Encountering Opposed Others and Countering Suggestions [khatarat]

Notes on Religious Tolerance from Ninth Century Arab-Muslim Thought

Authors

  • Faraz Masood Sheikh College of William & Mary

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/cis.34637

Keywords:

Religious Tolerance, Suggestions, Subjectivity, Muhasibi, Muslim Ethics, Intellectual Exercises

Abstract

Eschewing conventional approaches to religious tolerance in the study of Islam, the present study makes explicit an account of religious tolerance, and the larger discursive repertoire (psychological, anthropological and theological) in which it is grounded and to which it is linked, in the teachings of the ninth century Arab, Muslim thinker and moral pedagogue, al-Harith b. Asad al-Muhasibi (d. 857). I highlight the crucial role of suggestions in Muhasibi's vision of proper subjectivity and analyze how this vision relates to his implicit and complicated account of religious tolerance.

Author Biography

  • Faraz Masood Sheikh, College of William & Mary
    Faraz Masood Sheikh is an Assistant Professor of Religious Ethics at the College of William & Mary. He did is PhD in Islamic Studies and Comparative Religious Ethics at the Religious Studies Department, Indiana University Bloomington. His research interests include self and self-formation, the relations between discursive practices and subject formation, religion and moral psychology and comparative religious ethics and Muslim ethics.

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Published

2018-09-18

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Sheikh, F. M. (2018). Encountering Opposed Others and Countering Suggestions [khatarat]: Notes on Religious Tolerance from Ninth Century Arab-Muslim Thought. Comparative Islamic Studies, 11(2), 179-204. https://doi.org/10.1558/cis.34637