I found those quotes which I wanted but couldn't find, but they are only the opinion of a Rabbi who teaches in Oxford who was absolutely trounced in a debate with the Hitch.
This quote was my favourite, from the chapter addressed to women, in his book "An Intelligent Person's Guide to Judaism"
Men require physical signs of spirituality in order to bring out their religious devotion. For women this occurs more intuitively. And so men may need to wear a yarmulka to remind them that God accompanies them at all times, while women don't need an external symbol as they experience the divine presence more inwardly.
another quote from the same chapter;
The common denominator of all these names [descriptions?] of the divine is that they either convey Awsome Might and Vengence or nuturing and mothering.
he also writes;
Rabbi Issac Luria, a famous mystic, even wrote in the 15th century that the Messiah would not come until husbands started listening to their wives, by which he meant that the Messiah would not come until men began worshipping God as women do.
And this quote from where he is summing up the arguments of the chapter;
Women, hailing from the infinite, are not bound by time the way that men are. Their spirituality transcends the confines of spatio-temporal existance and they are thus obligated only in those commandments which apply at all times and places.
These are some quotes I copied from his book years ago, so they may not be quite verbatim but I think I was true to the intended meaning when I copied them.
Was Islam influenced by the very strong atheistic tendencies in Greek thinking?
I think so. I think this influence was there right from the begining since
Mecca was not the home of ignorance before Mo appeared even though Mo says it was. I think the Greek influence was already there in the Gnostic Xtians who were refugees from persecution by the emerging Literalist Xtianity, but I haven't got all the quotes handy which justify that thought.