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      • Open Access Article

        1 - The Outlook of Mulānā Jalāl-al Din Rumī and Plotinus: A Comparative Study
        Hamidrezā Kharazmi
        Outlook, as the human view to world and himself/herself, provides answers to the fundamental questions of man about the world, the creation of world, the situation of creatures in the world, the position of man in the world, the afterlife world and the end of existence. More
        Outlook, as the human view to world and himself/herself, provides answers to the fundamental questions of man about the world, the creation of world, the situation of creatures in the world, the position of man in the world, the afterlife world and the end of existence. Plotinus, one of the thinkers of the 2th century, has opened a new way in philosophy. Mulānā Jalāl-al Din Rumī, the Persian poet and mystic of the 12th century, based on his mystical outlook, has a special view regarding being and world. The main question of the present article is about how these two thinkers view existence and being. For answering the question, at first, we analyze their ideas about world-view and then study the similarities and differences of them.   Manuscript profile
      • Open Access Article

        2 - Hamāmm in Mowlānā's works
        پروانه سیدالماسی پرستو سیدالماسی
          The Turkish baths are quite identical to Iranian baths regarding their architectural stractures and institutions. Hamāmm is often present in the works of Mowlānā Jalāl-al Din Rumī. According to the scripts and old tales, he spent most of his time meditating in More
          The Turkish baths are quite identical to Iranian baths regarding their architectural stractures and institutions. Hamāmm is often present in the works of Mowlānā Jalāl-al Din Rumī. According to the scripts and old tales, he spent most of his time meditating in baths. In his poetry, espicelly Masnavī Manavī, Mowlānā refers to dallāk (the person who helped wash clients by soaping and scrubbing their bodies), apodyterium (changing room), tepidarium (heated room), caldarium (hot bathing room) and etc. The present article entertains this very subject.     Manuscript profile
      • Open Access Article

        3 - The Memory of Mulānā Jalāl-al Din Rumī
        Majid Mansouri
        Studying the works of Persian great poets shows that some poems of Diwan-e Shams-e Tabrizi have not composed by Mulānā Jalāl-al Din Rumī, and the poems of Sultān Walad, Sanāee, Attār, Khāqāni and etc. have been recorded in the name of Mulānā. It can be argued that the p More
        Studying the works of Persian great poets shows that some poems of Diwan-e Shams-e Tabrizi have not composed by Mulānā Jalāl-al Din Rumī, and the poems of Sultān Walad, Sanāee, Attār, Khāqāni and etc. have been recorded in the name of Mulānā. It can be argued that the poems of poets who used to live after Mulānā have by mistake been recorded in Diwan-e Shams. But the poems of poets who used to live before him, like Sanāee and Attār, have been recorded by Mulānā himself.  In Sufi circles, Mulānā used to read the poems of these poets from memory, so some of the poems have been recorded in his own works. The present article considers some poems of Sanāee and Attār that have been recorded in the name of Mulānā in Diwan-e Shams. Also, his researches about the poems of Annvari, Mojir Beilaqāni and Nezāmi have been noticed.   Manuscript profile
      • Open Access Article

        4 - Sun as a Linguistic Sign in the Works of Rumī
        zohre najafi
        The mystical language of Mulānā Jalāl-al Din Rumī is distinct and special. He utilizes linguistic signs, significants, significances and signifieds for expressing his mystical ideas. One of the most applied signs, in his poems, is sun. He relates it, as a significant, t More
        The mystical language of Mulānā Jalāl-al Din Rumī is distinct and special. He utilizes linguistic signs, significants, significances and signifieds for expressing his mystical ideas. One of the most applied signs, in his poems, is sun. He relates it, as a significant, to different signifieds or different features of a signified. In mystical texts, sun is one of common linguistic signs, but Rumī uses it according his own mystical experiences and doesn't imitate his predecessors. So, sun, as a linguistic sign, includes a widespread field of significance and suggests different ideas to readers in different poems. The present article tries to show applications of the term of sun, its meaning and its various significances in the works of Mulānā Jalāl-al Din Rumī; in this way it is possible to have a better interpret of some of his poems.   Manuscript profile