categories
- Traffic and Vehicles Catalogue
- socreal.catalog
- Advertisement Catalogue
- Photo Catalogue
- Chinese and Japanese Catalogue
- New Holy Card Catalogue II.
- 12 interesting old books
- Books
- Bibliophil
- Antiques
- Engraving
- Maps
- Photos
- Antique Papers, Small Prints
- Posters
- Circus
- Modern Graphics
- Socialist Realism
- NER Propaganda
- Others
cart
Cart is empty
You've not logged in
Akyol, Mustafa : Islam without Extremes - A Muslim Case for Liberty
- description
- additional information
As the Arab Spring threatens to give way to authoritarianism in Egypt and reports from Afghanistan detail widespread violence against U.S. troops and women, news from the Muslim world raises the question: Is Islam incompatible with freedom? In Islam without Extremes, Turkish columnist Mustafa Akyol answers this question by revealing the little-understood roots of political Islam, which originally included both rationalist, flexible strains and more dogmatic, rigid ones. Though the rigid traditionalists won out, Akyol points to a flourishing of liberalism in the nineteenth-century Ottoman Empire and the unique ?Islamo-liberal synthesis? in present-day Turkey. As he powerfully asserts, only by accepting a secular state can Islamic societies thrive. Islam without Extremes offers a desperately needed intellectual basis for the reconcilability of Islam and liberty.
condition: | |
category: | Books > Religion > |
category: | Books > History > 20th Century, Politics > |
category: | Books > Foreign Language Books > Books in English > |
publisher: | W. W. Norton & Company, 2013. New York, |
item number / ISBN: | 9780393347241 |
binding: | paperback |
pages: | 364 |
language: | English |