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The politics of war and revolution in the Persian Gulf

Conflicts of the late 1970s through the Gulf War of the 1990s have demonstrated the significance and fragility of the Persian Gulf, an area that contains over 60 percent of the world’s reserves of oil. Because of the importance of these oil reserves, every conflict in this region becomes an international event. While the collapse of the Soviet Union has reduced U.S.-Soviet tensions it has created new problems for the world and the Gulf region.

Political, economic, and religious interests of the region overlap oil interests to create complex regional issues.  Basic problems such as the problem of national identity and political legitimacy have remained unresolved and have taken a back seat to oil interests. For the most part, the Arab states have resisted the forces of democratization that have been sweeping the world and have remained monarchies.  They use their oil wealth to maintain their power, reinforce tradition, and crush or dominate their political rivals.  The relative stability of these states is attested by the fact that of eight Persian Gulf states, only Iran and Iraq have experienced revolutions during this period.

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Introduction

Twelfth century Arab philosopher al-Ghazali used methodological skepticism to answer two of the main problems of philosophy: (1) how knowledge is acquired and, (2) how can one justify that knowledge. Seventeenth century French philosopher Descartes dealt with the problem of doubt in lockstep with al-Ghazali and came up with the same solution (Najm 133). It is evident that Arab philosophy significantly, albeit indirectly, influenced Western philosophy. Is it possible that Descartes was influenced by al-Ghazali? A close comparison of their epistemological methodology and results gives reason to believe that Descartes was influenced by al-Ghazali, but there is no conclusive proof of it (a paper).

Divergent Backgrounds

Al-Ghazali, a prominent philosopher, theologian, and jurist of Sunni Islam, lived between c. 1055 and 1111. In his most famous work, the Incoherence of the Philosophers, he advanced a nominalist critique of Aristotelian science developed later in 14th century Europe. In the Incoherence, he rejected and condemned some of the teachings of Aristotelian philosophy, while accepting and applying others. One of al-Ghazali’s contributions that greatly influenced Latin medieval thought, through the works of Averroes and Jewish authors, was his resolution of seeming contradictions between reason and revelation (“Al-Ghazali”).

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Introduction

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict stems from Jewish-Arab claims to the land of Palestine and the wider, more general, Jewish Arab conflict. There are two main solutions being brokered to bring an end to this conflict: the one-state solution and the two-state solution. I am in favor of the two-state solution.

Background

The one-state solution calls for a single state or Jews and Arabs giving each equal rights under the law. The main problem with this solution is that regardless of whether the state of Israel should have been created on Palestinian land, it was and was and is internationally recognized. Furthermore, the creation of Israel was and is intended as a Jewish state. A change in the status of Israel as a Jewish state would in essence mark the beginning of its end, as Arabs would soon outnumber Jews.

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Introduction

The total available water supply in the Nile River Basin is about 74 billion m3, but demand has risen to about 90-142 billion m3. Egypt’s demand is about 70-75 billion m3 and Sudan’s is about 32 billion m3. Egypt is willing to allocate 2 billion m3 to Ethiopia, but Ethiopia’s demand is about 5 billion m3. Demand from the equatorial states is about 5 billion m3. Thus, there is a deficit of 16-68 billion m3 (Soffer 69-70). Rogers and Lydon (308) predict that Egypt and the Sudan will exceed their own water resource bases by 2025.

This deficit is clearly a problem. Furthermore, faced with water shortages, Egypt and Sudan oppose any change in the status quo of the division of Nile water. Egypt’s average annual population growth rate is 1.682% (2008 est.) and the Sudan’s is 2.134% (2008 est.) (CIA – The World Fact Book). Most experts agree that Egypt and Sudan will be forced to cooperate. However, Egypt has very little incentive to change the status quo and Sudan lacks the power to do so (Soffer 71).

