Universality in Islamic thought : rationalism, science and religious belief
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Universality in Islamic thought : rationalism, science and religious belief
(Library of Middle East history, 52)
I.B. Tauris, 2014
- : hbk.
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 223-242) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In tenth-century Baghdad, the Mu'tazila theologians believed good and evil could be distinguished through human reason, while in the Indian subcontinent in the sixteenth century, rationalism served to express both the connections and boundaries of Islam in a sphere of religious pluralism. Universality in Islamic Thought discusses specific applications of rationalism in Islamic thought - from the Mu'tazila of Iraq and the Hanafi school of Islamic Law to the Chishti mystics of Mughal India - to explore the boundaries, morality and utility of the universalist principle as conceived by Islamic scientists, scholars, theologians and mystics across half a millennium. Providing a long-overdue and groundbreaking study of rationalism in Islam, this is the first methodological examination of how rationalism served - or did not serve - as a bridge between Muslims and non-Muslims during one of the most vital periods of Islamic intellectual activity. Bringing together contributions from leading academics such as Wilferd Madelung and Carl W Ernst, this is essential reading for scholars and students of intellectual history and Islamic studies.
Table of Contents
Introduction - Michael G. Morony
Universality in Islamic Thought: Rational Theology and the Muctazila - Wilferd Madelung
Cultic Acts: Their Cosmic Causes and Legal Conditions - Baber Johansen
Humanism in Ism?c?l? Thought: The Case of the Ras?'il - Ismail K. Poonawala
Universality in Islamic Historiography - Michael G. Morony
The Universality and Neutrality of Science - Emilie Savage-Smith
The Limits of Universalism in Islamic Thought: The Case of Indian Religions - Carl W. Ernst
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