Abd ar-Rahman al-Sufi. Liber Locis Stellarum Fixarum (964 AD). Ptolemaic Constellation. 1417, 1730.
YOU ARE THE REASON
Monterey Bay Aquarium
dirt enthusiast
sheepfilms
Mike Driver
RMH
Sweet Seals For You, Always
d e v o n

if i look back, i am lost

blake kathryn
tumblr dot com
KIROKAZE

ellievsbear

@theartofmadeline
Not today Justin
Sade Olutola

★
cherry valley forever
$LAYYYTER
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Japan
seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from T1
seen from Italy
seen from Brazil

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from Brazil
@islamicrenaissance
Abd ar-Rahman al-Sufi. Liber Locis Stellarum Fixarum (964 AD). Ptolemaic Constellation. 1417, 1730.
Looking up, Mohammad Reza Domiri Ganji
Earth is about to pass through the tail of Halley’s Comet, This will start around April 20th and will continue right up until May 21st. The best time to view them will be in the small hours between May 5 and 7, when the sky will be the darkest during the new Moon.
The specks and flecks you’ll be seeing are tiny pieces of debris from Halley’s Comet hitting Earth’s atmosphere and burning up. They’re called the Eta Aquarids as they appear to emerge from the constellation of Aquarius.
The shower will be more visible in the southern hemisphere. However, those in the northern hemisphere should be able to catch the odd one, especially if you’re near the equator. At their peak time, those in the southern hemisphere can expect to see up to 30 meteors every hour. If weather conditions are favorable, even those north of the equator can still see up to 10 every hour.
The Eta Aquarids happens every year thanks to Halley’s comet. It takes the comet about 75 years to travel around the sun, but Earth passes through the tail of the comet around April/ May every year. Halley’s comet is projected to directly pass by the Earth again in 2061.
Islamic sayings and translation
Assalamu ‘Alaikum when you meet a muslim Translation: Peace be upon you
Wa’alaikum Assalam a Muslim greets you Translation: And peace be upon you
Assalamu ‘alaikum wa rahmatullahi wa barakatuh formal and great greeting to a Muslim Translation: May the peace, mercy, and blessings of Allah be upon you
Wa’alaikum assalam wa rahmatullahi wa barakatuh a Muslim greets you Translation: And peace and mercy and blessings of Allah be upon you
Hiyyak Allah When greeting someone after Salaams Translation: May Allah greet you (lit. May Allah preserve your life)
Bismillah arRahman arRahim before making a beginning Translation: In the name of Allah, most Gracious most Merciful
Jazak Allah Khairan for expression of thanks Translation: May Allah reward you with blessings (Reply: Wa iyak(i), wa iyakum; Trans. And you)
BarakAllahu feekum or Allah baraka feek(i) responding to someone’s thanks/ a way of expressing thanks Translation: May Allah bless you (Reply: Wa feek(i), Wa feekum; Trans.: And you)
Fi Amanillah by way of saying good-bye Translation: May Allah protect you
Subhanallah for praising something Translation: Glory be to Allah
Insha Allah for expressing a desire to do something Translation: If Allah wills/Through Allah’s will
Astaghfirullah Repenting for sins before Allah I beg Allah for forgiveness
Masha Allah for expressing appreciation of something good Translation: As Allah has willed/Praise be to Allah
Alhamdulillah for showing gratitude to Allah after success or even after completing anything Translation: Thanks be to Allah
Ameen the end of a Dua or prayer Translation: May it be so
Sallahu ‘alayhi wa salaam whenever say the name of Prophet Muhammad Translation: Peace be upon him (S.A.W.)
‘Alayhi salaam whenever say the name of a prophet Translation: Peace be upon him (A.S.)
Radi Allah ‘Anhu whenever say name of male companion of the Prophet (Sahabi) Translation: May Allah be pleased with him (R.A.)
Radi Allah ‘Anha whenever say name of female companion of the Prophet Translation: May Allah be pleased with her (R.A.)
Radi Allah ‘Anhum Plural form of saying companions of the Prophet Translation: May Allah be pleased with them (R.A.)
Innaa lillaahi wa innaa ilayhi raaji’oon this is uttered as an expression upon hearing the news of some loss or some one’s death Translation: To Allah we belong and to Him is our return
aathama allahu ajrakom uttered to family of deceased Translation: may Allah make your ajer (reward) great
Shakar Allahu Sa’yikum uttered to people who attend aaza – when friends go to send condolences upon death of a person Translation: May Allah accept that your effort
La hawla wala quwata illah billah during the time of troubles Translation: There is no strength nor power except Allah
Kudos to this innovative all-girls team!
(S)heroes!
The students’ Gesture Vocaliser understands simple sign language gestures and will say them out loud.
This is amazing for medical reasons isn’t it ahappymuslimah
THAT’S AMAZAING 🙌🙌🙌🙌
The students’ names are Minu Varghese, S. Deepthi, Delna Domini, and Nimya Varghese.
Yessss incredible women from Kerala 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
I’m going to give my pre-blackout selfie to address greatness where greatness is due. Here is my Women’s History Month Featured Woman #2 - Maryam Qaasim. Maryam Qassim is a Somali woman who has held several high positions of political respect in her country. She previously served as the minister for Women’s Development and Family affairs and as the minister of Human Development and Public Services. #Herstory
I want you all to know that an Arab Muslim from Tunis proposed the Theory of Evolution near 600 years before Charles Darwin even took his first breath. Don’t let them erase you.
his name is Ibn Khaldun
same thing with the scientific method!!! i was taught in school that it was invented by roger bacon , but Around 250 years before Roger Bacon expounded on the need for experimental confirmation of his findings, an Arab Muslim scientist scientist named Ibn al-Haytham was saying the exact same thing.
Ibn al-Haytham: The Muslim Scientist Who Birthed the Scientific Method
If asked who gave birth to the modern scientific method, how might you respond? Isaac Newton, maybe? Galileo? Aristotle?