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Islamic Eschatology

Christopher Hurtado —  October 10, 2008

An Islamicized Christian element explained

He then reported that Allah’s Messenger (may peace be upon him) said: The Dajjal would appear in my Ummah and he would stay (in the world) for forty – I cannot say whether he meant forty days, forty months or forty years. And Allah would then send Jesus son of Mary who would resemble ‘Urwa b Mas’ud. He (Jesus Christ) would chase him and kill him (Muslim 1520).

Both the Christian and the Islamic traditions hold that the coming of the Antichrist signals the coming of the apocalypse. Both traditions also hold that Jesus Christ will return at that time, although the circumstances of his leaving the Earth in the first place and his role during the apocalypse differ between the two traditions. What is entirely at variance between the two traditions is the belief, set forth in the above quoted hadith, that Jesus Christ will return to the Earth before the apocalypse to kill the Antichrist. In fact, this idea is not even supported by the Qur’an, but appears only in the Hadith and in later Islamic literature (Esposito 21-22).

A metaphor and its meaning in relation to its eschatological context

(6790) Abu Sa’id al-Khudri reported Allah’s Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying: The inmates of Paradise would see the inmates of the apartment over them just as you see the shining planets which remain in the eastern and the western horizon because of the superiority some have over others (Muslim 1477-1478).

The metaphor in the above quoted hadith seems to imply that there may be varying degrees of glory in the Islamic paradise, an element seeming to bear some resemblance to LDS thought, but not attested to in Christian or Jewish thought. The apartments over the those who dwell in paradise, visible to them just as the planets above us are to us, seem to imply a dwelling place in paradise of a higher order than that of the observers below.

An element seeming to bear some resemblance to LDS thought, but not attested to in Christian or Jewish thought

(6796) Abu Huraira reported Allah’s Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying: The first group of my Ummah to get into Paradise would be like a full moon in the night. Then those who would be next to them; they would be like the most significantly glittering stars in regard to brightness, then after them (others) in ranks (Muslim 1479).

Another element of Islamic eschatology bearing some resemblance to LDS thought, but not attested to in Christian or Jewish thought, appears in the above quoted hadith. Here, it seems even more explicit that there are degrees of glory in the realm of Islamic paradise. Furthermore, the comparison of these degrees of glory to celestial objects of varying degrees of luminosity very closely resembles that found in LDS scripture, specifically in section 76 of the Doctrine and Covenants. Although a similar comparison is made in 1 Corinthians 15:41, it is not clear in 1 Corinthians that Paul is referring to degrees of Glory without the clarification offered in the Doctrine and Covenants.

Works Cited

Esposito, John L. The Oxford Dictionary of Islam. New York. Oxford University Press, 2004.

Muslim, Imam. Sahih Muslim. Lahore, PK: SH. Muhammad Ashraf, 1976.

Arab governments have, for the most part, claimed legitimacy based on Arab nationalism and persist despite being challenged by Islamicists. The oil-wealthy Arab states attempt to buy the loyalty of their people by providing them with goods and services, while precluding widespread political participation. Neither the poor nor the rich Arab countries have produced nation-states based on a broad base of political participation. As a result, the legitimacy of these governments will continue to be disputed throughout the state building process.

Aside from a large, organized and effective Islamicist opposition, many of these countries also face a potentially large, unstable, unorganized mass of discontented urban lower class. To further complicate matters, this group is apt to be mobilized by revivalist Islam or other radical organizations. The response of these governments to these real or potential threats has been attempts at appeasement through strategies such as food subsidies, and to divide and conquer the opposition, pitting one group against another.

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El conflicto árabe-israelí proviene de reclamaciones judías y árabes de la tierra palestina y de un más amplio conflicto general entre los judíos y los árabes. Existen dos posibilidades para resolver este conflicto: la solución de un estado y la solución de dos estados. Yo estoy en favor de una solución de dos estados.

La solución de un sólo estado les da a los árabes y a los israelís derecho de igualdad ante la ley. El problema principal de esta solución es que el estado de Israel fue establecido a fin de ser un estado judío. Si cambia la naturaleza judía del estado, los judíos pronto serían [outnumbered] por los árabes, ya que estos tienen un grado más alto de fertilidad que los judíos.

