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Dr. Elvira Wakelnig

Dr. Elvira Wakelnig

Dr. Elvira Wakelnig

postdoc (scholarship holder 01/2006 - 09/2007)

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Dr. Elvira Wakelnig
Warwick Research Excellence
Department of Classics and Ancient History
University of Warwick

Coventry CV4 7AL, UK
00000 Warwick

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Islamic philosophy, Greek thought, hilosophy, the umma and regional factors

The beginning of philosophy within the Islamic world is closely linked to al-Kindi, who lived in Baghdad in the 9th century. By then the Graeco-Arabic translation movement, which has been ongoing since the 8th century, expanded into the philosophical field as well. The works and thoughts of the Ancient Greek philosophers influenced philosophy in the Islamic world from the beginnig (even concerning the terminology). From the 10th century onwards different philosophical trends, often competing with each other, emerged and spread over all the various geographical regions under Muslim control. This development and its reasons are the main focus of my research which starts with Abu l-Hasan al-’Amiri, a student of al-Kindi’s student al-Balhi, whose life and work is quite well known.

Curriculum Vitae

1992-1997studies in Philosophy (main field of studies), Arabistics, Jewish Studies and Catholic Theology at the University of Vienna (Magister. phil. ∼ M.A.)
1992-1998studies in Landscape-Planning at the University of Agricultural Sciences, Vienna (Diplom-Ingenieur ∼ Graduate Engineer)
1997-1999scholarship in Cairo, Egypt, based on the Austrian-Egyptian Cultural Agreement
2002-2005doctoral fellowship at the University of Bamberg, Germany, within the Research Training Group "Anthropological Foundations and Developments in Christianity and Islam"
2005

Ph.D. at the University of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany, in Islamic Studies on the topic of Graeco-Arabic Philosophy (Pen, Tablet, Man. Al-’Âmirîs Kitâb   al-Fusûl
fî l-ma’âlim al-ilâhiyya and the reception of   Proclus in Arabic
)

2005

research associate at the University of Bochum, Germany
(project: Glossarium Graeco-Arabicum; supervision: Prof. Dr. Gerhard Endreß)

Study Day Contributions

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