A great many students of science history would probably respond, “Roger Bacon.” An English scholar and friar, and a 13th century pioneer in the field of optics, he described, in exquisite detail, a repeating cycle of observation, hypothesis, and experimentation in his writings, as well as the need for independent verification of his work.
But dig a little deeper into the past, and you’ll unearth something that may surprise you: The origins of the scientific method hearken back to the Islamic World, not the Western one. Around 250 years before Roger Bacon expounded on the need for experimental confirmation of his findings, an Arab scientist named Ibn al-Haytham was saying the exact same thing.
Little is known about Ibn al-Haytham’s life, but historians believe he was born around the year 965, during a period marked as the Golden Age of Arabic science. His father was a civil servant, so the young Ibn al-Haytham received a strong education, which assuredly seeded his passion for science. He was also a devout Muslim, believing that an endless quest for truth about the natural world brought him closer to God. Sometime around the dawn of the 11th Century, he moved to Cairo in Egypt. It was here that he would complete his most influential work.
The prevailing wisdom at the time was that we saw what our eyes, themselves illuminated. Supported by revered thinkers like Euclid and Ptolemy, Emission theory stated that sight worked because our eyes emitted rays of light — like flashlights. But this didn’t make sense to Ibn al-Haytham. If light comes from our eyes, why, he wondered, is it painful to look at the sun? This simple realization catapulted him into researching the behavior and properties of light: optics.
In 1011, Ibn al-Haytham was placed under house arrest by a powerful caliph in Cairo. Though unwelcome, the seclusion was just what he needed to explore the nature of light. Over the next decade, Ibn al-Haytham proved that light only travels in straight lines, explained how mirrors work, and argued that light rays can bend when moving through different mediums, like water, for example.
But Ibn al-Haytham wasn’t satisfied with elucidating these theories only to himself, he wanted others to see what he had done. The years of solitary work culminated in his Book of Optics, which expounded just as much upon his methods as it did his actual ideas. Anyone who read the book would have instructions on how to repeat every single one of Ibn al-Haytham’s experiments.
“His message is, “Don’t take my word for it. See for yourself,” Jim Al-Khalili, a professor of theoretical physics at the University of Surrey noted in a BBC4 Special.
“This, for me, is the moment that Science, itself is summoned into existence and becomes a discipline in its own right,” he added.
Apart from being one of the first to operate on the scientific method, Ibn al-Haytham was also a progenitor of critical thinking and skepticism.
"The duty of the man who investigates the writings of scientists, if learning the truth is his goal, is to make himself an enemy of all that he reads, and,.. attack it from every side," he wrote. "He should also suspect himself as he performs his critical examination of it, so that he may avoid falling into either prejudice or leniency."
It is the nature of the scientific enterprise to creep ahead, slowly but surely. In the same way, the scientific method that guides it was not birthed in a grand eureka moment, but slowly tinkered with and notched together over generations, until it resembled the machine of discovery that we use today. Ibn al-Haytham may very well have been the first to lay out the cogs and gears. Hundreds of years later, other great thinkers would assemble them into a finished product.
But okay, keep putting poc in the backburner/ as background characters / misrepresent/underrepresent them when it comes to Science when the very scientific method was created by a poc.
Cultivate the self with learning in order to progress and leave all else; for knowledge is an abode of all things. The self is like glass, the knowledge, like a lamp, and the wisdom of God, like oil. When your self is illuminated - you are alive, and when there is darkness - you are dead.
Ibn Sīnā (via thelittlephilosopher)
Mariam “Al-Astrolabiya” Al-Ijliya: Why she kicks ass
She lived in the tenth century in Aleppo, Syria and was a famous scientist who designed and constructed astrolabes.
Astrolabes were global positioning instruments that determine the position of the sun and planets, so they were used in the fields of astronomy, astrology and horoscopes. They were also used to tell time and for navigation by finding location by latitude and longitude. They were also used to find the Qibla, prayer times, and determine starting days for Ramadan and Eid.
Mariam Al-Ijliya came from a family of engineers and manufacturers, like her father and many engineers, she was a student of a certain Bitolus, who was a well known manufacturer of astrolabes in Baghdad and she in turn became his student. Her hand-crafted designs were so intricate and innovative that she was employed by the ruler of the city, Sayf Al Dawla, from 944 AD until 967 AD.
We shall show them our signs in the universe and within themselves until it becomes clear to them that this is the truth. Is it not enough that your Lord is the witness of all things? (Qur’an 41:53)
If you want a physical copy of the leaflet (more pages included in the physical copy), let me know and I’ll send it, insha’Allah.
Ali’s status among the companions of Muhammad (saws) was that of the ‘rational’ in the midst of the ‘corporeal’.
Abu Ali ibn Sina (Avicenna), Nahjul Balagha: A Commentary by Martyr Ayatullah Murtada Mutahhari (via bu-hashem)
Awesomeness. Allahuakbar.
600 years before Galileo, al-Biruni wrote that the Earth rotates on its axis. Unlike Galileo, his ideas were accepted by religious scholars. Source: Lost History by Michael Hamilton Morgan
The earliest hospitals in Baghdad and Cairo served both the rich and the poor for free, no health insurance needed.