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What is most real, universals or particulars? Plato and Aristotle gave diametrically opposed answers to this basic ontological question and proceeded to build their entire philosophies on the epistemological foundation of their individual answers. As a result, the question has been debated for centuries, some siding with Plato, others with Aristotle, and others still attempting to syncretize the ideas of each. For Plato, universal Forms or ideas are most real. They are imperceptible to the senses, but all that the senses perceive are, according to Plato, a mere shadow of the Forms. Plato sees the universal Forms as ontologically prior to the individual particulars perceived by the senses. His pupil Aristotle, on the other hand, not only affirms that individual particulars are ontologically prior to universals, but that without the individual particulars, there would be no universals. For Aristotle, individual particulars are most real.

In the Categories, Aristotle asserts that substances are, “in the truest and primary and most definite sense of the word” (2a11-13) individual particulars, such as this computer or that telephone (2a13). He asserts that only individual particulars are “neither predicable of a subject nor present in a subject” (2a12-13). Aristotle explains what being “predicable of” or “present in” a subject means in chapter two of the Categories. Being predicable of a subject or not, is simply a distinction between abstract universals and concrete particulars. The particular man, Codell Carter, is not predicable of any subject, but the universal “man” is predicable of Codell Carter. My particular copy of A First Course in Logic is not predicable of any subject, but the universal term “book” is predicable of my particular copy of A First Course in Logic. In other words, universal terms are predicable of subjects, while particular terms are not. As for being or not being in a subject, this refers to the possibility of independent existence. Aristotle describes a subject as that which is “incapable of existence apart from the said subject” (1a22-23). Thus, that which is not in a subject is the subject itself. Since the “Arctic Silver” color of my BMW, for example, cannot exist separately from my BMW, said color is in a subject. But the BMW itself is not in any subject, since the BMW is the subject (3a10-16). Thus, Aristotle distinguishes between attributes (which are present in a subject) and entities (which are not present in a subject) (Hsieh).

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In his masters thesis, entitled “A Comparison of Muhammad and Joseph Smith in the Prophetic Pattern,” Todd J. Harris (2007) discusses a number of similarities and differences between Muhammad and Joseph Smith. In my analysis of Harris’ thesis, I will focus on the similarities and differences between Muhammad and Joseph in terms of patterns of revelation and of the books of scripture each produced, namely the Qur’an and the Doctrine and Covenants, respectively. Muhammad can be seen as a prophet in the typological sense. In other words, he fits the general pattern of individuals claiming divine inspiration. In keeping with the prophetic pattern, and in like manner to Joseph Smith, Muhammad was called of God through an experience of the divine, was charged with challenging the customs and practices of the people of his day, received revelation later recorded as scripture, was commanded to declare that which was revealed to him, and faced enormous odds. Muhammad also meets the definition of a prophet, based on its Arabic and Hebrew etymology, as one in the state of announcing the message that was given to him. Like Joseph, Muhammad can also be seen as a restorer in that he restored monotheism among his contemporaries. As a restoration prophet, Muhammad received continuing revelation on an as needed basis throughout his life, as did Joseph, to aid him in fulfilling his calling.

Although there are differences in the manner in which Muhammad and Joseph received revelation, the similarities are striking. Both prophets had an initial vision followed by a period of silence. During this period of silence, each of them questioned their standing before God. In both cases, the silence was broken by an angelic visit. Each prophet was tutored on an ongoing basis by the same angel who had made the aforementioned visit. As restoration prophets, both Muhammad and Joseph received instruction from their respective angelic tutors regarding the logistics of the restoration each carried out. In addition to the angelic visits they received, each prophet also received revelation indirectly. Sometimes Muhammad received revelation directly from the mouth of an angelic visitor, and at other times indirectly, in a manner which he described as reverberations that only ceased when he became aware of them. However, the Orthodox Muslim position is that Muhammad had no bearing whatsoever on the language of the revelations he received. Orthodox Muslims maintain that Muhammad received revelation in God’s own words. The pattern varies slightly for Joseph, who received revelation after the manner of his own language, and according to his own understanding, yet the pattern is still prevalent and still evidences divine influence. Further evidence of the roles of Muhammad and Joseph as restoration prophets lies in the large amount of revelation each received.

