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  1. Whose Justice? Which Rationality?Alasdair C. MacIntyre - 1988 - University of Notre Dame Press.
    [This book] develops an account of rationality and justice that is tradition specific.-http://undpress.nd.edu.
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  • The Quest for Consciousness: A Neurobiological Approach.Christof Koch - 2004 - Roberts & Company.
    In "The Quest for Consciousness," Caltech neuroscientist Christof Koch explores the biological basis of consciousness.
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  • (1 other version)Mystical Dimensions of Islam.Hamid Algar & Annemarie Schimmel - 1978 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 98 (4):485.
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  • Avicenna.Lenn Evan Goodman - 1992 - Ithaca: Routledge.
    the philosophers in the West, none, perhaps, is better known by name and less familiar in actual content of his ideas than the medieval Muslim philosopher, physician, minister and naturalist Abu Ali Ibn Sina, known since the days of the scholastics as Avicenna. In this book the author, himself a philosopher, and long known for his studies of Arabic thought, presents a factual account of Avicenna's philosophy. Setting the thinker in the context of his often turbulent times and tracing the (...)
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  • (1 other version)Mystical Dimensions of Islam.Annemarie Schimmel - 1979 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 10 (4):265-268.
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  • Brain death and islamic traditions.Birgit Krawietz - 2003 - In Jonathan E. Brockopp (ed.), Islamic ethics of life: abortion, war, and euthanasia. Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina Press. pp. 194--213.
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  • The Islamic Understanding of Death and Resurrection.Jene Idelman Smith & Yvonne Yazbeck Hadded - 1983 - Religious Studies 19 (1):125-126.
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