The Tomb of Ibn-Sina - Hamedan, Iran
One of the most respected and famous Persian medical scientingst and researchers and also notable philosopher who is known around the world is Ibn-Sina. His tomb is located in Hamedan city, and I made a short video when I was visiting his tomb.
Let’s watch this video to know more about Ibn-Sina while we are visiting his Tomb.
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Ibn Sina (Avicenna) Tomb in Hamedan Iran
Ibn Sina (Avicenna) Tomb in Hamedan Iran
Baba Tahir, Avicenna and Esther Tombs - Hamadan , Iran
Baba Tahir, Avicenna and Esther Tombs - Hamadan , Iran
FATHER OF MODERN MEDICINE: Hazrat Bu Ali Sina | Ibne Sina | Scientist Boo Ali Seena
#Avicenna
#Polymath
#physicians
مقاطعة غنبد كاووس
آرامگاه شیخ الرئیس بوعلی سینا
Δεκάγωνο
Mausoleum of Avicenna
Aβιτζιανός
Avicenna
Aviceno
Ибн Сина
Ibn Sino
ævɪˈsɛnə
GOOGLE MAP LOCATION:
Mausoleum of Avicenna
Hamedan, Buali Sina Square, Iran
IBNE SINA
HAZRAT ABU ALI HUSSAIN BIN ABDULLAH BIN HASSAN BIN ALI BIN SINA (God show mercy on him)
ARABIC: شیخ الرئیس أبو علي الحسين بن عبد الله بن الحسن بن علي بن سينا.
KNOWN FOR : a Persian polymath who is regarded as one of the most significant physicians, astronomers.
RESTING PLACE : Mausoleum of Avicenna
Hamedan, Iran.
BOOKS: The Book of Healing and The Canon of Medicine.
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Naš Iran - Hamedan, Ibn Sina
Hamedan, Ibn Sina
Iran Avicenna & Baba Taher tombs, Hamadan city آرامگاه باباطاهر و پورسينا همدان ايران
December 16, 2017 (Persian calendar 1396/9/25)
Hamadan province (استان همدان)
Hamadan city (شهر همدان)
Iran Avicenna & Baba Taher tombs, Hamadan city
آرامگاه باباطاهر و پورسينا همدان ايران
Avicenna (Ibn Sina) - In Our Time (BBC)
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Persian Islamic philosopher, Avicenna.
In the city of Hamadan in Iran, right in the centre, there is a vast mausoleum dedicated to an Iranian national hero. Built in 1952, exactly 915 years after his death, it’s a great conical tower with twelve supporting columns.
It’s dedicated not to a warrior or a king but to a philosopher and physician. His name is Ali Al Husayn Ibn-Sina, but he is also known as Avicenna and he is arguably the most important philosopher in the history of Islam.
In a colourful career Avicenna proved the existence of god, amalgamated all known medical knowledge into one big book and established a mind body dualism 600 years before Descartes and still found time to overindulge in wine and sex.
With:
Peter Adamson - Reader in Philosophy at King's College London
Amira Bennison - Senior Lecturer in Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at the University of Cambridge
Nader El-Bizri - Affiliated Lecturer in the History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge.
Hamedan - همدان
Avicenna (Abu Ali Sina) Ibn Sina mausoleum; Ali Sadr Cave – about 100km north of Hamedan lies this fascinating cave the world's largest water cave , best toured by pedal boat; Baba Tahir Mausleum; Gonbad-e Alavian; Ganjnameh, is an ancient inscription which has been carved in granite, is composed of two sections.
Hamedan - Ayn al-Quzat Hamadani's memorial - Avicenna Mausoleum یادمان عین القضات - آرامگاه ابن سینا
Iran Avicenna Research Institute Knee Treatment using Stem Cells درمان بيماري زانو با سلول بنيادي
August 9, 2018 (Persian calendar 1397/5/18)
Avicenna Research Institute (پژوهشگاه پور سينا) official website
Tehran city (شهر تهران)
Iran Avicenna Research Institute Knee Treatment using Stem Cells
درمان بيماري زانو با سلول هاي بنيادي ايران
Tomb of Dante, Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy, Europe
The Tomb of Dante is an Italian neoclassical national monument built over the tomb of the poet Dante Alighieri. It is sited next to the Basilica of San Francesco in central Ravenna. The monument is surrounded by a zona dantesca, in which visitors have to remain silent and respectful. The small garden to the monument's right originated as the monastic cloister but now only has a colonnade on one side. The garden is traditionally named after the Quadrarco di Braccioforte, where two people invoked the strong arm of Christ to guarantee their contract and therefore had the image of that arm painted on the arch.
