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Theme Changer

 Topic: Islam's arrested development.

 (Read 11789 times)
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  • Re: Islam's arrested development.
     Reply #60 - November 30, 2009, 08:19 AM

    Rashna was addressing Turkey exactly because Turkey is the most secular of the bunch, yet is having problems (poorer country in Europe) yet your statement seems to ad hom her, exactly because Turkey is the most secular of the bunch.

    This is how I see it, so correct me if I am wrong, or apologize to Rashna since she came under too many reactionary attacks in recent times.


    Lol! I misunderstanding I am afraid. I pointed out Turkey for the same reason (for being secular). The "Getting more and more reactionary though I am afraid." bit referred to Turkey and not to Rasha. I was simply saying that imho Turkey is stagnating or even going backwards (getting more reactionary;poor choice of words, should have really said that reactonary elements seem to be on the rise in Turkey) for the last ten years or so; but even so it still remains the most secular of all countries with a Muslim majority.
  • Re: Islam's arrested development.
     Reply #61 - November 30, 2009, 09:15 AM

    Ah k, sorry for misunderstanding then.

    "Ask the slave girl; she will tell you the truth.' So the Apostle called Burayra to ask her. Ali got up and gave her a violent beating first, saying, 'Tell the Apostle the truth.'"
  • Re: Islam's arrested development.
     Reply #62 - November 30, 2009, 11:45 AM

    Yep, we seem agree on lots of things; but we also disagree on some.
    True. Question is why?

    It's a big field of study, I suggest you to read this pdf http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/economicHistory/GEHN/GEHNPDF/ScienceandTechnology-WGCS.pdf (the one I proposed to rashna), it's well documented and could give element of answer.

    Absolutely, the question is however what do you do when this process of "continuous progress" (now I am a Marxist, heh) leads you to an idea that nullifies your most essential values? Dogmatic would say such an idea must therefore be wrong (take the concept of shirk as deterrent as an example) and dismiss it but somehow the idea that "everything is questionable" and that "objectively verifiable evidenc is needed" took hold and the rest is history.

    No we need to define what is "continuum progress". If we talk about "moral progress" It's not really that linear. Ancient persia had already the concept of human rights http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrus_Cylinder , it did not propagate automatically tough. And if we talk about about "western" progress,  industrial revolution for example, if we look at the "luddite" , their demands were not that unreasonable, reducing self-organizing skilled worker to mindless drone ,thus allowing things such as child work, for the sake of efficiency was not social progress. Wich makes me come to the concept of "technological progress", as I said in an other topic, technological determinism imho is false.

    Two example:

    -The Japanese started to use fireweapon, introduced by the portuguese.In the end, they rejected them because they were not in accord to their bushido principle .They only re-accepted it because of Matthew Calbraith Perry incursion.
    -The amish, who live in an obviously hyper-technological environnment, don't use it (they don't reject it per see, they seem to take a platonian approach to it).That made them self-sufficient, and they actually thrive in this socio economic crisis.

    That was a badly written post, but you see my point, I'm not sure if we can really define a total order on culture to classify them, only a partial one.







  • Re: Islam's arrested development.
     Reply #63 - December 01, 2009, 10:39 AM


    I read the first 9 pages and glanced thru the rest. Let me just tell you that if you like this sort of stuff then you will love Ziauddin Sardar's work.
    Nobody here is claiming that Islam is worthless or that IC failed to deliver anything of use. What I am claiming though is that cultures and societies that base their values and philosophy on dogmas
    are effectively shooting themselves in the foot. The problem with Islam (Christianity, Judaism, ...) is that it is based on immutable dogma. And that defies freedom of thought that is essential for Enlightenment.

    Read this passage carefully again: CLR James, like most anti-imperialists over the past two centuries, recognised that all progressive politics were rooted in the "Western tradition", and in particular in the ideas of reason, progress, humanism and universalism that emerged out of the Enlightenment. The scientific method, democratic politics, and the concept of universal values - these are palpably better concepts than those that existed previously, or those that exist now in other political or cultural traditions. Not because Europeans are a superior people, but because out of the Renaissance, the Enlightenment and the scientific revolution flowed superior ideas.
    Many of the ideas we call "Western" are in fact universal, laying the basis for greater human flourishing. The catch is not to reject "Western" ideas but to reclaim the best of them for all of humanity.

    People are potentially equal but cultures are not, because if they were the very idea of social and moral progress would be meaningless. It would be far better if everyone had the chance to live in the type of society or culture that best promoted human advancement.


    ...technological determinism imho is false.

    But of course it is false.

    The Japanese started to use fireweapon, introduced by the portuguese.In the end, they rejected them because they were not in accord to their bushido principle .They only re-accepted it because of Matthew Calbraith Perry incursion.

     
    This is exactly the point I am trying to make. The Japanese changed and went against their dogma because that was the rational thing to do.

    You also mentioned China as an example. The main ingredient that China is missing is freedom.

