (40), and “eu,” which she interprets as an orgasmic onomatopoeia. From mons to moans, the “medieval French literary lesbian” is a condensation of forms and fantasies—and noises—that come from before and beyond medieval France. In fact, the... (shrink)
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  13.  1
    Mentality and ideologies in letters from the first years of contact in ‘America’?Martha Guzmán Riverón -2025 -Araucaria 27 (58).
    El objetivo de este estudio es acercarnos a la mentalidad y la ideología de las personas que vivían a finales del siglo XV en “Améric”: los recién llegados y los nativos. Basaremos nuestra investigación en dos cartas, una de Diego Álvares Chanca (antiguo médico real) y otra de Michele da Cuneo (¿mercader? italiano). Con ello pretendemos contribuir al estudio de las mentalidades e ideologías desde una perspectiva lingüística. Utilizaremos datos históricos, herramientas de la ecdótica y del análisis del discurso y (...) el concepto de tradiciones discursivas. Estas cartas están entre los primeros ejemplos de textualidad colonial americana. Creemos que los datos de estos textos nos permiten hacernos una idea de las cuitas y la mentalidad de los protagonistas de aquellos hechos, pero no de su ideología en el sentido clásico del término. (shrink)
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  14.  68
    Luis Beltrán Prieto Figueroa: Maestro de la democracia venezolana.Lino Beltran -2004 -Utopía y Praxis Latinoamericana 9 (25):59-73.
    This ar ti cle is part of the anal y sis of the his tory of ideas in LatinAmer ica, which is a field of thought that con trib utes to re cov er ing con tri bu tions from di verse fields of knowl edge, and which has been fo cused on by in tel lec tu als who con sider our iden tity to be a theme..
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  15.  15
    Exhaustion in the Plantationocene.Yolande Jansen -2023 -Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy 52 (2):183-188.
    Exhaustion in the Plantationocene This contribution comments on Guno Jones’ notion of Citizenship Violence developed through his reading of We Slaves of Suriname by Anton de Kom. It addresses Jones’ discussion of exhaustion as a structural legacy of the plantation, proposing that exhaustion is also integral to the ‘Plantationocene’. This term, introduced by Donna Haraway and Anna Tsing, emphasizes how the plantation has been a laboratory for the subjection of organic life to radical simplification and commodification in modernity. Then, the (...) discussion extends to the critique of the Plantationocene by Malcom Ferdinand and Janae Davis et al., highlighting the racial politics of plantations and their connection to slavery. Furthermore, it examines the relationship between exhaustion, property, and whiteness. Additionally, this contribution pays attention to the interplay between Citizenship Violence and the politics of religion and secularity within the Dutch context, drawing parallels with MohammedAmer Meziane’s analysis of the French context. (shrink)
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  16.  22
    The Ethics of Business: A Concise Introduction.Al Gini &Alexei M. Marcoux -2011 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    In a field dominated by books that focus exclusively on the perspective of business in large corporations or that assume that business has a moral deficiency in need of reform, Al Gini and Alexei Marcoux offers students and business people alike a concise guide to what everyone ought to do when doing business. Where other books are organized topically, Gini and Marcoux look at the moral features of business that recur across topical areas, stressing the considerations that bear on business (...) people whether they be corporate functionaries, principals in family businesses, or solo entrepreneurs who do it all, end to end. They present to students the essential concepts, ideas, and issues involved in ethics in business and emphasize the individual acting person and what it means to have character and integrity when doing business. (shrink)
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  17.  29
    Actions of tame abelian product groups.Shaun Allison &Assaf Shani -2023 -Journal of Mathematical Logic 23 (3).
