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Mohamed Atalla, Egyptian engineer and physical chemist, inventor of the MOSFET (MOS transistor), and National Inventors Hall of Fame laureate. [31] Mohamed Sanad, Egyptian antenna scientist and professor in the Faculty of Engineering, Cairo University. [32] Ma Haide, Lebanese-American doctor who practiced medicine in China. [33]
Zayn al-Din al-Amidi (d. 1312 AD), Islamic scholar and inventor; Zaynab bint al-Kamal (1248–1339), Arab woman scholar; Zethos (3rd-century), neoplatonist and disciple of Plotinus; Zakariya al-Qazwini (d. 1283), physician, astronomer, geographer, and proto-science fiction writer; Zakariyya al-Ansari (c. 1420–1520), Islamic scholar and mystic
Griot: The griot musical tradition originates from the Islamic Mali Empire, where the first professional griot was Balla Fasséké. [121] Sitar: According to various sources, the sitar was invented by Amir Khusrow, a famous Sufi inventor, poet, and pioneer of Khyal, Tarana and Qawwali, in the Delhi Sultanate.
History of Islamic Philosophy. Routledge. pp. 315, 1022– 1023. ISBN 0-415-13159-6. Russell, G. A. (1994). The 'Arabick' Interest of the Natural Philosophers in Seventeenth-Century England. Brill Publishers. pp. 224– 262. ISBN 90-04-09459-8. Siddique, Md. Zakaria (2009). "Reviewing the Phenomenon of Death—A Scientific Effort from the ...
Lists of Muslim scientists and scholars cover scientists and scholars who were active in the Islamic world before the modern era. They include: List of scientists in medieval Islamic world; List of pre-modern Arab scientists and scholars; List of pre-modern Iranian scientists and scholars; List of Muslim Nobel laureates
The elephant clock was one of the most famous inventions of al-Jazari.. Badīʿ az-Zaman Abu l-ʿIzz ibn Ismāʿīl ibn ar-Razāz al-Jazarī (1136–1206, Arabic: بَدِيعُ الزَّمانِ أَبُو العِزِّ بْنُ إسْماعِيلَ بْنِ الرَّزَّازِ الجَزَرِيّ, [ældʒæzæriː]) was a Muslim polymath: [2] a scholar, inventor, mechanical engineer ...
The Conica of Apollonius of Perga, "the great geometer", translated into Arabic in the ninth century Chemistry. 801 – 873: al-Kindi writes on the distillation of wine as that of rose water and gives 107 recipes for perfumes, in his book Kitab Kimia al-'otoor wa al-tas`eedat (Book of the Chemistry of Perfumes and Distillations.) [citation needed]
Pages in category "Arab inventions" The following 80 pages are in this category, out of 80 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9. 20 µm process; A.