Proceedings of the IIIT Lunar Calendar Conference

Front Cover
International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT), Jan 1, 1998 - Reference - 198 pages

This volume brings together both the elementary scientific facts that any lunar calendar formulation cannot ignore and a summary of the pressing scientific questions of particular interest to the Islamic calendar. Scientific aspects of the problem are thoroughly reviewed without prejudicing the argument in purely Islamic juridical questions and differences. The results are of great significance to both Islamic scholars and the general Muslim public.

The papers presented are of a high scientific quality and are followed by a unanimous statement of the professional astronomers on the scientific questions. If these conclusions are followed, the varying sets of conventions used by different Islamic populations can be made self-consistent and free from scientific errors, even if they still differ from each other. This new edition allows the correction of errors in the first edition, makes the style more uniform among the papers, and improves the articles’ graphs and figures. It aims to serve as an effective tool for addressing the calendrical issues that motivated the conference more than being merely a historical record. A new Afterword summarizes refinements in the scientific issues that have taken place in the ten years since the conference, many of which were prompted by the work presented here.

 

Contents

45
3-1
46
3-2
47
3-3
48
3-4
49
3-5
50
3-6
51
3-7
52
3-8
103
7-5
104
7-6
105
7-7
106
7-8
107
8-1
108
8-2
109
8-3
110
8-4

53
3-9
54
3-10
55
3-11
56
3-12
57
3-13
58
3-14
59
3-15
60
3-16
61
3-17
62
3-18
63
3-19
64
3-20
65
3-21
66
3-22
67
3-23
69
4-1
70
4-2
71
4-3
72
4-4
73
4-5
74
4-6
75
4-7
76
4-8
77
4-9
78
4-10
79
4-11
80
4-12
81
4-13
82
4-14
83
4-15
85
5-1
86
5-2
87
5-3
88
5-4
89
5-5
91
6-1
92
6-2
93
6-3
94
6-4
95
6-5
96
6-6
97
6-7
99
7-1
100
7-2
101
7-3
102
7-4
111
8-5
112
8-6
113
8-7
115
9-1
116
9-2
117
9-3
118
9-4
119
9-5
120
9-6
121
9-7
122
9-8
123
9-9
124
9-10
125
9-11
126
9-12
127
9-13
129
10-1
130
10-2
131
10-3
132
10-4
133
10-5
134
10-6
135
10-7
136
10-8
137
10-9
138
10-10
139
10-11
140
10-12
141
10-13
142
10-14
143
10-15
144
10-16
145
10-17
146
10-18
147
10-19
148
10-20
149
10-21
150
10-22
151
10-23
152
10-24
153
10-25
154
10-26
155
10-27
156
10-28
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1998)

Imad-ad-Dean Ahmad is a Ph.D. astronomer who has been actively involved in the issue of moonsightings and the Islamic calendar since the 1980’s. Born in 1948 of Palestinian parents, Dr. Ahmad was raised in Pennsylvania. He graduated cum laude from Harvard in 1970 and in 1975 obtained a Ph.D. in astrophysics from the University of Arizona. Dr. Ahmad has done postdoctoral work in astronomy at Harvard, the University of Maryland, and under contract to Goddard Space Flight Center and for private firms. He is currently president of his own research firm, Imad-ad-Dean, Inc. (1998). 

Bibliographic information