Secularism and the Arab World
تاريخ النشر: 01/08/2002
الناشر: دار الساقي للطباعة والنشر
نبذة الناشر:Secular Arabic thought is not a novelty, despite the religious and traditional nature of what is being written in the Arab world today. Saba Yared demonstrates that the beginnings of secularism can be traced back to the writings of various thinkers, mainly from Egypt, Lebanon and Syria, in a study ...that spans the mid-nineteenth century-when the first Arab intellectuals came into contact with Western thought and civilization-to the mid-twentieth century when secularism became part of the political, social and educational systems in many Arab countries. Among others whose works and thought are studied in this volume are Butrus al-Bustani, Shidyaq, Marrash, Adib Ishaq, Qasim Amin, farah Antun, Shumayyil, Zaydan, Abd al-Raziq, Lutfi al-Sayyid, Kawakibi, Salama Musa, Kurd Ali, Rihani, and Taha Husayn.
This illustrates how writers (both Christian and Muslim) took a secular stand, not only in their writings on the nature of government, nationalism and the socio-economic system, but also when addressing issues such as morality and religion in relation to society, education, women's rights, language and literature, science, and freedom of thought and expression. إقرأ المزيد