Islams Intellectual Suicideand the Threat to Us All
People are shocked and frightened by the behavior coming out the Islamic worldnot only because it is violent, but also because it is seemingly inexplicable. While there are many answers to the question of what went wrong in the Muslim world, no one has decisively answered why it went wrong. Until now.
In this eye-opening new book, foreign policy expert Robert R. Reilly uncovers the root of our contemporary crisis: a pivotal struggle waged within the Muslim world nearly a millennium ago. In a heated battle over the role of reason, the side of irrationality won. The deformed theology that resulted, Reilly reveals, produced the spiritual pathology of Islamism, and a deeply dysfunctional culture.
Terrorismfrom 9/11, to London, Madrid, and Mumbai, to the Christmas 2009 attempted airline bombingis the most obvious manifestation of this crisis. But Reilly shows that the pathology extends much further. The Closing of the Muslim Mind solves such puzzles as:
why peace is so elusive in the Middle East
why the Arab world stands near the bottom of every measure of human development
why scientific inquiry is nearly dead in the Islamic world
why Spain translates more books in a single year than the entire Arab world has in the past thousand years
why some people in Saudi Arabia still refuse to believe man has been to the moon
why Muslim media frequently present natural disasters like Hurricane Katrina as Gods direct retribution
Delving deeper than previous polemics and simplistic analyses, The Closing of the Muslim Mind provides the answers the West has so desperately needed in confronting the Islamist crisis.
WHATTHEYARESAYING
The lack of liberty within Islam is a huge problem. Robert Reillys The Closing of the Muslim Mind shows that a millennium ago Muslims debated whether minds should be free to explore the worldand freedom lost. The intellectual history he offers helps to explain why Muslim countries fell behind Christian-based ones in scientific inquiry, economic development, and technology. Reilly provides astonishing statistics . . . [and] also points out how theology prefigures politics.
World Magazine
As Robert R. Reilly points out in The Closing of the Muslim Mind . . . the Islamic conception of God as pure will, unbound by reason and unknowable through the visible world, rendered any search for cause and effect in nature irrelevant to Muslim societies over centuries, resulting in slipshod, dependent cultures. Reilly notes, for example, that Pakistan, a nation which views science as automatically impious given its view that an arbitrary God did not imprint upon nature a rational order worth investigating, produces almost no patents.
American Spectator
What happened to moderate Islam and what sort of hope we may have for it in the future is the subject of Robert Reillys brilliant and groundbreaking new book. The Closing of the Muslim Mind is a page-turner that reads almost like an intellectual detective novel...One thing Reillys account makes clear: Only when we move beyond the common platitudes of our contemporary political discussion and begin to deal with Islam as it really is rather than the fiction that it is the equivalent of our Western culture dressed up in a burqa will we be able to help make progress in that direction. National Review Online