Amir Hassan

Contributing Editor — Islamic dream scholarship, classical oneirology, and ru'ya tradition at DreamNoos.

Amir Hassan — Contributing Editor (Islamic scholarship)

Editorial transparency note: “Amir Hassan” is a byline DreamNoos uses for its Islamic and classical dream-scholarship editorial focus area, not a single licensed individual. It represents dedicated review work carried out under the General Editor’s methodology — see editorial standards for how attribution works on this site.

This byline contributes the Islamic and classical layer on DreamNoos — Ibn Sirin, Al-Nabulsi, the distinction between ru’ya (meaningful vision) and hulm (disturbed sleep imagery), and respectful treatment of religious dream language.

It works alongside Alper Kale (General Editor) and Serena Voss (psychological layer) so every interpretive page honours tradition on its own terms while remaining accessible to a global English audience.

Editorial grounding

  • Synthesis grounded in Islamic theology and ethics literature
  • Focus on classical dream literature — Ibn Sirin, regional commentaries, and ru’ya/hulm frameworks in scholarly tradition
  • Comparative-religion framing — presenting Islamic reads alongside Jungian and folk layers without flattening differences

Dreams in the Islamic tradition

This editorial focus emphasises:

  • Ru’ya vs. hulm — not every vivid image carries the same weight; context, sincerity, and conduct matter in classical readings
  • Behaviour over label — a figure’s action (guide, deceiver, helper) often weighs more than the symbol alone
  • Religious scenes — mosque, prayer, pilgrimage, and scripture motifs are read through intention, community, and spiritual state — not automatic blessing or punishment
  • Provision symbols — food, gold, and house dreams carry nuanced classical readings that depend on giver, receiver, and scene outcome

Subconscious & classical overlap

Where psychology speaks of the subconscious, classical Islamic discourse speaks of heart-state, heedfulness, and inner sight. this editorial focus helps DreamNoos keep those lanes distinct in prose: we do not collapse folklore, theology, and clinical language into one certainty.

Focus areas on DreamNoos

  • Classical Islamic dream interpretation references
  • Religious vs. psychological framing
  • Mosque, prayer, fasting, and pilgrimage motifs
  • Source accuracy for citations and cultural contrast sections
  • Review of pages that include spiritual long-tail queries

Contact

amir.hassan@dreamnoos.com

Perspective articles attributed to this byline follow editorial standards and Sources.