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The challenges and future of applied Islamic ethics discourse: a radical reform?

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Abstract

In this paper, I explore the concept of applied Islamic ethics, the facts, its challenges, and its future. I aim to highlight some of the deep-rooted issues that Muslims have faced historically and continue to experience today as they apply religious guidance to their daily lives. I consider the causes and rationale behind the current situation and look beyond to suggest ways in which this may evolve, calling for a radical reform. Muslims throughout the world are experiencing a deepening crisis of identity and confusion about their faith's principles and practices. I suggest how improvements might be achieved, in order to gain more coherence and understanding. This approach recognizes the importance of inviting an in-depth, deliberate analysis of relevant dialogues between religious experts of the text (scholars) and practitioners, those working at the grassroots. This approach remains faithful to the fundamental principles of the Islamic sources but also considers our present context. I recommend a shift in authority from scholars alone to a more inclusive, critical engagement of practitioners. Through this more comprehensive methodology of applied Islamic ethics, I suggest that Muslim communities, organizations, and individuals can remain faithful to their religious principles while, at the same time, actively participating in and contributing to our evolving societies. While I recognize that this will be a long process, I am confident that with applied Islamic ethics, the current feelings of confusion, self-doubt, and even apathy, given the previous failed processes of adaptation and reform, will give way to a new confidence in knowing how to address contemporary challenges.

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Notes

  1. See, e.g., [24].

References

  1. Ramadan, Tariq. 2009. Radical reform: Islamic ethics and liberation. New York: Oxford University Press.

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Correspondence to Tariq Ramadan.

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Ramadan, T. The challenges and future of applied Islamic ethics discourse: a radical reform?. Theor Med Bioeth 34, 105–115 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11017-013-9246-4

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11017-013-9246-4

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