The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam /

Iqbal, Allama Muhammad

The Reconstruction of Religious Thought in Islam / Allama Muhammad Iqbal; edited & annotated by M. Saeed Sheikh - Lahore: Institute of Islamic Culture, 2006. - xxiii, 249 p. includes bibliography, index (205-249)

The book is a collection of seven lectures delivered by Allama Muhammad Iqbal between 1920-1932, compiled and edited by Muhammad Saeed Sheikh. The work seeks to re-examine Islamic metaphysics and intellectual foundations in light of modern knowledge, including science, history, and philosophy. Key themes include knowledge and religious experience; the conception of God and meaning of prayer; the nature of the human ego, freedom, and immortality; the “spirit of Muslim culture”; movement and dynamism as an essential element of Islam; and an exploration of whether religion remains possible in an age shaped by rationalism and secular thought. Iqbal argues that Islam must be understood as a dynamic, living tradition capable of dialogue with contemporary thought, rather than being frozen in classical forms.

9694690285


Islamic philosophy
Ego/self
Ijtihād
Epistemology
Metaphysics
Modernity
Revelation
Science and religion

297.1 / P9;2
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