    A Polish group G is tame if for any continuous action of G, the corresponding orbit equivalence relation is Borel. When [Formula: see text] for countable abelian [Formula: see text], Solecki [Equivalence relations induced by actions of Polish groups, Trans.Amer. Math. Soc. 347 (1995) 4765–4777] gave a characterization for when G is tame. In [L. Ding and S. Gao, Non-archimedean abelian Polish groups and their actions, Adv. Math. 307 (2017) 312–343], Ding and Gao showed that for such G, (...) the orbit equivalence relation must in fact be potentially [Formula: see text], while conjecturing that the optimal bound could be [Formula: see text]. We show that the optimal bound is [Formula: see text] by constructing an action of such a group G which is not potentially [Formula: see text], and show how to modify the analysis of [L. Ding and S. Gao, Non-archimedean abelian Polish groups and their actions, Adv. Math. 307 (2017) 312–343] to get this slightly better upper bound. It follows, using the results of Hjorth et al. [Borel equivalence relations induced by actions of the symmetric group, Ann. Pure Appl. Logic 92 (1998) 63–112], that this is the optimal bound for the potential complexity of actions of tame abelian product groups. Our lower-bound analysis involves forcing over models of set theory where choice fails for sequences of finite sets. (shrink)
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  18.  24
    The Importance of Being Lazy: In Praise of Play, Leisure, and Vacation.Al Gini -2003 - Routledge.
    Drawing upon in-depth case studies of vacation habits and the observations of philosophers, writers, and sociologists such as Aristotle, Mark Twain and Thorstein Veblen, Al Gini argues why vacations are so venerated and why 'doing nothing' is a fundamental human necessity. From shopping sprees and extreme sports to the ultimate vacation - retirement - The Importance of Being lazy demonstrates that without true leisure, we are diminished as individuals and as a society.  .
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  19.  6
    Ḍawʼ al-manāẓir fī sharḥ al-Mashāʻir.Nūrī Ṭihrānī &Zayn al-ʻĀbidīn -2017 - Tihrān: Muʼassasah-i Pizhūhishī-i Ḥikmat va Falsafah-i Īrān. Edited by Muḥammad Masʻūd Khudāwirdī & Amīr Ḥusayn ʻĀbidī.
  20. al-Mumārasāt al-ījābīyah lil-Muslimīn al-Maghāribah fī iṭār al-fikr al-Islāmī al-aṣīl wa-thawābit al-huwīyah al-dīnīyah.Aḥmad al-Ghazālī Yaḥyāwī -2015 - [Fès?]: [Publisher Not Identified].
  21.  8
    al-Ihtimām bi-amr al-Muslimīn: mafhūmuh, ḍawābituh, ahamīyatuh, majālātuh: (dirāsah daʻawīyah).Ṣalāḥ Nūr ʻAbd al-Shakūr Yūsuf -2019 - Jiddah: Dār al-Awrāq al-Thaqāfīyah lil-Nashr wa-al-Tawzīʻ.
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  22.  8
    al-Dīn wa-al-insān wa-al-ʻālam L.Aḥmad ʻAbd al-Jawād Zāyidah &Hibah Raʼūf ʻIzzat (eds.) -2017 - al-Qāhirah: Dār al-Marāyā lil-Intāj al-Thaqāfī.
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  23. al-Taqwá wa-rawāʼiʻ al-muttaqīn.Muḥammad ibn ʻAbd al-Malik Zughabī -2023 - [Cairo?]: Dār al-Amal lil-Ṭabʻ wa-al-Nashr wa-al-Tawzīʻ.
     
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  24.  64
    My Job, My Self: Work and the Creation of the Modern Individual.Al Gini -2000 - Routledge.
    In _My Job My Self,_ Gini plumbs a wide range of statistics, interviews with workers, surveys from employers and employees, and his own experiences and memories, to explore why we work, how our work affects us, and what we will become as a nation of workers. _My Job, My Self_ speaks to every employed person who has yet to understand the costs and challenges of a lifetime of labor.
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  25.  9
    Ḥāshiyah al-ʻallāmah al-Mullā ʻAbd Allāh al-Yazdī (al-mutawaffī 1015 H.) ʻalá al-Tahdhīb.ʻAbd Allāh ibn al-Ḥusayn Yazdī -2016 - Sanandaj: Intishārāt Kurdistān. Edited by ʻAbd Allāh ibn al-Ḥusayn Yazdī.
