Islam without extremes : a Muslim case for liberty / Mustafa Akyol.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780393347241 (pbk.)
- 0393347249 (pbk.)
- BP 173.6 A315i 2013
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Oficina Leonel Fernández | Colección 6to. Piso | BP 173.6 A315i 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00000109145 |
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BL 65 R888h 2013 Holy ignorance : when religion and culture part ways / | BL80.3 D778 2011 All things shining reading the Western classics to find meaning in a secular age / | BP 40.5 E37i 2011 Islam dot com : contemporary Islamic discourses in cyberspace / | BP 173.6 A315i 2013 Islam without extremes : a Muslim case for liberty / | BP 193.5 T112s 1975 Shi'ite Islam, | BS511.3 C321 2010 The God who is there finding your place in God's story / | C112 2012 Photoshop cs6/ |
Originally published: 2011. Reprinted with a new epilogue by the author.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction -- Part I: The beginnings. A light unto tribes -- The enlightenment of the Orient -- The medieval war of ideas (I) -- The medieval war of ideas (II) -- The desert beneath the iceberg -- Part II: The modern era. The Ottoman revival -- Romans, Herodians, and Zealots -- The Turkish march to Islamic liberalism -- Part III: Signposts on the liberal road. Freedom from the state -- Freedom to sin -- Freedom from Islam -- Epilogue.
Islam without Extremes presents a provocative manifesto for an interpretation of Islam that synthesises liberal ideas and respect for the Islamic tradition. With an eye sympathetic to Western liberalism and Islamic theology, Mustafa Akyol traces the roots of political Islam. The years following the death of Muhammad saw an intellectual "war of ideas" rage between rationalist, flexible schools of Islam and the more dogmatic, rigid ones. The traditionalists won, fostering perceptions of Islam as antithetical to modernity. However, Akyol traces a flourishing of liberalism in the nineteenth-century Ottoman Empire and explores the unique "Islamo-liberal synthesis" of present-day Turkey. Only by accepting a secular state, he asserts, can Islamic societies thrive. Persuasive and inspiring, Islam without Extremes offers an intellectual basis for the reconcilability of Islam and religious, political, economic and social freedoms.
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