University professor and international government and media consultant John L. Esposito guides you through the facts and myths surrounding Islam and its more than 1.2 billion adherents. How familiar are you with the worlds second largest and fastest growing religion? Many in the West know little about the faith and are familiar only with the actions of a minority of radical extremists.
This course will help you better understand Islams role as both a religion and a way of life, and its deep impact on world affairs both historically and today. It is important to understand what Muslims believe, and also how their beliefs are carried out privately and publicly as individuals as well as members of a larger community.
Learning about Islam: What Does the Future Hold?
What does the future hold for Islam and the West in the new century? How will it change under the influence of conservatives, reformers, and extremists?
The focus of this course will be to better understand Islams role as a religion and as a way of life, says Professor Esposito. In 12 lectures, moving from Muhammad to the present, from the 7th to the 21st centuries, we will explore Muslim beliefs, practices, and history in the context of its significance and impact on Muslim life and society through the ages, as well as world events today.
You will learn about:
Muhammad
Jihad
Muslim beliefs about other faiths
Whether the Quran condones terrorism and what it says about God
The contributions to mathematics, science, and art made by a flourishing Islamic civilization
The role of women in Islam
Whether Islam is compatible with modernization, capitalism, and democracy.
Like Judaism and Christianity, Islam is one of the great monotheistic faiths that traces its ancestry to Abraham. Professor Esposito discusses the similarities and differences in the three great Abrahamic faiths and explores more closely the core beliefs that serve as the common denominators that unite all Muslims throughout the world.
We will see that Islam is not monolithic, says Professor Esposito. Although Muslims share certain core beliefs, the practices, interpretations, images, and realities of Islam vary across time and space.
The Stunning Growth of the Muslim Community and Its Golden Age
Within 100 years of Muhammads death, the Muslim community became a vast, dynamic, and creative Islamic empire that stretched from North Africa to India.
Islamic civilization flourished under the Umayyad and Abbasid empires. Under Abbasid rule (750–1258 C.E.), the Islamic community became an empire of wealth, political power, and cultural accomplishments.
Muslims made original creative contributions in law, theology, philosophy, literature, medicine, algebra, geometry, science, art, and architecture.
Arabic became the language of literature and public discourse. Centers were created for the translation of manuscripts from Sanskrit, Greek, Latin, Syriac, Coptic, and Persian into Arabic.
Europeans, emerging from the Dark Ages, turned to Muslim centers of learning to regain their lost heritage and to learn from Muslim advances. Through Islamic philosophy, Greek philosophy was retransmitted to Europe.
Examining the history of Islamic civilization helps us appreciate the remarkable achievements of its Golden Age and to understand the sources of sectarianism, religious extremism, and the conflict between Islam and Christianity, epitomized by the Crusades.
Understand the Development of Islamic Law
Professor Esposito takes a closer look at the historical development of two great Islamic institutions: Islamic law, (the Shariah) and Islamic mysticism (Sufism).
Islamic law has been seen as the ideal blueprint guiding Muslims correct action, that is, what to do in their public and private lives in order to realize Gods will.
Sufism resulted from efforts to experience a more direct and personal sense of God. Both law, the exterior path to God, and mysticism, the interior path, developed as responses to what was perceived as the abuse of the enormous wealth and power in Islamic empires.
The historical tradition of Islamic renewal and reform was developed to fight internal disintegration and upheaval in the Muslim world caused by outside forces from the 17th to the 20th centuries.
Professor Esposito examines the variety of religious sociopolitical movements that struggled to address weakness and decline in diverse Muslim societies through the ages, and discusses how and why these efforts continue to inspire Islamic modernists and contemporary movements in our time.
Discuss the Struggle for the Soul of Islam
The lectures examine the worldwide struggle for the soul of Islam occurring today between conservatives and reformers, mainstream Muslims and extremists. Among these issues, few are more fraught with controversy than the debates about women and Islam.
Professor Esposito discusses women and their changing roles. Issues include diversity of dress, social status, education, and roles for women in the family throughout the world.
Professor Esposito expands this human dimension to spotlight the ever increasing reality of Muslims as our neighbors and colleagues in Europe and America, examining how and why Muslims came to Europe and America, and the issues of faith and identity, integration and assimilation, that face them in their new homelands and how they are grappling with these challenges.
Harold McFarland, editor of Midwest Book Review, writes about this course: This is easily the most accurate, even handed, and thorough survey of Islam that I have seen to date. The extent of coverage, breadth, and depth of Professor Espositos knowledge, recognition of the various groups and beliefs within Islam, and scholarly treatment of the subject makes this a very highly recommended lecture series and the only one on the subject that I could recommend to date.
About Your Professor
Dr. John L. Esposito is University Professor, Professor of Religion and International Affairs, and Professor of Islamic Studies at Georgetown University. He earned his B.A. at St. Anthony College, his M.A. at St. Johns University, and his Ph.D. at Temple University.
Professor Esposito is Founding Director of the Center for Muslim Christian Understanding: History and International Affairs in the Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University. He has served as President of the Middle East Studies Association of North America, and the American Council for the Study of Islamic Societies. A specialist in Islam, political Islam, and the impact of Islamic movements from North Africa to Southeast Asia, Dr. Esposito serves as a consultant to the Department of State as well as multinational corporations, governments, universities, and the media worldwide.
In 2005, Professor Esposito won the American Academy of Religions prestigious Martin E. Marty Award for the Public Understanding of Religion. This award honors a scholar who has been exemplary in promoting the public understanding of religion.
A prolific writer, Professor Esposito is the author of over 25 books, including What Everyone Needs to Know About Islam, The Islamic Threat: Myth or Reality?, and Unholy War: Terror in the Name of Islam. He is also the Editor in Chief of The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World, The Oxford History of Islam, and The Oxford Dictionary of Islam.
Course Lecture Titles
1. Islam Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow
2. The Five Pillars of Islam
3. Muhammad Prophet and Statesman
4. Gods Word the Quranic Worldview
5. The Muslim Community Faith and Politics
6. Paths to God Islamic Law and Mysticism
7. Islamic Revivalism Renewal and Reform
8. The Contemporary Resurgence of Islam
9. Islam at the Crossroads
10. Women and Change in Islam
11. Islam in the West
12. The Future of Islam
http://www.rarefile.net/pj50tyds201y/Great.World.Religions.Islam.part01.rar
http://www.rarefile.net/vuzg548i0wiy/Great.World.Religions.Islam.part02.rar
http://www.rarefile.net/ygfp9elhgryo/Great.World.Religions.Islam.part03.rar
http://www.rarefile.net/yfvdrskqe6ue/Great.World.Religions.Islam.part04.rar
http://www.rarefile.net/1u3d5l3iu4sl/Great.World.Religions.Islam.part05.rar
http://www.rarefile.net/9xf5gu37t4hg/Great.World.Religions.Islam.part06.rar
http://www.rarefile.net/75q9k0p6lpsy/Great.World.Religions.Islam.part07.rar
http://www.rarefile.net/s0zw1io9tj42/Great.World.Religions.Islam.part08.rar
http://www.rarefile.net/10hy3byi4fyg/Great.World.Religions.Islam.part09.rar
http://www.rarefile.net/5mblg02fkn1p/Great.World.Religions.Islam.part10.rar
.
2 Responses to this entry.
Thanks Max!
Thank you too Jack