    Taftāzānī, Masʻūd ibn ʻUmar, 1322-1389?. Tahdhīb al-manṭiq wa-al-kalām.
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  26.  28
    Three Critical Characteristics of Leadership: Character, Stewardship, Experience.Al Gini &Ronald M. Green -2014 -Business and Society Review 119 (4):435-446.
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  27.  27
    Working Ourselves to Death: Workaholism, Stress, and Fatigue.Al Gini -1998 -Business and Society Review 100-100 (1):45-56.
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  28. Tadrīs al-falsafah bi-al-lughah al-ʻArabīyah fī Tūnis (1948-1981).Abd Al-Karim Marraq,Tawfiq Sharif &Rida Bin Rajab -1982 - Tūnis: Manshūrāt al-Maʻhad al-Qawmī li-ʻUlūm al-Tarbiyah. Edited by Tawfīq Sharīf & Riḍā Bin Rajab.
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  29.  10
    Abū Sulaymān al-Sijistānī: sīratahu al-ʻilmīyah wa-arāʼahu al-falsafīyah.Muḥammad ʻAbd al-Raḥīm Zaynī -2012 - al-Manṣūrah: Dār al-Yaqīn lil-Nashr wa-al-Tawzīʻ.
  30.  56
    Immanent Non-Algorithmic Rules: An Ontological Study of Social Rules.Ismael Al-Amoudi -2010 -Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 40 (3):289-313.
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  31.  95
    “It is impossible to be told anyone's name'.Al Tajtelbaum -1956 -Analysis 17 (3):52--3.
  32. Knowledge, language, thought, and the civilization of Islam: essays in honor of Syed Muhammad Naquib al-Attas.MohdNor Wan Daud,Muhammad Zainiy Uthman &Muhammad Naguib Al-Attas (eds.) -2010 - Skudai, Johor Darul Ta'zim, Malaysia: UTM Press.
  33.  23
    The Work, Spend and Debt Syndrome.Al Gini -1999 -Business and Society Review 104 (3):243-259.
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  34. Sbornik zadach po matematicheskoĭ logike.Alʹbert Vladimirovich Gokhman -1965
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  35.  16
    Daʻāwá al-ijmāʻ ʻinda al-mutakallimīn fī uṣūl al-dīn: ʻarḍ wa-naqd.Yāsir ibn ʻAbd al-Raḥmān Yaḥyá -2011 - al-Riyāḍ: al-Mīmān lil-Nashr wa-al-Tawzīʻ.
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  36. Durūs fī muqaddimat al-dirāsāt al-qānūnīyah.Maḥmūd Jamāl al-Dīn Zakī -1964 - al-Qāhirah: al-Hayʼah al-ʻĀmmah li-Shuʼūn al-Maṭābiʻ al-Amīrīyah.
     
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  37. Rihānat al-falsafah wa-bīdāghūjiyā al-qiyam al-insānīyah: qaḍāyā wa-ishkālāt.ʻAbd al-Laṭīf Khamsī -2013 - al-Rabāṭ: Dār al-Tawḥīdī.
     
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  38.  18
    Mennonites, Politics, and Peoplehood: Europe—Russia—Canada, 1525 to 1980.Al Koop -2007 -Utopian Studies 18 (1):95-98.
  39. Za vse v otvete.Alʹbert Aleksandrovich Kubarev -1962
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  40. Naẓarīyat al-maʻrifah bayna al-Qurʼān wa-al-falsafah.Rājiḥ ʻAbd al-Ḥamīd Kurdī -1992 - Hīrndin: al-Maʻhad al-ʻĀlamī lil-Fikr al-Islāmī.
    On the knowledge theory in Koran and philosophy.
