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This book explores the methodological foundation of Islamic thought premised on the cardinal principle of Tawhid, meaning the Oneness of God as the universal law. The consequential methodological worldview arising from the monotheistic unity of knowledge is explained as the theory of consilience, meaning unity of knowledge as the primal ontological reality leading to its epistemological and phenomenological essentials of reasoning and thereby configuring reality. Masudul Alam Choudhury presents a non-mathematical exposition of the theory and applications of Meta-Science of Tawhid, and brings…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book explores the methodological foundation of Islamic thought premised on the cardinal principle of Tawhid, meaning the Oneness of God as the universal law. The consequential methodological worldview arising from the monotheistic unity of knowledge is explained as the theory of consilience, meaning unity of knowledge as the primal ontological reality leading to its epistemological and phenomenological essentials of reasoning and thereby configuring reality. Masudul Alam Choudhury presents a non-mathematical exposition of the theory and applications of Meta-Science of Tawhid, and brings out the essential monotheistic methodological worldview of science.

Autorenporträt
Masudul Alam Choudhury is Professor and Dean of the Faculty of Business Administration, Director, Mentor, and Patron of USTC's Quality Assurance Centre, Research Center, and University Journal, respectively in the University of Science and Technology Chittagong, Bangladesh. As adjunct professor he is the International Chair of Postgraduate Program in Islamic Economics and Finance, Faculty of Economics at Trisakti University in Jakarta, Indonesia. He is also Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal of Systems and Ethics (IJOES, Emerald). He is frequent Sumer Visiting Professor in the Social Justice Education Department of Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto. This work was started in the Department of Shari'ah and Economics, University of Malaya, when he was Visiting Professor there. The work was researched in the rich Robarts Library of University of Toronto in conjunction with the author as Summer Visiting Professorin the Social Economy Center of OISE-UofT.