Wang Tai-yü's great learning of the pure and real and Liu Chih's Displaying the concealment of the real realm ; with a new translation of Jāmī's Lawāʼiḥ from the Persian by William C. Chittick /
Includes bibliographical references (pages 241-246) and indexes.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
1. Chinese-Language Islam 13 -- The Essentials of Islam 14 -- The Chinese Language 17 -- Wang Tai-yu 19 -- Liu Chih 24 -- The Arabic Translation of Liu Chih's Philosophy 28 -- Translations into Chinese 31 -- The Neo-Confucian Background 35 -- 2. The Works of Wang Tai-yu 43 -- The True Answers 44 -- The Real Commentary on the True Teaching 48 -- Adam and Eve: From Chapter Two of the Real Commentary 60 -- The Real Solicitude 64 -- 3. Wang Tai-yu's Great Learning 69 -- The Chinese Background 70 -- The Islamic Concepts 74 -- 4. The Great Learning of the Pure and Real 81 -- Synopsis: Comprehensive Statement 84 -- The Real One 89 -- The Numerical One 93 -- The Embodied One 96 -- 5. Liu Chih's Translation of Lawaih 113 -- The Oneness of Existence 116 -- Liu Chih's Appropriation of Lawaih 121 -- The Translations 126 -- 6. Gleams 128 -- 7. Displaying the Concealment of the Real Realm 129.