     
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  41.  19
    Book on the Science of Metaphysics, 14.Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi &İlyas Altuner -2024 -Entelekya Logico-Metaphysical Review 8 (1):01-10.
    ‘Abd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī’s _Book on the Science of Metaphysics_ is an important work that contains the influence of both Alexander of Aphrodisias and Themistius in the interpretation of Aristotle. Only chapters 13-16 belong to the Lambda. The limitation results first of all from the main purpose of the work, namely to present a new witness for the reception of Arabic metaphysics. As can be seen from the introduction of the work, the work is conceived as a unified whole and may (...) be meant as a kind of summa of metaphysics, a synopsis of four writings that hold high rank among medieval metaphysical works - especially since 'Abd al-Latif apparently regarded not only the Metaphysics but also his other sources as originating from Aristotle, the First Teacher. This translation includes only the eighth chapter of the Book Lamda. (shrink)
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  42.  69
    Letter from France.Al Kessler -2006 -The Chesterton Review 32 (3-4):557-558.
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  43. Sharḥ-i ḥāl-i Ṣadr al-Mutʼallihīn Shīrāzī va sukhunī dar ḥarakat-i jawharīyah.Ḥusaynī Qazvīnī &Abū al-Ḥasan -1961 - Ṭihrān: Chāpkhānah-i Dānishgāh. Edited by Seyyed Hossein Nasr.
  44. Sefer Otsar lev.Yaʻaḳov Yiśraʼel Sṭal -1996 - Bene Beraḳ: Y.Y. Sṭal.
    [1] Lev Yehudah ḥeleḳ 1, u-vo ḥidushim u-veʼurim be-ʻinyanim shonim. Lev Yehudah ḥeleḳ 2, u-vo heʻarot ṿe-heʼarot ḳetsarot. Boʼu ḥeshbon, u-vo heʻarot be-ḥeshbonot u-midot Ḥazal -- [2] Ḳunṭres Boʼu ḥeshbon ḥeleḳ 2.
     
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  45.  15
    A Training Strategy and Functionality Analysis of Digital Multi-Layer Neural Networks.R. Al-Alawi &T. J. Stonham -1992 -Journal of Intelligent Systems 2 (1-4):53-94.
  46.  18
    Democracy and humanism.Al Tanase -1971 -Res Publica 13 (5):749-755.
  47.  15
    Postures Toward Postcolonial Peace: Repentance, Forgiveness, and Lament1.Al Tizon -2022 -Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 39 (4):229-234.
    Each party in any given conflict has a role to play in the process of reconciliation. However, these respective roles are different depending on the power differential within the conflict. The role of the gospel peacemaker is to be aware of the power differential and to call each party to do their part toward reconciliation with one another. For those who have abused their power for self-gain at the expense of others need to repent. For those who have been victimized (...) by this power abuse need to forgive. And both abuser and abused need to lament. (shrink)
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  48.  17
    The Glocalization of Mission as Transformation: How the Global and the Local have shaped a Movement.Al Tizon -2009 -Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 26 (4):247-257.
    The reality of globalization warrants an understanding of mission that negotiates global and local realities. This article explores the way in which the global and the local have informed Mission as Transformation, a holistic missionary movement among radical evangelicals that developed in earnest since Lausanne ’74. How have local expressions — particularly Filipino expressions — of Transformation helped to form a global understanding of Transformation? And vice versa: How does a global understanding serve local expressions? The Transformational view of the (...) global-local — or glocal — relationship as symbiotic and not antagonistic undermines both universal theologies that are imposed on all cultures and to local theologies that lack global accountability. (shrink)
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  49. Ibn Tufayl's Hayy ibn Yaqzān.Ibn Ṭufayl &Muḥammad ibn ʻAbd al-Malik -1972 - New York,: Twayne Publishers. Edited by Lenn Evan Goodman.
  50. Aspecte din filozofia contemporană.Henri Wald &Al Posescu (eds.) -1970 - București : Editura Academiei Republicicii Socialiste România,:
     
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