Receiving revelation was strenuous for both Muhammad and Joseph. Joseph became accustomed to it and tired less from it over time. When section 76 of the Doctrine and Covenants was revealed to Joseph Smith and Sidney Rigdon, Sidney was exhausted. Joseph, who seemed unaffected, commented that Sidney wasn’t used to it, as he was. Muhammad never got used to it. He said that the experience of receiving revelation was always like having his soul torn away. His wife Aisha noted an instance in which sweat ran from his forehead as he was receiving revelation on a very cold day. Both Muhammad and Joseph struggled to put into words the revelations they received. Both Muhammad’s and Joseph’s revelations compare each of their revelations with those of biblical prophets before them. While Joseph became accustomed to the physical rigor of receiving revelation, he struggled to put it into his own words, whereas Muhammad, according to tradition, struggled physically to receive revelation directly in God’s own words. Despite this difference between Muhammad’s experience and Joseph’s, their seems to be a similar pattern in which, according to the Qur’an and the Doctrine and Covenants,  the Lord speaks to the hearts and minds of each prophet, and they in turn arrange and amend the revelations they have received as they gain greater understanding. Another similarity in the revelations each prophet received, in the pattern of prophets, who tend to become more schismatic over time, is the increasing divisive nature of the revelations each received later in his life. In the case of both prophets, revelation evolved as the religion of each prophet developed. Over time, Muhammad and Joseph received revelation as needed, and for each of them, a new religion and its accompanying doctrine gradually unfolded.

Muhammad and Joseph both follow the prophetic pattern of receiving revelation latter written down by either themselves or their followers. While Muhammad’s and Joseph’s followers both hold the word of God sacred, Muhammad’s followers take this further than Joseph’s. Muhammad’s followers take the Qur’an to be god inlibrate (in book form,) in much the same way as Joseph’s follower take Jesus the Christ as God incarnate (in the form of a man). While this represents a difference between Muslim and Latter-day Saint views on scripture and there are other differences between the Qur’an and the Doctrine and Covenants, these two books bear many similarities as compilations of situational revelations (revelations given in response to immediate needs or questions). Each of them was revealed over a period of time. Both are similar in length. The Qur’an consists of 114 chapters, called surahs, while the Doctrine and Covenants consists of 138 chapters, called sections. Each book contains shorter and longer revelations varying between a few sentences and several pages in length. Both books are written mostly in the first person in the voice of God, although the Qur’an is written in the voice of God the father (Allah) and the Doctrine and Covenants is written in the voice of Jesus the Christ. The revelations contained in both the Qur’an and the Doctrine and Covenants came severally, according to the needs and questions of the prophets who received them and their followers. Just as the current edition of the Doctrine and Covenants has chapter headings giving historical background information to the revelation that follows, some edition of the Qur’an provide the same type of information for the same reason.

The Qur’an and the Doctrine and Covenants both address a very small and very particular group of people at a specific time and place in history, yet both continue to provide guidance today. Both were revealed in parts, “line upon line,” and “precept upon precept,” as the Doctrine and Covenants puts it. There is a pattern in the gradual manner in which Muhammad and Joseph received revelation for themselves and their followers. Both the Qur’an and the Doctrine and Covenants deal intimately with the issues Muhammad and Joseph and their followers faced, respectively, because the revelations contained in them were given in response to the needs and concerns of these people. Because these revelations were given to fill in gaps in previously revealed knowledge, they lack continuity. Each book of scripture contains revelations given in order to correct previous scripture, whether it be the false beliefs of the Christians and Jews from a Muslim point of view, or the errors and omissions of the Bible from a Christian viewpoint. Both the Qur’an and the Doctrine and Covenants confirm or clarify biblical writings, remind their readers of forgotten laws, and give specific situation guidance. Lacking a unifying theme, these two books of scripture seem to ramble disconnectedly. Both the Qur’an and the Doctrine and Covenants contain relatively short revelations received over a period of 20 and 23 years, respectively.

