conducted in the marketplace.
Alongside this, the
juridical construction of morality, there was also
a culture of refined behavior (adab) that shaped
the ethical outlook of urban Muslims. This was
expressed in writings that set forth the virtues for
different classes and groups to honor, including
the ulama, rulers, bureaucrats, merchants, and
craftsmen.
Moral philosophy was an important subject
for Muslim intellectuals, even if it did not have
equal weight with sharia and
fiqh
in the eyes of
the ulama. The scholars who contributed to this
area of ethics during the Middle Ages were Abu
Yusuf Yaacub al-Kindi (d. 870), Abu Bakr Muham-
mad al-Razi (also known as Rhazes, d. ca. 925),
a
bU
n
asr
al
-F
arabi
(also known as Alfarabius, d.
950), and a
bU
a
li
al
-h
Usayn
ibn
s
ina
(also known
as Avicenna, d. 1037), m
Uhammad
ibn
r
Ushd
(also
known as Averroës, d. 1198), and Nasir al-Din
Tusi (d. 1198). Perhaps the most noteworthy of
all were Miskawayh (d. 1040), the Persian author
of Refinement of Morality; a
bU
h
amid
al
-g
hazali
(d. 1111), Persian mystic and author of
Revival of
the Religious Sciences; and
the Andalusian man of
letters a
li
ibn
h
azm
(d. 1064). Originally sparked
by the rationalist theology of the Mutazila in
the eighth century and further influenced by
Aristotelian ethics, this area of Muslim scholarly
discussion declined after the 12th century, but it
experienced revived interest among Muslims in
the 19th and 20th centuries.
Today Islamic ethics and morality are receiv-
ing close scrutiny in Muslim lands and beyond
as never before. The encounters of traditional
Islamic moral laws and values with modern secu-
lar laws and values have raised urgent questions
about whether and how the sharia in whole or in
part requires preservation, reform, adaptation, or
rejection. Respect for
hUman
rights
, individual-
ism, religious freedom, and women’s rights has
caused Muslims to search their ethical heritage to
find where there is compatibility and where there
is not. Violent actions performed in the name
of Islam against public officials and civilians by
militant organizations have given added urgency
to this search. While it is true that many Mus-
lims have condemned violent acts in the name
of religion, they have also sought to make moral
arguments in favor of violence (
Jihad
) and revolu-
tion in the face of oppression, tyranny, and attacks
against core beliefs and practices. As in the past,
given the many ways in which Muslims under-
stand and practice their religion, views on these
and many other issues diverge widely within the
worldwide Muslim community.
See also
abortion
;
crime
and
pUnishment
;
cUstomary
laW
;
Fate
;
hisba
; i
slamism
; m
Utazili
s
chool
;
sUicide
;
Women
.
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