Well Begun is Only Half Done...
Well Begun is Only Half Done: Tracing Aristotle’s Political Ideas in Medieval Arabic, Syriac, Byzantine, and Jewish Sources , ed. by Vasileios Syros (Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies 388; Medieval Confluences Series 1). Tempe, Arizona: ACMRS (Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies), 2011, xiv-226 pp., ISBN 9780866984362. Section I. Falsafa Bibliographies and Chronicles Daiber , Hans, Bibliography of Islamic Philosophy, vol. 1 (in 2 vol.) & vol. 2.
Leiden-Boston: Brill, 2011, ISBN 9789004202382 [paperback reprint of the 1999 ed.]. Druart , Thérèse-Anne, “Brief Bibliographical Guide in Medieval Islamic Philosophy and Theology (2009-2010),” http://philosophy.cua.edu/faculty/tad/bibliography-09-10.cfm. Online Dictionary of Arabic Philosophical Terms Andreas Lammer has begun an online dictionary of Arabic philosophical terms. It can be accessed at http://www.arabic-philosophy.com/dict .
New Journals Journal of Islamic Research is published twice a year by the Islamic University of Europe located in Rotterdam in the Netherlands. It began in 2008 and can be accessed on the internet at http://www.iueurope.com It includes articles in Turkish, English, French and German. Studia graeco-arabica is the on line journal of the European Research Council Advanced Grant Greek into Arabic. Philosophical Concepts and LinguisticBridges .
It features critical articles and reviews on the transmission of philosophical and scientific texts from and into various languages – Greek, Syriac, Arabic, and Latin – from late Antiquity to the Middle Ages and Renaissance. The first issue came out in 2011. The journal can be accessed at http://www.greekintoarabic.edu/index.phpaid=20. Resurrected Journal Oriens published its vol. 35 in 1996 and its vol. 36 in honor of Rosenthal in 2001. Vol. 37 was published in 2009, vol.
38 in 2010, and the two issues of vol. 39 in 2011 by Brill. The journal is directed by Gerhard Endress, Cornelia Schöck & Florian Schwarz. Special Issues of Journals Arabica , 58.1/2 (2011) centers on Les Nusayris et les Druzes: deux communautés ésotériques à la périphérie doctrinale de l’Islam. Actes des journées d’études organisées par Daniel De Smet et Orkhan Mir-Kasimov.