The situations Muhammad and Joseph faced led to the gradual revelation of truths and practices that informed the development of Islam and Mormonism, respectively. This unfolding happens chapter by chapter in the Doctrine and Covenants, as its sections are mostly organized chronologically, according to the date on which the revelation they contain was received. The Qu’ran is instead arranged from longest to shortest surah. Each book breaks with its respective pattern of organization once, namely in its first chapter, which is placed at the beginning as a preface. It is apparent that both Muhammad and Joseph intended for their revelations to be compiled in book form. Joseph oversaw and directed the publication of his revelations, which were usually written down by scribes, in two books before he died. The sections from Joseph Smith added after his death had all been received and recorded while he was yet alive. As for Muhammad, his followers either memorized his revelations or wrote them down on whatever was ready-at-hand. The Qur’an also indicates that Muhammad himself wrote down some of the revelations he received. A semi-official version of the Qur’an was available about two years after Muhammad’s death and about two centuries later, a standard version was produced. An important difference between the Qur’an and the Doctrine and Covenants is that the Qur’an is a closed book as revelation ceased with the death of Muhammad, whereas the Doctrine and Covenants is an open book, subject to addition or alteration by a living Latter-day Saint prophet. Another important difference lies in the belief that the Qur’an contains God’s word as it was literally dictated to Muhammad, wherefore any translation of it is considered interpretive. In fact, the poetic beauty of Qur’anic Arabic, which is generally lost in translation, is considered evidence of its divine origin. The Doctrine and Covenants, on the other hand, is still regarded as scripture even in translation.

The many similarities between Muhammad and Joseph and the Qur’an and the Doctrine and Coveants cannot be dismissed as mere coincidences. It is unlikely that either Muhammad or Joseph forced his life into the prophetic pattern, as many of their circumstances were beyond their control. It is also unlikely, considering the difference in time and place in which each of them lived, that the similarities between them can be attributed to the human psyche either.  It is interesting to note the differing ways in which Islam and Mormonism viewed revelation after their respective prophets died. For Muslims, revelation ceased with the death of Muhammad. For Mormons, revelation continued through Joseph’s successors, the later presidents of the church.  Nevertheless, both Muhammad and Joseph received revelation and produced scripture, in keeping with the prophetic pattern. Both the Qur’an and the Doctrine and Covenants were intended to confirm previously revealed truths and to restore lost truths. Both Muhammad and Joseph were, therefore, restoration prophets. Both of them were viewed by their followers as opening a new and last dispensation, leading up to the end of the world. Their followers believed that accepting them as prophets and adopting their teachings was crucial to their salvation. This, too, is in keeping with the prophetic pattern.

“The more things change, the more they stay the same.” (Author unknown)

In his search for true and distinct knowledge, after overcoming skepticism, al-Ghazali found there to be essentially four groups of those who sought the truth in the Islamic world of his day. Al-Ghazali sought to align himself with the one and only true and correct source out of the four. Similarly, in the modern Western world, there are four equivalent sources to which one might turn for truth. Although the Islamic world of al-Ghazali’s day and the modern Western world are very different, these sources of knowledge are very much the same.

The four sources of knowledge in the Islamic world of al-Ghazali’s day were the mutakallimun, who were conservers of the creeds of orthodoxy; the Batinites, or Ta’alimites, who and their Infallible Imam; the philosophers, who relied strictly upon reasoning and logic; and the sufis, who were mystics who sought come closer to God by ridding themselves of all that is ungodly. The four modern-day Western equivalent sources of knowledge in the modern Western world are the Roman Catholic or Eastern Orthodox churches as conservers of the creeds of orthodoxy, Protestantism with its theological concept of solo scriptura, the philosophers, and the restored Church.

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