Sunday, February 05, 2006

Conflicting Civilizations Pt 2

To further expand some thoughts:

1) We can never truly trust Islam. Their religious texts explicitly say that they do not have to act in good faith with non-believers. Any lie or deception is not only admirable, but expected.

2) Their culture was founded on spreading their religion by the word and the sword. Mohammed imposed Islam on Mecca and the Arabian Peninsula at the head of an army. This tradition continued under the Caliphs after him.

3) There is no reward for moderation in the Islamic culture. The way to power and wealth is extremism. Moderates are ignored or eliminated.

4) There is huge historical resentment in the Islamic culture. They remember that they were once the zenith of civilization. They cannot accept that their present backwardness is due to their theocracies. They do not yearn to achieve our standard of living, they would be perfectly willing to reduce ours instead. (the bucket of crabs phenomena)

5) Their religious leaders are not stupid. They know the dangers of Western liberalism poses to their position, power and influence.

6) Secularism is practically non-existent in the Islamic culture. The one Islamic country that pays lip service to secularism, Turkey, is still dominated by religious considerations.

7) We have seen in the UK, France and to a lesser extent the US, that even second and third generation immigrants will reject their host culture and embrace militant Islam.

Update:
8) Reason is not nearly as important in the Islamic civilization as our own. Our reliance on reason is an outgrowth of classical liberal thought. In the Islamic culture religious belief, raw emotion, honor and revenge are all more important than reason. Reasonable people do not become suicide bombers.

9) The Islamic culture is an Eastern one. They do not value individual life as we do. This is again due to the lack of classical liberal thought. They are still tied to the ideas of family, clan and tribe and are perfectly willing to subsume the interests of the individual to the larger whole. They see our concern for individual lives as a weakness to be exploited. This will make any eventual conflict between our civilizations even bloodier.

Update (2/7/06) :

10) Moderation and accommodation (both of which are necessary in order to co-exist with a competing ideology) require that you respect your opponents, and grant their motives and beliefs legitimacy. Islam does not and cannot do this. It runs directly counter to its doctrine and dogma. To the question of "Can't we all just get along?" the Islamic civilization replies, "Only if you convert."

Update (2/12/06):

Check out this link to an article that says much of what I have been saying from last August.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

A well written post. I'll be back.

Jerri Lynn Ward, J.D. said...

I believe that Reason is not just an outgrowth of liberal philosophy. In fact, it is my opinion that some of ideas that have come from the Enlightment have weakened the West in this confrontation with Islam.

I think that Reason grows from Christian philosophical thought. See the works of Francis Schaeffer for further analysis. He says it better than I ever could.

Gahrie said...

I would disagree with you. Before the rise of the enlightenment movement, scientists and scholars were still being tried by the Catholic Church if their conclusions based on experiment and reason, differed from the teachings of the Church. To its credit, the Church soon realized that its best interests lay in promoting, and co-opting where it could, the fruits of the enlightenment. The Islamic faith never made this shift, and is still resisting the ideas of the enlightenment. (Which in fact is the reason for their civilization's backwardness, but they will never admit this)

Jerri Lynn Ward, J.D. said...

Gahrie,

Your comments about what the Catholic Church was doing are correct. I think they strayed far from the Scriptures, which is why I am Protestant.

Here is an example of what I am talking about when I criticize the Enlightenment and its detrimental impact on Reason.

"In the first half of this century, Western man began to think in terms of mutually exclusive truths. In other words, we began to believe that two people could believe mutually exclusive truths simultaneously and both of them could be correct. This would be like two people seeing an object and one claiming that it existed and the other claiming that it did not exist. The two men shake hands and say that they are both right in their conclusions. Objective reality is completely undermined and nothing is true. The result of this thinking is that man begins to despair of his condition.{3} He doesn’t know what is ultimately true."
http://www.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/schaeffer.html

Moral Relativism sprang from the Enlightment and is what makes it difficult for us to confront Islam.

Gahrie said...

I would agree that moral relativism is a problem. However I would argue that it is not an outgrowth of reason and enlightenment, but rather a perversion of it. (similar to those who claim that communism is an out growth of Jesus' teachings)
Reason, and the enlightenment movement at its core was an attempt to define truth. Moral relativists are instead interested in denying truth.