    Same can be said for Amish society. Do you think that Amish parents in general encourage critical thinking among their children? Or do they do their best to implement the "Amish" meme into their children?
    Let me ask you a blunt question? Would you like to live like an Amish? I wouldn't. Because the society I live in allows me to develop my potentials way better then Amish society ever could.
    People are potentially equal but cultures are not, because if they were the very idea of social and moral progress would be meaningless. It would be far better if everyone had the chance to live in the type of society or culture that best promoted human advancement.
    But that isn't going to happen is it. Why? Because people love their dogmas. And that is the main difference. I try not to have any. That is why I never had any problems defining my identity. My identity is fluid rather then static. I try and take the best from different cultures. Because I have freedom to do so. I don't have to play a role that "my society" is trying to impose on me because that is simply not required.
    And this in a way is the core issue. Most Muslims think that change is going to strip them of their identity. And that to me this is mind-boggling narrow-mindedness.

  • Re: Islam's arrested development.
     Reply #64 - December 01, 2009, 10:41 AM

    +1

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  • Re: Islam's arrested development.
     Reply #65 - December 01, 2009, 07:09 PM

    I read the first 9 pages and glanced thru the rest. Let me just tell you that if you like this sort of stuff then you will love Ziauddin Sardar's work.
    Nobody here is claiming that Islam is worthless or that IC failed to deliver anything of use. What I am claiming though is that cultures and societies that base their values and philosophy on dogmas
    are effectively shooting themselves in the foot. The problem with Islam (Christianity, Judaism, ...) is that it is based on immutable dogma. And that defies freedom of thought that is essential for Enlightenment.

    Read this passage carefully again: CLR James, like most anti-imperialists over the past two centuries, recognised that all progressive politics were rooted in the "Western tradition", and in particular in the ideas of reason, progress, humanism and universalism that emerged out of the Enlightenment. The scientific method, democratic politics, and the concept of universal values - these are palpably better concepts than those that existed previously, or those that exist now in other political or cultural traditions. Not because Europeans are a superior people, but because out of the Renaissance, the Enlightenment and the scientific revolution flowed superior ideas.
    Many of the ideas we call "Western" are in fact universal, laying the basis for greater human flourishing. The catch is not to reject "Western" ideas but to reclaim the best of them for all of humanity.

    People are potentially equal but cultures are not, because if they were the very idea of social and moral progress would be meaningless. It would be far better if everyone had the chance to live in the type of society or culture that best promoted human advancement.

    But of course it is false.
     
    This is exactly the point I am trying to make. The Japanese changed and went against their dogma because that was the rational thing to do.

    You also mentioned China as an example. The main ingredient that China is missing is freedom.

    Same can be said for Amish society. Do you think that Amish parents in general encourage critical thinking among their children? Or do they do their best to implement the "Amish" meme into their children?
    Let me ask you a blunt question? Would you like to live like an Amish? I wouldn't. Because the society I live in allows me to develop my potentials way better then Amish society ever could.
    People are potentially equal but cultures are not, because if they were the very idea of social and moral progress would be meaningless. It would be far better if everyone had the chance to live in the type of society or culture that best promoted human advancement.
    But that isn't going to happen is it. Why? Because people love their dogmas. And that is the main difference. I try not to have any. That is why I never had any problems defining my identity. My identity is fluid rather then static. I try and take the best from different cultures. Because I have freedom to do so. I don't have to play a role that "my society" is trying to impose on me because that is simply not required.
    And this in a way is the core issue. Most Muslims think that change is going to strip them of their identity. And that to me this is mind-boggling narrow-mindedness.




    Nobody here is claiming that Islam is worthless or that IC failed to deliver anything of use.


    *ahem*


    *AHEM*



    "This is exactly the point I am trying to make. The Japanese changed and went against their dogma because that was the rational thing to do. "

    The kind of dogma you hint to, does not exist. It would have to suppress every form of change . Physical one too. As for Japan, you know that it's a country famous for its alliance between modern technology and traditional culture.

    "Same can be said for Amish society. Do you think that Amish parents in general encourage critical thinking among their children? Or do they do their best to implement the "Amish" meme into their children?
    Let me ask you a blunt question? Would you like to live like an Amish? I wouldn't. Because the society I live in allows me to develop my potentials way better then Amish society ever could."

    I'm studying CompSci. I have tabs like Hacker News, Slashdot and proggit open. You know my response. But your opinion nor my opinion does not matter. Sustainability is an highly sought quality nowadays. The amish society is sustainable. Modern society is not. Does that make the amish society superior? So let me restate my point : Culture cannot be totally ordered.

    "My identity is fluid rather then static" Is this statement itself Fluid? eh ! But enough mind game, my point is that wathever your conception of life you still need a dogma, or system value, even if it is reduced to "no dogma" paradoxically. "I try and take the best from different culture" hehe that's funny because,  if you take value A somewhere you could end up with a new system value that cannot would have not accepted value A in the first place... you know what I'm hinting there  Tongue.

