Defenders of Reason In Islam: Mu'tazilism and Rational Theology from Medieval School to Modern Symbol

by Richard C. Martin

Paperback, 1997

Status

Available

Call number

297.2

Collection

Publication

Oneworld (1997), Paperback, 288 pages

Description

Drawing on texts both ancient and modern, this book explores rational theology in Islam, from ninth and tenth century Mu'tazilism to rationalist modernist scholarship.

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LibraryThing member gmicksmith
Muʿtazilah (Arabic: المعتزلة‎) is an Islamic school of speculative theology that flourished in the cities of Basra and Baghdad, both in present-day Iraq, during the Abbasid Age (800-1050 CE). Though Mu'tazilis later relied on logic and different aspects of early Islamic philosophy, Greek
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philosophy, and Hellenistic philosophy, the truths of Islam were their starting point and ultimate reference.

Table Of Contents Introduction - a tale of two texts; the rise and fall of the Mu'tazila in premodern Islam; the life and works of Qadi' abd Al-Jabbar; a thick description of the five Usul; Kiab Al-Usul Al-Khamsa (book of the five fundamentals) - a translation; the persistance of traditionalism and rationalism; the significance of Mu'tazilism in Indonesia; Harun Naustion's defense of Mu'tazilism; Kaum Mu'tazilah dan Pandangan Rasionalanya (the Mu'Tazila and rational philosophy) - a translation; modern and postmodern glosses of Mu'tazilism; the implication of modernity - deconstructing the argument.

p. 232, `aql, reason; rationalism in Islam thought.

p. 233, islamiyun, Islamists, contemporary traditionalist Muslims, sometime referred to as fundamentalists, who seek to make the Shari`a the highest and most pervasive authority in Islamic states.
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Language

Physical description

288 p.; 5.79 x 0.63 inches

ISBN

1851681477 / 9781851681471
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