In
Metaphysical Institutions, Caner K. Dagli explores the ultimate nature of the realities we call religions, cultures, civilizations, and traditions through the lens of a particular question often limited to religious studies, history, and anthropology, namely: ‚What is Islam?‘ The book is both a philosophical treatise about the nature of shared thinking that uses the encounter between the Modern Project and Islam as an illustrative example, and an exploration of the conceptualization of Islam in light of the metaphysics of consciousness and meaning.
Dagli first develops a comprehensive theory of the institution and then expands its meaning to include a new category called ‚metaphysical institutions, ‚ with the goal of establishing both necessary and empirically variable features of all institutions, including those that deal with ultimate questions. The new model is then used to analyze questions of authority and autonomy, rationality and imitation, the universal and the particular, and other enduring questions.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Institutions
1. What Kind of Thing Is Islam?
2. The Nature of Institutions and Shared Thinking
Part II: Metaphysics
3. The Metaphysics of Antidualism
4. The Metaphysics of Meaning
5. The Metaphysics of Paradox
Part III: Islam and the Modern Project
6. The Language Analogy
7. Project and Tradition
8. One Islam, Many Islams, or No Islam?
Conclusion The Sighted Men and the Elephant
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Über den Autor
Caner K. Dagli is Associate Professor in the Department of Religious Studies at the College of the Holy Cross and the author of
Ibn al-ʿArabī and Islamic Intellectual Culture: From Mysticism to Philosophy. He is also one of the general editors of
The Study Quran: A New Translation and Commentary.