อิบน์ ค็อลดูน (Thai Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "อิบน์ ค็อลดูน" in Thai language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank Thai rank
1st place
1st place
low place
low place
3rd place
5th place
2nd place
4th place
6th place
20th place
low place
low place
40th place
42nd place
26th place
72nd place

archive.org

books.google.com

  • Laurence S. Moss, บ.ก. (1996). Joseph A. Schumpeter: Historian of Economics: Perspectives on the History of Economic Thought. Routledge. p. 87. ISBN 9781134785308. Ibn Khaldun drited away from Al-Farabi's political idealism.
  • Savant, Sarah Bowen (2014). Genealogy and Knowledge in Muslim Societies: Understanding the Past. Edinburgh University Press. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-7486-4497-1. Banu Khaldun al-Hadrami (Yemen, but not Qahtan), to which belonged the famous historian Ibn Khaldun. The family's ancestor was 'Uthman ibn Bakr ibn Khalid, called Khaldun, a Yemeni Arab among the conquerors who shared kinship with the Prophet's Companian Wa'il ibn Hujr and who settled first in Carmona and then in Seville. The Historical Muhammad, Irving M. Zeitlin, (Polity Press, 2007), 21; "It is, of course, Ibn Khaldun as an Arab here speaking, for he claims Arab descent through the male line.". The Arab World: Society, Culture, and State, Halim Barakat (University of California Press, 1993), 48;"The renowned Arab sociologist-historian Ibn Khaldun first interpreted Arab history in terms of badu versus hadar conflicts and struggles for power." Ibn Khaldun, M. Talbi, The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Vol. III, ed. B. Lewis, V.L. Menage, C. Pellat, J. Schacht, (Brill, 1986), 825; "Ibn Khaldun was born in Tunis, on I Ramadan 732/27 May 1332, in an Arab family which came originally from the Hadramawt and had been settled at Seville since the beginning of the Muslim conquest...."

britannica.com

doi.org

jstor.org

  • Joseph J. Spengler (1964). "Economic Thought of Islam: Ibn Khaldun", Comparative Studies in Society and History, 6(3), pp. 268-306.
      • Jean David C. Boulakia (1971). "Ibn Khaldûn: A Fourteenth-Century Economist", Journal of Political Economy, 79(5), pp. 1105–18.

muslimphilosophy.com

  • "Ibn Khaldun – His Life and Work". คลังข้อมูลเก่าเก็บจากแหล่งเดิมเมื่อ 13 September 2013. สืบค้นเมื่อ 25 February 2017.
  • Muhammad Hozien. "Ibn Khaldun: His Life and Work". Islamic Philosophy Online. คลังข้อมูลเก่าเก็บจากแหล่งเดิมเมื่อ 2013-09-13. สืบค้นเมื่อ 2008-09-19.

themaydan.com

  • https://themaydan.com/2017/11/myth-intellectual-decline-response-shaykh-hamza-yusuf/ "Ibn Khaldun on Philosophy: After clarifying what was meant precisely by philosophy in the Islamic tradition, namely the various schools of peripatetic philosophy represented either by Ibn Rushd or Ibn Sina, it should be clear why Ibn Khaldun was opposed to them. His critique of philosophy is an Ash’ari critique, completely in line with the Ash’aris before him, including Ghazali and Fakhr al-din al-Razi, both of whom Ibn Khaldun recommends for those who wish to learn how to refute the philosophers"

web.archive.org

  • "Ibn Khaldun – His Life and Work". คลังข้อมูลเก่าเก็บจากแหล่งเดิมเมื่อ 13 September 2013. สืบค้นเมื่อ 25 February 2017.
  • Muhammad Hozien. "Ibn Khaldun: His Life and Work". Islamic Philosophy Online. คลังข้อมูลเก่าเก็บจากแหล่งเดิมเมื่อ 2013-09-13. สืบค้นเมื่อ 2008-09-19.