Why read more? To collect more "anecdotes" regarding Christianity or Islam that you'll disregard, being adverse to an "anecdote battle"?Then you need to read more. As I said, I'm not getting into an anecdote battle. — Thorongil
I think much of the public controversy about this topic arises from that word 'authentic'. It is typically assumed, without examination, that there is such a thing as 'authentic Islam'. There is no apparent reason to believe there is any such thing, just as there is no such thing as authentic Christianity or authentic Buddhism. Adherents of a particular sect, who have dogmatic tendencies, will insist that their sect's version of the relevant religion is the only authentic one, but very few people outside the sect believe them.I really don't believe Western liberalism and any kind of truly authentic Islam are going to find it easy to co-exist. — Wayfarer
It is typically assumed, without examination, that there is such a thing as 'authentic Islam'. — andrewk
very few people outside the sect believe them. — andrewk
Because of course, "the West" is monolithic, as much as "the Islamic world," right? — Arkady
Speaking for myself, I've never said that Islam is inherently more violent (in terms of its scripture, say; though, as others have pointed out, its principal figure was a bit more violent than Jesus in his lifetime), I've said that it is more violent than any other major world religion in the 21st century.So, to claim that the problem is that Islam is inherently more violent than Christianity is not only to make a claim that is not supported by evidence (show me a study where levels of violence in majority Islamic countries are found to be significantly higher than those in majority Christian countries where other socio-cultural variables are accounted for) but also to prevent yourself from having any hope of finding a solution. Which is fine only for those who don't really want one. — Baden
You are using a story that an imaginary Muslim might make a certain claim, as proof of the truth of the claim. If we ask the same Muslim 'Is there life after death?' they might say 'yes'. Is that then proof that there is life after death? We then ask Richard Dawkins, and he says No, so we now have proof that there is no life after death. So we now have two conflicting proofs. Of course, neither is a proof.What do you think, if you asked a Muslim, if there were 'such a thing as authentic Islam', that he or she would say? I bet they would not even comprehend the question. The response would be: of course there is, 'authentic Islam' is the word of the Prophet. — Wayfarer
Surely you know me well enough by now to know I'm not a reductionist. I don't believe in scientific facts. Science is just a tool for helping us construct useful narratives. A lovely, lovely tool. But still just a tool.and I think you believe that to be tantamount to 'scientific fact'. — Wayfarer
In short, you are confusing an observation of someone that self-describes as belonging to group G saying they believe there is an essence of group G, with evidence that there is an essence of group G. Remember the True Scotsman. He was convinced there was an essence of being a Scotsman, and he was a Scotsman. Does that make him right? — andrewk
to any Muslim who takes the teachings of his faith seriously, it must seem that many Western ideas about how Islam ought to change just promise its eventual extinction.
This is clearly true of the idea, held by certain prominent atheists and some of my fellow conservatives and Christians, that the heart of Islam is necessarily illiberal — that because the faith was born in conquest and theocracy, it simply can’t accommodate itself to pluralism without a massive rupture, an apostasy in fact if not in name. [Some here are saying this; in fact one of my near relatives believes it to the point where he and his spouse can't even discuss the issue.]
But it’s also true of the ideas of many secular liberal Westerners, who take a more benign view of Islam mostly because they assume that all religious ideas are arbitrary, that it doesn’t matter what Muhammad said or did because tomorrow’s Muslims can just reinterpret the Prophet’s life story and read the appropriate liberal values in. [That's the kind of view you're advocating]
the Qur'an is there for all to read, — VagabondSpectre
No I'm not. One's religious ideas are deeply conditioned by one's psychology, which is in turn conditioned by genes and environment (including, in some cases, spiritual experiences). One has very little choice in the matter, so I certainly would not say they are arbitrary.secular liberal Westerners, who take a more benign view of Islam mostly because they assume that all religious ideas are arbitrary, that it doesn’t matter what Muhammad said or did because tomorrow’s Muslims can just reinterpret the Prophet’s life story and read the appropriate liberal values in. [That's the kind of view you're advocating] — Wayfarer
No I'm not. One's religious ideas are deeply conditioned by one's psychology, which is in turn conditioned by genes and environment.... — andrewk
Revelation was covered in my very next six words. Why did you leave them out of your quote? Here they are again:but not, it would seem, by any actual revelation — Wayfarer
Revelation was covered in my very next six words. — andrewk
Of course it matters what the Quran says, just as it matters what the Bible says - because some people take them literally. — andrewk
it all starts to look like just an attempt to feel superior to 'the Left' — andrewk
You often speak sympathetically about condemnations of the supposed immorality of the West, but I'm never quite sure what you're referring to. — Arkady
It's only one more step before you realize that as there is no absolute indisputable meaning of religion X (just shades of plausibility with regard to interpretations)... — Baden
No. You are reading it wrong. I did not say that spiritual experiences are conditioned by genes and environment. I said that a person's beliefs are conditioned by their genes and environment. The parenthesis clarifies that 'environment' encompasses everything that happens to a person, including any spiritual experience, revelation or other such thing. It is not necessary for us to guess whether the experience is a hallucination or a genuine interaction with a deity. Whichever it is, the experience is still part of somebody's historical environment.But, notice, that you've given a reductionist account of revelation, i.e. one might have 'spiritual experiences' but these are 'conditioned by genes and environment' — Wayfarer
Who holds that notion? Not me. I have repeatedly said that the idea of 'Islam' as an entity or agent with which one can converse and do deals, is a chimera.As I've acknowledged, the implication of my view is that I think there ought to be more examination of the implicit notion that Islam can be an 'equal partner' in a liberal-secular framework, and a consideration of the hidden premises in the arguments from both sides. — Wayfarer
Indeed, thanks for pointing that out. I had thrown an -ism onto the end of anti-Islam, and totally missed the resulting ambiguity. — VagabondSpectre
I presume you support death to apostates and atheists? — tom
What do you support though? Anti-religious sentiment in general? Are you a full blown hard-atheist anti-theist? You've condemned Islam, so what now? — VagabondSpectre
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