Islamic Theology and Extraterrestrial Life: New Frontiers in Science and Religion
Editat de Jörg Matthias Determann, Shoaib Ahmed Maliken Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 feb 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780755650880
ISBN-10: 0755650883
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția I.B.Tauris
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0755650883
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția I.B.Tauris
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Uniquely brings together a range of leading experts, including Muslim theologians, scholars of comparative religion, philosophers, historians, and social as well as natural scientists
Notă biografică
Shoaib Ahmed Malik is Visiting Researcher at St Mary's University, UK.. He is the author of Islam and Evolution: Al-Ghazali and the Modern Evolutionary Paradigm (2021) and various peer-reviewed journals. He specialises as an interdisciplinary researcher in the field of Islam and science.Jörg Matthias Determann is Professor of History at Virginia Commonwealth University, Qatar. He is the author of four books published by I.B. Tauris: Islam, Science Fiction and Extraterrestrial Life (2020); Space Science and the Arab World (2018); Researching Biology and Evolution in the Gulf States (2015); and Historiography in Saudi Arabia (2013).
Cuprins
Introduction Shoaib Ahmed Malik and Jörg Matthias Determann 1. Theological Information on the Existence of Intelligent Life Outside Our Solar System: Metaphysics, Scripture, and Science Hamza Karamali2. Does the Qur?an Affirm Extraterrestrial life? A Hermeneutic Analysis of the of Surat al-Na?l (Q. 16:8) Moamer Khalayleh3. Islamic Sacred Resources on Extraterrestrials and Their Possible Eschatological Implications Mohammad Mahdi Montasseri4. Extraterrestrials and Moral Accountability: Nonhuman Moral Personhood through the Lens of Classical Sunni Theology and Law David Solomon Jalajel5. Classical Muslim Thought and the Theological Implications and Possibility of Non-Human Entities Bearing Higher Intelligence Faisal Abdullah6. Extraterrestrial Intelligent Life and Islamic Beliefs: Investigating Six Potential Conflicts Shoaib Ahmed Malik7. The Alien in the Lamp? The Jinn and Alien Life in Islamic Theology Richard Playford8. A Qur?anic Ufology? Seven Exotheological Hypotheses of the Indonesian 'Islamic UFO' Community Ayub and Ilham Ibrahim9. Exotheology in Contemporary Egyptian Science Fiction - A Comparative Appraisal Emad El-Din Aysha
Recenzii
This landmark interdisciplinary volume fills a huge gap in our discussions of the theological impact of the discovery of extraterrestrial intelligence. Heretofore the focus has been on Christianity, but for the first time we have multiple scholarly views of the potential impact on Islamic theology and the Earth's two billion Muslims. This is a substantial contribution to the new and growing field of astrotheology, and should be read by anyone interested in the future evolution of religions on Earth.
The Qur'an meets exotheology. This is a most informative, comprehensive, and reflective compilation of Islamic thinking about the prospect of sharing God's cosmos with other intelligent creatures on exoplanets. Now, aliens do not seem so alien any more.
This is a fascinating collection - due both to the intrinsic interest of the topic, and to the richness and creativity of the Islamic philosophical, theological, and literary traditions engaging with it. Out of this world.
As realisation grows that we are a global community across the earth, researchers have increasingly considered the question of whether we are alone. What would the encounter with an extra-terrestrial mean for our assumptions about the nature of reality, of the human, of gods, and for some of the most fundamental theological and ethical questions that follow, concerning goodness, recompense, and the life of the soul? It also reminds us of the importance of philosophical and theological questions raised by sci-fi that is also worth pursuing to make sense of Muslim futurism. This pioneering volume - and there is little doubt that it not only is the first but potentially seeks to open up a broader field of the intersection of Islamic studies and exotheology - attempts to address these by looking at the resources and possibilities within the Islamic traditions (one should emphasise the plural here) in order to create positive theologies for the future. An exciting turn in the literature on religion and science.
The discovery of extraterrestrial life, if made, will likely impact all cultures, societies and religions. It is important to assess such an impact as James Webb Space Telescope is searching for bio signatures in exoplanet atmospheres, there are rovers currently on Mars, and the SETI program is actively looking for signals from technological civilizations in our Galaxy. This eclectic collection of essays fills in a crucial gap in literature, and provides a glimpse into potential Islamic theological and jurisprudential responses to such a discovery.
Islamic Theology and Extraterrestrial Life takes one small, but significant, step as a pioneer work in exotheology, but potentially representing one giant leap for a forthcoming discipline.Through a series of thought-provoking chapters that span various disciplines, including Islamic theology, jurisprudence, and Christianity, this work delves into hitherto relatively uncharted scholarly territories. It explores scholarly, complex and intellectually intriguing questions, such as how the discovery of extraterrestrial life forms aligns with religious beliefs. Do these forms of life possess souls and spirituality? How do we ethically and spiritually relate to them?This volume offers a captivating journey into unexplored realms of religion and science, inviting readers to contemplate the mysteries of the cosmos.
The Qur'an meets exotheology. This is a most informative, comprehensive, and reflective compilation of Islamic thinking about the prospect of sharing God's cosmos with other intelligent creatures on exoplanets. Now, aliens do not seem so alien any more.
This is a fascinating collection - due both to the intrinsic interest of the topic, and to the richness and creativity of the Islamic philosophical, theological, and literary traditions engaging with it. Out of this world.
As realisation grows that we are a global community across the earth, researchers have increasingly considered the question of whether we are alone. What would the encounter with an extra-terrestrial mean for our assumptions about the nature of reality, of the human, of gods, and for some of the most fundamental theological and ethical questions that follow, concerning goodness, recompense, and the life of the soul? It also reminds us of the importance of philosophical and theological questions raised by sci-fi that is also worth pursuing to make sense of Muslim futurism. This pioneering volume - and there is little doubt that it not only is the first but potentially seeks to open up a broader field of the intersection of Islamic studies and exotheology - attempts to address these by looking at the resources and possibilities within the Islamic traditions (one should emphasise the plural here) in order to create positive theologies for the future. An exciting turn in the literature on religion and science.
The discovery of extraterrestrial life, if made, will likely impact all cultures, societies and religions. It is important to assess such an impact as James Webb Space Telescope is searching for bio signatures in exoplanet atmospheres, there are rovers currently on Mars, and the SETI program is actively looking for signals from technological civilizations in our Galaxy. This eclectic collection of essays fills in a crucial gap in literature, and provides a glimpse into potential Islamic theological and jurisprudential responses to such a discovery.
Islamic Theology and Extraterrestrial Life takes one small, but significant, step as a pioneer work in exotheology, but potentially representing one giant leap for a forthcoming discipline.Through a series of thought-provoking chapters that span various disciplines, including Islamic theology, jurisprudence, and Christianity, this work delves into hitherto relatively uncharted scholarly territories. It explores scholarly, complex and intellectually intriguing questions, such as how the discovery of extraterrestrial life forms aligns with religious beliefs. Do these forms of life possess souls and spirituality? How do we ethically and spiritually relate to them?This volume offers a captivating journey into unexplored realms of religion and science, inviting readers to contemplate the mysteries of the cosmos.