Title: Medieval Islamic Economic Thought: Filling the Great Gap in European Economics
Abstract: Notes on contributors S. Todd Lowry Foreword Acknowledgements 1. S.M. Scholastic Economics Arab Scholars: Great Gap thesis reconsidered 2. S.M. and A. Azim Islahi of an Arab Scholastic: Abu-Hamid Al-Ghazali (AH450-505/1058-1111AD) 3. Paul Oslington Religious Thought: comment on Islahi 4. S.M. Ghazanfar A. Azim Islahi A Rejoinder to Religious Thought 5. S.M. Ghazanfar A. Azim Islahi Explorations in Arab-Islamic Economic Thought: Some aspects of Ibn Taimiyah's economics 6. S.M. Gahzanfar History of Economic Thought: Schumpeterian Great Gap, the lost Arab-Islamic legacy the literature gap 7. Hosseini Understanding the Market Mechanism before Adam Smith: Economic thought in medieval Islam 8. Hosseini Innaccuracy of the Schumpeterian Great Gap Thesis: Economic thought in medieval Iran (Persia) 9. S.M. and A. Azim Islahi Explorations in Arab-Islamic Ecomic Thought: Some aspects of Ibn Qayyim's economics (AH691-751/1292-1350AD) 10. S.M. Medieval Islamic Socio-Economic Thought: Links with Greek Latin-European scholarship 11. S.M.Ghazanfar Post-Greek/Pre-Renaissance Economic Thought: Contributions of Arab-Islamic Scholastics during the Great Gap centuries 12. S.M. The Economic of Abu Hamid Al-Ghazali St Thomas Aquinas: Some comparative parallels links 13. M. Nejatullah Siddiqi and S.M. Ghazanfar Early Islamic Economic Thought: Abu Yousuf's (731-798AD) economics of public finance 14. S.M. Ghazanfar Public-Sector Economics in Economic Thought: Contributions of selected Arab-Islamic scholars 15. S.M. Ghazanfar Social European Renaissance: influence of selected Arab-Islamic Scholastics Bibliography Index
Publication Year: 2003
Publication Date: 2003-06-25
Language: en
Type: book
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Cited By Count: 71
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