bananabrain
awkward squadnik
yes, but c0de, couldn't your argument be reduced to "my interpretation is the best"? i've noticed someone pop up on the islam board just now talking about how hadith and so on need to be removed, so we can get back to the pristine Text. the thing is, we've already experienced something very similar in both christianity (the reformation) and in judaism (karaism - not, in fact, the reform movement, which was slightly different) and in both cases these reformations have foundered on the unarguable fact that the Text, in every case, requires human interpretation, thus refracting the argument into a question about the source of legitimate interpretative authority.c0de said:Today, just like Judaism, there are those Muslims who take a sort of adaptationist approach, there are those who are assimiliationists, and then there are the so called "orthodox". The problem is that the real Islam (in my opinion) lies at the heart of the Quran. And all of these parties include extra-Quranic material in their beliefs (except the assimiliationists who could care less). IMO, a proper
reading of the Quran makes it perfectly compatible with living a good life in any society, in any time.
an excellent point; the key to understanding it is to understand what the *drivers* of the desire to reform are and whether they are the same in all cases. i would posit the following:Netti-Netti said:The silent assumption here is that a reformation is a good thing. That assumption warrants exploring.
1. dissatisfaction with power structures and those in power
2. observation of injustices and social inequity purportedly incompatible with the Text
3. identification of some kind of malevolent "foreign" influence or some other form of "admixture"
4. tension between the socio-historic conditions prevalent in the Text at the time of Revelation/redaction and those prevailing in contemporary society
it would be instructive to see whether political revolutions have the same drivers, incidentally.
this presumes that mankind develops from orthodoxy or fundamentalism to, i don't know, liberal democratic religion of some sort and, indeed, this was the founding presumption of C18-C19 reform judaism, the "enlightenment" and, indeed, the more recent tenet of fukuyama's theory of "the end of history". however, it does somewhat fly in the face of actual historical fact - fundamentalism is a fundamentally modern phenomenon (read karen armstrong's "the battle for G!D") and, arguably, earlier societies were sometimes more progressive in some ways - the mirror of your view of history is that of the "rose-tinted glasses" of the "golden-agers", who believe in some version of the "decline of the generations" theory, which we certainly are not short of in judaism unfortunately.Avi1223 said:The kind of reformation I am looking for is where orthodoxy or fundamentalism evolves to the next stage in mankinds development.
them's fighting words, avi - so you think peace is conditional upon my giving up miracles? i think you're going to be waiting a while.It also means that people let go of false ideas such as the age of the earth being 6,000 years old and the occurance of ancient miracles which divide us to this day.
exactly - the nazis killed people for not being sufficiently evolved into super-humans.The Protestants killed people for not going along with their progressive theological ideas. Obviously their theological update didn't make them better people.
yeah baby, starke and finke, those guys know where it's at.c0de said:You might be interested in the work of Rodney Stark and the "free-rider" thesis: as a new religion becomes politically powerful new adherents attach themselves to it who might just join because of the material benefits their membership provides and this undermines the faith of the truly committed. Stark argues that Christianity for example, was actually weakened by the conversion of Constantine. The same concept applies to all other religions as well, in fact to all movements of any kind.
much of maimonides is an attempt to harmonise the *best available scientific and philosophical knowledge* with the *clearest and most systemically robust* halakhic thought. this was not entirely successful, for the reason that there are some things he was mistaken about, although he did anticipate the replacement of aristotelian thought by something better and allowed for it. there were innovations that he introduced, such as introducing an idea of agreed dogmas to underpin a theology which had previously been less than systematic. this was both controversial in his lifetime (his books were periodically burnt for the next century or so) as well as largely ignored afterwards - read the work of menachem kellner. i am a great fan of the 13 principles only because i regard them as something completely different, in other words they are the 13 great unprovable, irreducible axioms of judaism, from which all else can be philosophically deduced - but they are neither comprehensive, nor are they compatible with aristotle (nor islam). maimonides was also a great opponent of the mutazilites. for more on these controversies, i also recommend that you read the work of ibn ezra, often (mistakenly in my view) claimed as the very first reform jew!Avi1223 said:In my reading about Maimonides, the philosophers that you mentioned are listed as foundational in his thinking. It seems to me that the ancient Greek and Islamic philosophers were leaders at logic with respect to philosophy. Maimonides was a brilliant medieval Jewish philosopher best known for his Mishneh Torah, which was a codification of Talmud. He is also known for the 13 Principles of Faith.
not all that well. it depends what sort of state you have and whether it has an "established religion" or not.The issue of theology vs. religion seems to correspond to the idea of “separation of church and state”. This ideal seems to work well in the USA but I am not sure how prevalent it is in the rest of the world ?
yes, you should look at the case of the establishment and generous state funding of the lutheran state churches in norway, sweden, denmark and germany. in all cases it has resulted in more or less complete religious apathy! stark and finke are very good on this: read "acts of faith" (2000). israel's a case in point, judaism, though not theocratically powerful in israel, is hugely powerful as an established religion (sharia law is also established, ironically enough) and this has caused huge controversy and arguably similar apathy or anti-religious feeling. theocratic government (netti-netti omits both pakistan, afghanistan and iran, one of the more complete examples) cannot reliably be shown to make the populace more religious. quite the reverse, in fact.Netti, I think there are many counties where church and state are not well separated. Don't you agree ? It doesn't mean it is totalitarian. The Vatican is an unusual case.
b'shalom
bananabrain