Journal of religious culture = Journal für Religionskultur
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177
By organizing the approach to religion historically, we trace the evolution, diffusion, and genealogies of ideas and themes and how those ideas have been inspired or configured by the events of times and human agency in looking at selected texts, actors, and themes. In other words, we inquire into the articulated problem of existence, its solutions, techniques and examples on a case-to-case basis contextualizing specific texts, actors and themes by relating them to time, space and situations.
175
Der "tolle Mensch" und der "alte Gott" : ein Essay über Nietzsches Apokalypse der modernen Existenz
(2013)
"Wohin ist Gott? rief er, ich will es euch sagen! Wir haben ihn getödtet, - ihr und ich! Wir alle sind seine Mörder!" Diese berühmten Sätze des 'tollen Menschen' aus Friedrich Nietzsches Werk 'Die Fröhliche Wissenschaft' sind keineswegs an bekennende Fromme gerichtet, um sie von ihrem Gottesglauben abzubringen und vom Atheismus zu überzeugen. Sein entsetzter Ausruf richtet sich vielmehr an die Atheisten oder sonstige Ungläubige. Aber diesen Ausruf tat er auch nicht, um sie in ihrem wissenschaftlichen oder unwissenschaftlichen Unglauben zu bestärken. Nein! Er ruft ihnen diese schier unglaubliche Wahrheit zu, um sie mit der Frage zu konfrontieren, ob sie, die Gott getötet haben, überhaupt wissen, was sie angerichtet haben, ob sie sich der Konsequenz ihrer ungeheuerlichen Tat bewußt sind.Der 'tolle Mensch' distanziert sich dabei keineswegs von seinen gottlosen Zuhörern; im Gegenteil: ausdrücklich rechnet er sich ihnen zu. Aber im Gegensatz zu den angeredeten Gottesmördern hat er begriffen, was für eine furchtbare Existenzkatastrophe sie gemeinsam heraufbeschworen haben.
Wer ist aber dieser Gott, den Nietzsche den 'alten Gott' nennt, und den er, der 'tolle Mensch' und seine Zuhörer auf dem Marktplatz der Moderne getötet haben?
187
In this essay, one of the most serious problems highlighted with respect to contemporary Iranians, who are mostly known as Shi‘ite-Perso (Shi‘ite-Persian) citizens of Iran, and what their view toward abusing wine and opium is. On one hand, the wealthy Persian literature is full of poems, narrations and notes with reference to wine and opium, while on the other hand, many parts of Shi‘ite-Islamic thought deem wine unclean and illegal, and abusing opium is forbidden except under certain [hard-fulfilling] conditions. Hereby, in this essay the aim is to express why the question “are drinking wine and abusing opium known as addiction or literal culture?” is suspended throughout the young Iranian generation. In this regard, the standpoints of Persian poets and Iranian religious figures towards wine and opium will be considered.
189
Mohammad Arkoun (٭1928, Algeria; †2010, Paris) was an influential Muslim intellectual and particularly concerned with - amongst a profound spectrum of scholarly interests – reforming the academic study of Islamic societies. Trained at the University of Algiers (Faculty of Philology) he ventured off to lecture Arab language and literature at the Sorbonne. His engagement with philosophy and sociology led in 1968 to his PhD at the Sorbonne through a work on Ibn Miskawayh’s ethics...
This exploration into Arkoun’s stances on the Quran looks onto the genesis of the Quran, the notion of the Quran as the ‘deliverer of truth’, and with that, its significane for the ‘being in the world’ of Muslim societies. I will also point out some crucial difficulties in the study of Arkoun’s views on the Quran as well as their implications for the study of Islamic cultures.
186
In this article, the author shows that progress of info-communications is a key factor of society changes, as it radically changes the key aspects of human life. Studying the time of progress and comparing it with the most important anthropic characteristic - length of human life, he comes to the conclusion that our generation has witnessed the tipping point in the rate of development of human civilization. This showing up in the fact that the present stage of the scientific and technological advance lead to the transformation, perhaps on the same scale, what were the appearance of written language and publishing, but these multiple fundamental changes in the life of society occur within the life of a single generation. In these circumstances, the task of forecasting, in its traditional setting, is becoming increasingly inaccurate. According to the author, the only possibility is to venture outside the framework of formal logic and technocratic approaches and try to find answers to these questions by generating new meanings of the realities surrounding us and in this context philosophy has a special role.
183
One memorable quote from Karl Marx’s conception of religion is, “religion is the opium of the masses.” By this, he critiqued religion as an analgesic that dulls the senses, thus inducing a false sense of satisfaction, and preventing the oppressed from revolting against the grubby socio-economic system. As the sigh of the oppressed, religion makes them to resign to fate since it only gives an unrealistic eschatological hope. Rather than conceive religion from this prismatic way, contemporary events have shown that religion has become an amphetamine or a catalyst for revolt, not only at the global but also national level. This work argues that religion is used as an amphetamine, an energizing pill, to pursue other goals than religious as depicted in the activities of Boko Haram sect, which has raised security challenges in contemporary Nigeria.