ভূমিকা
Shiavault - a Vault of Shia Islamic Books Dictionary of Islamic Philosophical Terms Lam la ’adriyah Skepticism, the doctrine that no certain knowledge is possible, for senses can deceive and reasoning may be false-a view, for example, adopted by Imam Ghazali (450-505/1053-1111 -website-) at one stage of his spiritual development. In-its extreme form, as with some of the Greek philosophers, skepticism means that one does not know anything, and not even that. See also Furun.
la yasduru shai’-un ‘an la shai’-in The principle of ex nihilo nihil fit: out of nothing, nothing comes. The fundamental assumption of the law of causation that nothing happens in the universe without there being a cause for it. See also al-‘ilal al-’arba‘ah. lafz Vocable [see S. Afnan, Avicenna: His Life and Works, 92]; term. (AnAc) al-alfaz al-khamsah Literally the five predicables. It is also known as the al-mufradat al-khamsah (the five definitions) or al-kulyat al-khamsah.
the expressions like "all"; "some"; "not all", "not some", used to indicate the definite quantity of the subject in a proposition. See also sur. al-lafz al-mushtarak Homonym, a word that is spelt and pronounced in the same way as another, but has an entirely distinct meaning like the word ‘ain in Arabic which means "eye" as well as "spring" and the word "spring" itself in English which means "springing motion" as well as the "place where water or oil wells up". The use of such words.
leads to a number of fallacies of equivocation in logic (see mughalatah ishtirak al-lafzi). lazim Concomitant. (AnAc) lima "Why?": a form of question put in order to discuss the form and matter of definitions and propositions with regard to problems that arise in science. The interrogative pronoun lima is used in logic to ask two kinds of things: (1) "Why a thing is or what it is?" or "Why has an event occurred?", i.e.
"What is the cause of it?" (2) "What are the grounds of somebody's making an assertion?", i.e. "How is the assertion to be verified?".