The Critical Path
Contemporary Islamic scholarship emerged in the mid-nineteenth century in response to the overall stagnation of Muslim society and culture. Muslim reformers advanced a simple but powerful thesis: overcoming the weaknesses and deficiencies of contemporary Muslim society requires profound social and...
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Formato: | article |
Lenguaje: | EN |
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International Institute of Islamic Thought
2000
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Acceso en línea: | https://doaj.org/article/8431853462664cbaa650e11bdd0001ba |
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Sumario: | Contemporary Islamic scholarship emerged in the mid-nineteenth century
in response to the overall stagnation of Muslim society and culture.
Muslim reformers advanced a simple but powerful thesis: overcoming the
weaknesses and deficiencies of contemporary Muslim society requires profound
social and cultural reforms, and hence a critical examination of traditional
thought and institutions.
The pioneers of contemporary Islamic reform were versed in both modem
Western and traditional Islamic thought. Early reformers, such as Al-
Afghani, Abduh, al-Kawakibi, and Iqbal critically engaged both the system
of ideas inherited from the Muslim past and those received from the modern
West. Their free spirit, inquisitive minds, and unyielding courage
allowed them to place intellectual reform on a critical yet balanced path.
While the tradition of critical thinking they espoused continues to grow
and flourish among many contemporary Muslim thinkers, the balance they
maintained in criticizing the self and the other has been lost by a large segment
of Muslim intellectuals. Most Muslim intellectuals are critical of
either traditional Muslim scholarship or Western thought, but seldom both.
This one-sidedness has turned knowledge and scholarship into a partisan
tool to be used against the perceived ideological adversary.
Factors contributing to the one-sidedness of many contemporary Muslim
scholars are numerous, and are often rooted in pure political or economic
motives. Two factors, however, stand out as expressively theoretical and
intellectual: the ahistorical view of ideas and concepts among Muslims,
whereby what has been devised by early scholars is given universal and
absolute validity; and the absence of an Archimedean point from which the
intellectual can judge both.
For over a century now, Muslim intellectuals have been divided into two
major blocs, the advocates of modernity and the defenders of Islamic tradition.
The former continue to see Islam as a premodern legacy, incapable of
leading Muslim society into a challenging future. Trapped in an end-of-history
mindset, they have not been able to develop a critical approach to ...
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