The Human Words and Their Social Implications in the Narrations of Hind bint al-Khass al-Ayadiya
The Human Words and Their Social Implications in the Narrations of Hind bint al-Khass al-Ayadiya
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58564/ma.v15i39.1890Keywords:
Keywords: Human words, meaning, social, IndiaAbstract
The nature of humanity, as Ibn Sina pointed out, is: “A single thing may have many descriptions, all of which are intrinsic, but it is not a single one of them, but rather all of them. It is not a human being because it is an animal, a dead person, or something else, but because it speaks with its animality.”
It also appears that humanity is what distinguishes man from praiseworthy qualities, such as goodness and generosity of morals, and the thinker is the person who is intellectually and morally advanced, and the triune man who surpasses the ordinary with powers he acquires through evolution. As for humanity, it is the opposite of bestiality and the set of qualities that distinguish man or the set of individuals of the human species that these qualities are true of.
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