    As for:

    " I don't have to play a role that "my society" is trying to impose on me because that is simply not required" Well you are a British citizen. You have a role in this society, defined by Laws and Rights, wich, except. even will lawyer find some part obscure or counter-intuitive*. Does that mean you are a slave completely defined by it?

    As for the CLR james quote, I partially agree with him but I'm not in the mood to make a detailed response  whistling2

    PS:

    Note to myself, that I estimate worth of being made public:

    1)Been a lurker for too long. Trying to organize my thought to make those post show me that my current knowledge is quite hazy. It lacks a certain kind of clarity and unity. Too confuse , too instinctive. I must be fact based and not opininon-based.

    2)I must stop to respond to quote like I'm commenting code, really. That's inelegant. That must be a consequence of 1).

    *counter-intuitivity is something I feel is an important idea. why not developping it now? see 1).
  • Re: Islam's arrested development.
     Reply #66 - December 01, 2009, 07:58 PM



    Is this your cat? Cute. As far as *Ahem* is concerned, maybe I should have written "I am not claiming that Islam is worthless or that IC failed to deliver anything of use." K?

    The amish society is sustainable. Modern society is not.

    You are not a Gaia type environmentalist are you?
    Non-dogmatic society changes all the time. You know what was the main issue in New York circa 1900? Horseshit! I kid you not! There were arguments back then that this is unsustainable; they were even projecting the enormous amount of horseshit they would have to cope with in year 2000. If you know anything about evolution you should know that adaptable organisms are more successful; the "dogmatic" ones die out as soon as there is a critical change in environment.
     
    "My identity is fluid rather then static" Is this statement itself Fluid? eh ! But enough mind game, my point is that wathever your conception of life you still need a dogma, or system value, even if it is reduced to "no dogma" paradoxically. "I try and take the best from different culture" hehe that's funny because,  if you take value A somewhere you could end up with a new system value that cannot would have not accepted value A in the first place... you know what I'm hinting there  Tongue.

    This is exactly what I was trying to say. Values change, people change. I am not the same guy I was ten years ago. My values have changed, (hopefully) improved; as a result I am (hopefully) a better person. And closer to the Truth. You said: "if you take value A somewhere you could end up with a new system value that cannot would have not accepted value A in the first place"; this is precisely how values evolve.

    " I don't have to play a role that "my society" is trying to impose on me because that is simply not required" Well you are a British citizen. You have a role in this society, defined by Laws and Rights, wich, except. even will find some part obscure or counter-intuitive*. Does that mean you are a slave completely defined by it?

    No, of course not. Neither are you completely defined by "your" culture. I do admit though that this is a tricky subject as there is no complete freedom and we are all (at least to some extent) defined by factors we have no control over.

    One more thing. You are a smart guy who is using his brain for its intended purpose. And I respect you for that. Besides inputs from somebody with different perspective are always good for fostering critical thinking.
    Do stick around.


  • Re: Islam's arrested development.
     Reply #67 - December 01, 2009, 08:16 PM

    Quote
    Nobody here is claiming that Islam is worthless or that IC failed to deliver anything of use.

    Worthless? no. I never think of islam as a 'worthless' component in the cultures in attaches to. Harmful, negative, dangerous, ritualistic, orthodox, earthly, tribal, conquering, vengful. Those are the memes/qualities I think of when I look at islam. But not worthless or anything in that regards.

    "Ask the slave girl; she will tell you the truth.' So the Apostle called Burayra to ask her. Ali got up and gave her a violent beating first, saying, 'Tell the Apostle the truth.'"
  • Re: Islam's arrested development.
     Reply #68 - December 01, 2009, 10:05 PM

    (Clicky for piccy!)

    Is this your cat? Cute. As far as *Ahem* is concerned, maybe I should have written "I am not claiming that Islam is worthless or that IC failed to deliver anything of use." K?
    You are not a Gaia type environmentalist are you?
    Non-dogmatic society changes all the time. You know what was the main issue in New York circa 1900? Horseshit! I kid you not! There were arguments back then that this is unsustainable; they were even projecting the enormous amount of horseshit they would have to cope with in year 2000. If you know anything about evolution you should know that adaptable organisms are more successful; the "dogmatic" ones die out as soon as there is a critical change in environment.
     This is exactly what I was trying to say. Values change, people change. I am not the same guy I was ten years ago. My values have changed, (hopefully) improved; as a result I am (hopefully) a better person. And closer to the Truth. You said: "if you take value A somewhere you could end up with a new system value that cannot would have not accepted value A in the first place"; this is precisely how values evolve.
    No, of course not. Neither are you completely defined by "your" culture. I do admit though that this is a tricky subject as there is no complete freedom and we are all (at least to some extent) defined by factors we have no control over.

    One more thing. You are a smart guy who is using his brain for its intended purpose. And I respect you for that. Besides inputs from somebody with different perspective are always good for fostering critical thinking.
    Do stick around.


    Well said -I agree 100%,  the last paragraph in particular  Afro

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