1st Edition

Human Conscience and Muslim-Christian Relations Modern Egyptian Thinkers on al-damir

By Oddbjørn Leirvik Copyright 2006
    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    Human Conscience and Muslim-Christian Relations puts forward a discussion of how the notion of conscience may unite Muslim and Christians across religious divides, as well as examining the relation between selfhood and otherness in interfaith dialogue. The author explores how the notion of conscience has been dealt with by modern Egyptian authors and discusses their works in light of how Christian-Muslim relations in Egypt have evolved during the modern period.

    Part 1: Introduction: Horizon and Focus, Terms and Methods  1. Horizon and Focus  2. Terms, Concepts and Methods  Part 2: Christian Conscience and Islamic Ethics  3. The Self and the Other in Christian and European Discourses of Conscience  4. Islamic Ethics – Knowing with Whom?  Part 3: Interlude: The Semantics of Damir  5. Conscience in Arabic: The Semantics of Damir  Part 4: Al-Damir in Modern Egyptian Muslim Authors  6. The Notions of Al-Damir and Wijdan in Egyptian Reformers and Writers  7. ‘Abbas Mahmud Al-‘Aqqad (1889-1964): Ethico-Religious Internalisation, Human Conscience and Islamic Apologetics  8. Khalid Muhammad Khalid (1920-1996): Conscience, Human Authenticity and Islamic Democracy  9. M. Kamil Husayn (1901-1977): Conscience as the Law of Inhibition and the Voice of God  10 . Christians and Muslims in Egypt: United or Separated by Modernity?  11. Conclusions to Part Four  Part 5: Concluding Discussions  12. Wronging the Self, Wronging the Other: Conscience and Ethics in Modernity  13. Conscience in Interreligious Dialogue: Telling the Story of Oneself as Another  14. Knowing with God: Face to Face with the Other?

    Biography

    Oddbjørn Leirvik