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    Ibn Al-Nafis Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Ibn Al-Nafis? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Ibn Al-Nafis from Polymaths and what is the personality traits.

    Ibn Al-Nafis
    INTP

    INTP (5w4)

    Ibn Al-Nafis personality type is INTP, and initially it seemed like a shock that he could have been a good judge considering he only had a high school education.

    But after I read more about Ibn Al-Nafis and his philosophy, I found that I could relate to it a lot.

    Ibn Al-Nafis just wanted a better way to explain a phenomenon in the world, and he tried to find it through experimentation. He would create a hypothesis and test everything by moving forward to its logical consequences, and if the consequences were still the same, he would accept it.

    He wasn't really interested in assigning a label to his theories, but his philosophical thought was still very intriguing.

    Ibn Al-Nafis also described people as "a species of animals", which is similar to Carl Sagan's famous remark: "If we do not understand it, we call it a 'mystery' and if we do understand it we call it a 'science.' "

    Ibn Al-Nafis was also very insistent on evidence-based thinking, and he stressed the importance of only accepting the truth only when the evidence is overwhelming.

    Ala-al-Ddin abu al-Hasan Ali ibn Abi-Hazm al-Qarshi al-Dimashqi (Arabic: علاء الدين أبو الحسن عليّ بن أبي حزم القرشي الدمشقي), known as Ibn al-Nafis (Arabic: ابن النفيس), was an Arab physician from Damascus mostly famous for being the first to describe the pulmonary circulation of the blood. The work of Ibn al-Nafis regarding the right sided (pulmonary) circulation pre-dates the later work (1628) of William Harvey's De motu cordis. Both theories attempt to explain circulation.Apart from medicine, Ibn al-Nafis studied jurisprudence, literature and theology. He was an expert on the Shafi'i school of jurisprudence, philosopher and an expert physician. The number of medical textbooks written by Ibn al-Nafis is estimated at more than 110 volumes. His Al-Risalah al-Kamiliyyah fil Siera al-NabawiyyahorTheologus Autodidactus is said to be the first theological novel in which he attempted to prove that the human mind is able to deduce the truths of the world through reasoning. He described this book as a defense of "the system of Islam and the Muslims' doctrines on the missions of prophets, the religious laws, the resurrection of the body, and the transitoriness of the world"

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