Rationality and Ethics between Western and Islamic Tradition

In the contemporary legal and political debate a large space is taken by the concept of ‘reasonableness’ as a multifaceted notion. Its plasticity makes it very adaptable to the variety of problems that is called on to solve. Its philosophical underpinnings are located in the trad...

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Main Author: Michele Mangini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/9/10/302
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spelling doaj-91c0fa38b6c54a49aa53e65eee7157712020-11-24T21:24:58ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442018-10-0191030210.3390/rel9100302rel9100302Rationality and Ethics between Western and Islamic TraditionMichele Mangini0Department of Law, University of Bari, 70121 Bari, ItalyIn the contemporary legal and political debate a large space is taken by the concept of ‘reasonableness’ as a multifaceted notion. Its plasticity makes it very adaptable to the variety of problems that is called on to solve. Its philosophical underpinnings are located in the tradition of Western thought. On the one hand, we have the modern tradition, including the Kantian and the Humean views and, on the other, the Aristotelian–Thomistic tradition, proposing a different and competing conception of reasonableness. Insofar as the latter tradition proposes an idea relying on perfectionist considerations, I want to inquire into the Islamic tradition of reason and rationality in order to find whether it is closer to the first or to the second model. Concepts such as ‘ijitihad’, ‘maqasid’ and ‘maslaha’, I shall argue, find their better explanation if interpreted along the Aristotelian perfectionist tradition rather than along its competitor. If this move is well-founded, some important consequences for the understanding of contemporary Islamic culture may derive. My basic assumption is that those Islamic concepts (and a few others) embed a religious and cultural core of tension to ‘human development’ that can nicely dovetail with Aristotelian rationality and ethics of virtues.http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/9/10/302Islamic ethicsWestern ethicsreasonableness
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michele Mangini
spellingShingle Michele Mangini
Rationality and Ethics between Western and Islamic Tradition
Religions
Islamic ethics
Western ethics
reasonableness
author_facet Michele Mangini
author_sort Michele Mangini
title Rationality and Ethics between Western and Islamic Tradition
title_short Rationality and Ethics between Western and Islamic Tradition
title_full Rationality and Ethics between Western and Islamic Tradition
title_fullStr Rationality and Ethics between Western and Islamic Tradition
title_full_unstemmed Rationality and Ethics between Western and Islamic Tradition
title_sort rationality and ethics between western and islamic tradition
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2018-10-01
description In the contemporary legal and political debate a large space is taken by the concept of ‘reasonableness’ as a multifaceted notion. Its plasticity makes it very adaptable to the variety of problems that is called on to solve. Its philosophical underpinnings are located in the tradition of Western thought. On the one hand, we have the modern tradition, including the Kantian and the Humean views and, on the other, the Aristotelian–Thomistic tradition, proposing a different and competing conception of reasonableness. Insofar as the latter tradition proposes an idea relying on perfectionist considerations, I want to inquire into the Islamic tradition of reason and rationality in order to find whether it is closer to the first or to the second model. Concepts such as ‘ijitihad’, ‘maqasid’ and ‘maslaha’, I shall argue, find their better explanation if interpreted along the Aristotelian perfectionist tradition rather than along its competitor. If this move is well-founded, some important consequences for the understanding of contemporary Islamic culture may derive. My basic assumption is that those Islamic concepts (and a few others) embed a religious and cultural core of tension to ‘human development’ that can nicely dovetail with Aristotelian rationality and ethics of virtues.
topic Islamic ethics
Western ethics
reasonableness
url http://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/9/10/302
work_keys_str_mv AT michelemangini rationalityandethicsbetweenwesternandislamictradition
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