Further reading: Hamid Enayat, Modern Islamic Politi-
cal Thought (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1982);
Albert Hourani, Arabic Thought in the Liberal Age,
1798–1939 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1983).
Abd al-Wahhab, Muhammad ibn
See
i
bn
a
bd
al
-W
ahhab
, m
Uhammad
.
Abduh, Muhammad
(1849–1905) modern
Islamic modernist thinker
Muhammad Abduh was an Egyptian religious
scholar, jurist, and leader of a major social reform
movement in the Muslim world who advocated
a modernist reinterpretation of i
slam
. Known as
the “father of Islamic modernism,” he was born in
1849 to a modest family in the Egyptian delta. His
early education involved traditional q
Uran
mem-
orization, although Abduh’s natural inclinations
tended toward s
UFism
. In 1877, he concluded
his studies in religion, logic, and
philosophy
at
al
-a
zhar
University and began teaching there as
a religious scholar. Simultaneously, he became
interested in politics, publishing articles on politi-
cal and social reform and joining the Egyptian
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