Arab doctors made significant contributions to medicine during the Islamic Golden Age, particularly in the fields of surgery, pharmacology, and anatomy. Notable figures such as Avicenna (Ibn Sina) authored influential texts like "The Canon of Medicine," which served as standard medical references for centuries. They advanced medical practices by introducing systematic observations, clinical trials, and hospitals, laying the groundwork for modern medicine. Their work preserved and expanded upon ancient knowledge, bridging the gap between the Greeks and later European developments.
performing surgery on the brain
They was bombing, shooting, smelling pot, kidnaped chubacka and king kong
Yes and No. Assuming that this question refers to medieval Arab doctors, they did realize that coughing, sneezing, touching a sick person or their pustules/boils, and other forms of contact would serve to transmit diseases from person to person. However, they did not have the "germ theory of disease" which is prevalent today and asserts that microorganisms cause most ailments and these are the beings that are transmitted from person to person.
1 arab=100 crores so there are 9 zeroes in 1 arab i.e 1000000000.
Arab. For example: Look at this Arab man wearing Arab clothing and reading a book in Arabic.
A Kenyan is not an Arab and its impossible for a Kenyan to become an Arab because an Arab has to be someone from one of the Arabic countries
The address of the Arab Public Library is: 325 2Nd Street NW, Arab, 35016 1346
The address of the Arab Historical Society is: Po Box 352, Arab, AL 35016
Nada M. Shabout has written: 'Modern Arab art' -- subject(s): Aesthetics, Arab, Arab Aesthetics, Arab Art, Art, Arab
You can claim Arab ancestry. It doesn't make you an 'Arab.'If one of your great great grandfathers was Arab and the rest were not, you can claim to be Arab if you want, but if your don't want to you don't have to.
yes she is Arab
Arab Chess Federation's motto is 'Arab as one Nation'.