Islamic virtues have much in common with Jewish and Christian virtues
Note 11. To the Subsection “4. Weaknesses in the Islamic View of Value”
Примітка 11. До розділу “6.4. Вразливість уявлення про цінності в ісламі“
The Koran says: “Say: We belive in Allah and that which is revealed to us; in what was revealed to Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, and the tribes; to Moses and Jesus and the other prophets by their Lord. We make no distinction amongst any of them, and to Allah we have surrendered ourselves.” THE KORAN, trans. with notes. N.J. Dawood (New York: Penguin Books, 1974), 346.
Note
- Understanding the Three Realms in Buddhism: desire, matter, and non-matter
- A good person can be called a person who exists for the good of others
- Addressing dehumanization through active participation and critique of capitalism
- Economic independence and the struggle against exploitation in the post-WWII less developed world
- From personal cultivation to governing the state in The Great Learning
- Tathagata in Buddhism
- Islamic virtues have much in common with Jewish and Christian virtues
- Of all the virtues of Islam, the most basic is mercy or mercy
- Pascal’s view of happiness and faith