Kapitel
Open Access
1.1 The concept of justice in Arabo-Islamic and Western philosophy
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Kaouther Karoui
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter 1
- Contents 5
- Acknowledgements 7
-
1. Introduction
- Introduction 9
- 1.1 The concept of justice in Arabo-Islamic and Western philosophy 12
- 1.2 The significance of postcolonial theory for the Maghrebian context 24
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2. Background and methods in the thought of Fatima Mernissi
- Introduction 29
- 2.1 The concept of secular humanism: The necessity of emancipating Islamic thought from religious and nationalist conceptions 45
- 2.2 The concept of justice in the modern era: The entanglement of descriptive and normative claims of justice theories 56
- 2.3 The rereading of ninth-century early Arabo-Islamic thought: The theorization of notions of justice through Mernissi’s transcultural and humanistic approaches 77
- 2.4 Transdisciplinary approaches to establish gender justice within the framework of Islamic feminism 96
- 2.5 The relevance of Mernissi’s feminist thought for a transcultural approach to feminism 138
- 2.6 Conclusion on the thought of Fatima Mernissi 151
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3. Background and methods in the thought of Mohammed Arkoun
- Introduction 155
- 3.1 Mohammed Arkoun’s rereading of the Islamic thought of Miskawayh (d. 1030): A multifaceted concept of justice 165
- 3.2 The method of applied Islamology: A transcultural and transdisciplinary key for the renewal of Islamic studies 189
- 3.3 Toward an emancipation from hegemonic constructions: The critique of orthodoxy, Arab nationalism, and Euro-modernism 222
- 3.4 The concept of emerging reason: A key for a democratic and cosmopolitan project 241
- 3.5 Conclusion on the thought of Mohammed Arkoun 254
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4. Epilogue: Theorizing justice in contemporary Arabo-Islamic philosophy
- Introduction 261
- 4.1 The common approach to theorizing justice by Fatima Mernissi and Mohammed Arkoun 262
- 4.2 On the relevance of a cosmopolitan theory of justice based on a transcultural approach 266
- Bibliography 275
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter 1
- Contents 5
- Acknowledgements 7
-
1. Introduction
- Introduction 9
- 1.1 The concept of justice in Arabo-Islamic and Western philosophy 12
- 1.2 The significance of postcolonial theory for the Maghrebian context 24
-
2. Background and methods in the thought of Fatima Mernissi
- Introduction 29
- 2.1 The concept of secular humanism: The necessity of emancipating Islamic thought from religious and nationalist conceptions 45
- 2.2 The concept of justice in the modern era: The entanglement of descriptive and normative claims of justice theories 56
- 2.3 The rereading of ninth-century early Arabo-Islamic thought: The theorization of notions of justice through Mernissi’s transcultural and humanistic approaches 77
- 2.4 Transdisciplinary approaches to establish gender justice within the framework of Islamic feminism 96
- 2.5 The relevance of Mernissi’s feminist thought for a transcultural approach to feminism 138
- 2.6 Conclusion on the thought of Fatima Mernissi 151
-
3. Background and methods in the thought of Mohammed Arkoun
- Introduction 155
- 3.1 Mohammed Arkoun’s rereading of the Islamic thought of Miskawayh (d. 1030): A multifaceted concept of justice 165
- 3.2 The method of applied Islamology: A transcultural and transdisciplinary key for the renewal of Islamic studies 189
- 3.3 Toward an emancipation from hegemonic constructions: The critique of orthodoxy, Arab nationalism, and Euro-modernism 222
- 3.4 The concept of emerging reason: A key for a democratic and cosmopolitan project 241
- 3.5 Conclusion on the thought of Mohammed Arkoun 254
-
4. Epilogue: Theorizing justice in contemporary Arabo-Islamic philosophy
- Introduction 261
- 4.1 The common approach to theorizing justice by Fatima Mernissi and Mohammed Arkoun 262
- 4.2 On the relevance of a cosmopolitan theory of justice based on a transcultural approach 266
- Bibliography 275