Communicative Reason & Medieval Iranian Thought
by
Book Details
About the Book
In this book the theories of Marx, Weber, and Habermas are critically evaluated and tested against the cultural background of the medieval Iranian and Islamic thought. In this context, Islam, Sufism, and Zoroastrian thought, are compared and contrasted. These three discourses are among the most important contributors to the social and political milieu that has shaped the fate of the people in Middle East, Central Asia, Asia Minor, Indian Peninsula, and many other parts of the world, for centuries. Each discourse is scrutinized in respect to a variety of issues such as the ethical and cognitive rationalization, linguistification of the sacred, theodicy, flight from the world versus domination over it, etc. It is amazing to see how the trends of thought that belong to centuries ago determine the day to day life of the people in this region of the world, today. Even more astonishing is the impact of these apparently abstract arguments on the actual political, social, and personal life of the people.
About the Author
Kambiz Sakhai has studied Sociology and Social Research at the University of Rome in Italy and Iranian Cultural History at Columbia University in New York. This book is his Ph.D. dissertation at the latter institute’s Department of Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures. The areas in which he has conducted research include: Medieval Islamic and Zoroastrian Thought, Anti-Islamic trends of thought in Sufism, Sociology and Psychoanalysis of Religion, Italian Contemporary Social Theory, Soviet Legal Thought During the twenties. The common theme of his work is the analysis of the revolutionary theory and practice and emancipatory struggles of the poor and powerless people of the world over the centuries.