Hamedan + Kermanshah - Trip to Iran
Hamedan was the second station on my trip. Most people don't go to Hamedan. In my opinion it's a mistake, because it's a very nice city and you can see a lot of things there.
Beside that it is easy to access from Tehran. It's around four hours by bus. For Iran it's a short trip :D
In Hamedan you can visit a lot of things. For example:
Imam Khomeini Square
Ibn Sina tomb
Baba Taher tomb
Famous Pottery
Ali Sadr cave
Ancient city of Hegmataneh
Qorban Historical Tower
Alaviyan Dome
Ganjnameh Waterfall
Hiking the Alvand mountains
Stone Lion
Tomb of Mordakhay and Ester
You see, it's worth to go there :D
If you continue your trip for around four more hours to the west, then you will arrive in Kermanshah.
I spent there only one night in the Oak Hostel. I can recommend this hostel a lot, very clean and great location (this advertisment is for free, I don't get any thing for it ;-))
You can visit there a lot of places. I visited only some places in the city. There's the beautiful park around Taq-e Bostan, there are many nice traditional houses like Tekyeh Moaven al-molk or Biglar Beigi Takiyeh.
If you have any questions about the cities, feel free to ask in the comments.
I post a many pictures on Instagram in my stories, so you can follow my trip live :D
Or follow me on facebook:
A big thank you to Benjamin Tissot from bensound.com who lets people use his music for videos.
I used four of the songs from his website:
Hamadan - Chapters of History- IRAN- Part III 090708
Brief history of Hamadan and its historical sites have been reviewed.
Emphasis has been on Achaemenid King Artaxerxes and his well treatment of Jews. The historical site of Ester and Mordecai have been visited. Slides have been enhanced by movie clips of the sites and background classical guitar music by the Persian Artist Armik.
بوعلی سینا(مسلمان سائنسدان) اور خواجہ ابو الحسن خرقانی (رحمتہ اللہ علیہ)
ALLAM MUHAMMAD KREEM SULTNI SAHIB
GULSHAN E SULTNIA
What is FLOATING MAN? What does FLOATING MAN mean? FLOATING MAN meaning, definition & explanation
✪✪✪✪✪ ✪✪✪✪✪
What is FLOATING MAN? What does FLOATING MAN mean? FLOATING MAN meaning - FLOATING MAN definition - FLOATING MAN explanation.
Source: Wikipedia.org article, adapted under license.
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Floating man, flying man or man suspended in air is a thought experiment by Avicenna (Ibn Sina, d. 1037) to argue for the existence of the soul. The argument is used to argue for the knowledge by presence.
It has been said that Avicenna wrote the argument while imprisoned in the castle of Fardajan, in the Iranian province of Hamadan. He reached the conclusion that the soul is immaterial and substantial. He also claimed that humans can not be denied their consciousness and awareness. According to Avicenna the floating man could attain the concept of being without any sense experience.
The floating man argument is concerned with one who falls freely in the air. This subject knows himself, but not through any sense perception data. Floating or suspending refers to a state in which the subject thinks on the basis of his own reflection without any assistance from sense perception or any material body. This mind flutters over the abyss of eternity.
According to Avicenna, we can not deny the consciousness of the self. His argument is as follows:
One of us must suppose that he was just created at a stroke, fully developed and perfectly formed but with his vision shrouded from perceiving all external objects – created floating in the air or in the space, not buffeted by any perceptible current of the air that supports him, his limbs separated and kept out of contact with one another, so that they do not feel each other. Then let the subject consider whether he would affirm the existence of his self. There is no doubt that he would affirm his own existence, although not affirming the reality of any of his limbs or inner organs, his bowels, or heart or brain or any external thing. Indeed he would affirm the existence of this self of his while not affirming that it had any length, breadth or depth. And if it were possible for him in such a state to imagine a hand or any other organ, he would not imagine it to be a part of himself or a condition of his existence.
—?Avicenna, DE Anima , the book of Healing' Na, Avicenna, L E Goodman
This argument relies on an introspective thought experiment. We have to suppose a man who accidentally comes into existence fully developed and formed, but he does not have any relation with sensory experience of the world or of his own body. There is no physical contact with the external world at all. According to Avicenna, this subject is, nonetheless, necessarily conscious of himself. In other words, such a being possesses the awareness of his own existence. He thereby believes that the soul has an unmediated and reflexive knowledge of its own existence. Thus appealing to self-consciousness, Avicenna tries to prove the existence of soul, or Nafs. This argument is not supported by the concept of substance in metaphysics. This experiential field shows that the self is not consequently a substance and thereby there is no subjectivity. On the other hand some scholars like Wisnovsky believe that the flying man argument proved the substantiality of the soul. Ibn Sina believes that innate awareness is completely independent of sensory experience.
