PS_RalphW wrote:The irony is that the enlightenment and scientific revolution where built on the foundations of a lot of work done Islamic scholars whilst we suffered under the medieval church. Arabic numerals, algebra, (al)chemistry etc., etc.
Cultures change, sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. There is nothing in the Islamic religion itself that causes fundamentalism. It is just another meme that the human brain is prone to latch on to in its weaker moments.
The Islamic religion, as laid out in the Quran, literally interpreted, is most certainly a cause of dangerous Islamic fundamentalism. That's the
point.
The bible, literally interpreted, is equally dangerous. The point is that the Enlightenment and all the rest means that, for the most part, the bible is no longer fundamentally interpreted by the vast majority of people who come from a broadly Christian tradition, even to the extent that many of them
may not even lay claim to a belief in a god, myself included. That's a measure of just how far the Christian
cultural tradition has come. Islam has not yet adequately gone through this historical process.
Having said all of the above, where I differ from some of the previous points made is that I do not believe that there is a rising global tide of Islamic fundamentalism that we should be concerned with in and of itself. This rising tide is a function, not of Islam per-se. But, is, instead, due to a hundred or so years of Western forces accessing the oil in Islamic countries by fair means or foul and, in doing so, carving up parts of the world in such a way as to make ethnic and religious conflicts pretty much inevitable. All of the above is further complicated by the matter of cultural issues that exist independently of Islam, but which nevertheless occur in some oil rich, predominantly Islamic countries. This leads, if we are not careful to erroneously assigning some of the cultural practices in such countries to Islam instead of to other aspects of their culture.
In other words, I am suggesting, yes, Islam needs to go through a process of cultural growth and that will inevitably involve sometimes violent tensions between the old reactionary Islamic forces and the forces of Islamic liberalism. However, the globally murderous levels of those tensions we are currently witnessing are, to a significant extent, the result of our various interferences in various Islamic countries over many decades. These tensions, though, are yet further complicated by other cultural issues in those countries.
We reap what we sow. Or, rather, the poor bastards who have to live in those countries are reaping it. We should walk away and let them fight it out until a blind, vindictive peace eventually pertains. Two or three centuries down the line, the vindictiveness will be forgotten and there will be only the peace.
But we can't walk away because of the oil.