Modern Islamic philosophy
Modern Islamic philosophy revives some of the trends of medieval Islamic philosophy, notably the tension between Mutazilite and Asharite view of ethics in science and law, and the duty of Muslims and role of Islam in the sociology of knowledge and in forming ethical codes and legal codes, especially the fiqh (or "jurisprudence") and rules of jihad (or "just war"). See list of Islamic terms in Arabic for a glossary of key terms used in Islam.Key figures representing important trends include:
- Sayed Abul Ala Mawdudi
who revived Islamist thought
in the 20th century,
and argued that science
was itself merely re-discovering that all matter and energy obeys laws, and that
Kafir claims that humankind
was free of obligation to comprehend and obey such laws, had to be resisted by
Muslims. "Caliphate and Monarchy"
was his most important work. He established the Jamaat-e-Islami in India.
This and the Egyptian Ikhwan
al Muslimin ("Muslim
Brotherhood") were revivals of the tarika
tradition and committed to religious, political, and intellectual reform of Islam.
Nasser
exploited the latter to gain power in 1952
but then turned against the Brotherhood, murdering and torturing many members.
The leader Sayed Qutb
was executed with five others in 1966.
- Muhammad
Iqbal sought an Islamic revival based on social
justice ideals and emphasized traditional rules, e.g. against usury.
He argued strongly that dogma, territorial nationalism
and outright racism, all of
which were profoundly rejected in early Islam
and especially by Muhammad
himself, were splitting Muslims into warring factions, encouraging materialism
and nihilism. His thought
was influential in the emergence of a movement for independence of Pakistan,
in which his ideas are revered. Indirectly this strain of Islam also influenced
Malcolm X and other
figures who sought a global ethic through the Five
Pillars of Islam. Some claim that the Four
Pillars of the Green Party honor Iqbal and Islamic traditions.
- Ismail
al-Faruqi looked more closely at the ethics
and sociology
of knowledge, concluding that no scientific
method or philosophy
could exist that was wholly ignorant of a theory
of conduct or the consequences a given path of inquiry and technology.
His "Islamization
of knowledge" program sought to converge early
Muslim philosophy with modern sciences, resulting in, for example, Islamic
economics and Islamic sociology.
- Seyyed
Hossein Nasr, a political
ecologist, argues that khalifa
in Islam is fundamentally
compatible with ideals of the ecology
movement and peace
movement, more so than conventional interpretations of Islam.
He argues for an ecology-based ecumenism
that would seek unity amongst the faiths by concentrating on their common respect
for life as a Creation, i.e. the Earth's
biosphere, Gaia,
or whatever name. Pope
John Paul II has made similar suggestions that "mankind must be reconciled
to the Creation," and there is a Parliament of World Religions seeking a "global
ethic" on similar grounds.
- Numerous attempts to reconcile Islamic
sharia law with feminism
and human rights
norms of international
law have been made, dating back to reform efforts in former Soviet Central
Asia before 1920, when these regions
enjoyed effective autonomy
due to chaos in the Russian
Civil War. More modern efforts in Indonesia,
Afghanistan, Iran
and the proposed state of Palestine
have often emphasized the traditional role of women's control of the household
finances. In Bangaladesh the Grameen Bank has been involved in micro-capital financing
of small businesses run exclusively by women.
- The predominant theological
voice in Islam today is the Islamist
movement, a radically puritanical fundamentalist form of Islam.