Before the French philosopher Descartes (1596–1650) pointed out the existence of the conscious self as a turning point in epistemology, using the phrase Cogito ergo sum, the 11th century Persian philosopher Avicenna had referred to the existence of consciousness in the flying man argument. Thus, long before Descartes, Avicenna had established an argument for the existence of knowledge by presence without any need for the existence of the body.
There are two stances on the relationship between the arguments of Avicenna and Descartes. Some scholars believe that there are apparent similarities between the floating man and Descartes' cogito. Others consider these similarities trivial and superficial. Both Avicenna and Descartes believed that the soul and self are something other than sense data. Also, Avicenna believed that there is no relation logically between the self and the body. In other words, there is no logical dependency between them.
A weakness in the argument is that, even if the flying man would be self-aware, the thought experiment does not prove that the soul is something distinct from the body. One could argue that the self-awareness is seated in the brain. In this case, in being self-aware the flying man is only aware of his brain, not of a distinct soul, it's just he doesn't realize that the self-awareness is an aspect of his brain.
Ebn Sina Movie
Music & Audio production by
MOHAMED MEDHAT
Avicenna Mausoleum - A Short Visit
*NO ANY REUSED NOR THIRD-PARTY CONTENT INCLUDED* : ALL MATERIALS IN THIS VIDEO HAVE BEEN FILMED AND EDITED BY OWNER OF THIS CHANNEL *
Music: Parviz Meshkatian
Ibn Sina (Persian: ابن سینا), also known as Abu Ali Sina (ابوعلیِ سینا), Pur Sina (پورسینا), and often known in the west as Avicenna (c. 980 – June 1037) was a Persian Muslim polymath who is regarded as one of the most significant physicians, astronomers, thinkers and writers of the Islamic Golden Age.
He has been described as the father of early modern medicine.Of the 450 works he is known to have written, around 240 have survived, including 150 on philosophy and 40 on medicine.
His most famous works are The Book of Healing, a philosophical and scientific encyclopedia, and The Canon of Medicine, a medical encyclopedia[12][13][14] which became a standard medical text at many medieval universities and remained in use as late as 1650.[16] In 1973, Avicenna's Canon Of Medicine was reprinted in New York.
Besides philosophy and medicine, Avicenna's corpus includes writings on astronomy, alchemy, geography and geology, psychology, Islamic theology, logic, mathematics, physics and works of poetry.
The Mausoleum of Avicenna is a complex located at Avicenna Square, Hamadan, Iran.
Dedicated to the Iranian polymath Avicenna, the complex includes a library, a small museum, and a spindle-shaped tower inspired by the Ziyarid-era Kavus Tower.
Designed by Hooshang Seyhoun, it was built in 1952, replacing an older building dedicated to Avicenna which was destroyed in 1950.
The Pahlavi government had plans to build the mausoleum since at least 1939. The mausoleum was eventually dedicated in a grand ceremony in May 1954, and the avenue running in front of it was also renamed in honor of Avicenna.
As the monument was a central element of the propagation of Iranian nationalism by the Pahlavi government, it was consequently in danger of being defaced, but as Khomeini himself was an admirer of Avicenna, the square was not renamed after the 1979 Revolution.
Avicenna (Ibn Sina): Universalgelehrter; „Vater“ der Medizin
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Avicenna (In Our Time)
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the Persian Islamic philosopher, Avicenna. In the city of Hamadan in Iran, right in the centre, there is a vast mausoleum dedicated to an Iranian national hero. Built in 1952, exactly 915 years after his death, it’s a great conical tower with twelve supporting columns. It’s dedicated not to a warrior or a king but to a philosopher and physician. His name is Ali Al Husayn Ibn-Sina, but he is also known as Avicenna and he is arguably the most important philosopher in the history of Islam. In a colourful career Avicenna proved the existence of god, amalgamated all known medical knowledge into one big book and established a mind body dualism 600 years before Descartes and still found time to overindulge in wine and sex. With Peter Adamson, Reader in Philosophy at King's College London; Amira Bennison, Senior Lecturer in Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at the University of Cambridge; Nader El-Bizri, Affiliated Lecturer in the History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge.