12/2019 Seminar: Key Concepts in the Islamic Ethical Tradition: Semantics, Methods and Approaches

11 February - 03 December, 2019
Islamic Tradition

Concepts and terms are at the heart of all disciplines and are reflective of their theoretical structures and holistic perceptions, serving as gateways to understanding them, but "Islamic ethics" as a major Islamic field is still in need of in-depth studies of its scattered conceptology and terminology in texts or disciplines where ethics constituted their subject matter. The existing models of studies on Islamic ethical conceptology, limited in number as they might be, reflect the importance of focusing on this field and exploring it further, hence the importance of organizing this international seminar which held by The Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics (CILE) on “Key Concepts in the Islamic Ethical Tradition: Semantics, Methods and Approaches”, 1-3/12/2019, and hosted researchers and academics from Morocco, Algeria, Norway, Germany, Bulgaria, Syria and Qatar. Theoretical and methodological issues of studying the ethical concepts was discussed, also models or semantic fields of key concepts in texts and the Islamic Ethical Tradition, or interdisciplinary.

The International Seminar opened with a general speech by CILE Academic Director, Dr Mohammed Ghaly, about the center's activities and research interests, and the importance of the Seminar's topic within the center's interests.

Report

First day papers

The work of the first day started with an introductory lecture given by the Seminar coordinator, Abdulrahman Helli (University of Frankfurt) on “Studying the Concepts and the Ethical Theory: Methodological Questions,”. He focused on the importance of studying ethical concepts in texts and Tradition and its impact on studying Islamic Ethical theory, and pointed to some methodological problems that confront the study of the ethical concept, for example the frequency of ethical vocabulary between a scientifically stable term and a problematic concept. He warned in his lecture against studying these concepts with the concerns of modernity that we live in today, and against projecting the present on the past and on texts, and he also drew attention to methodological problems centered in particular on the relationship of the concept to the linguistic dimension and the contextual dimension, whether in structural or historical terms, before, within and after the text, and in Tradition as well. He concluded his intervention by emphasizing that the study of the Islamic Ethical concept is necessary and important, especially in terms of controlling historical development and distinguishing between basic values and advanced practical ones.

The second paper was by Dr. Ghassan el Masri (Free University of Berlin) on "Qurʾānic Ethics, between Epistemology and Eschatology". He examines the difference between semantic and historical etymology and argues for the necessity of combining the two strands in a historical analysis of Qur’anic terms and tried to prove that Qur’an responded to the pre-Islamic culture in its Arabic and theological (Biblical) dimensions, relying in his paper on analyzing the origin of the linguistic significance and the interpretation of the Qur’an by the Qur’an, explaining the philosophical, psychological and epistemological significance of the Qur’anic concept. (Fear and Hope), and the role of knowledge in moral choice, versus the role of divine guidance. In his study, he touched on practical examples of relevant Qur’anic vocabulary, tracing its advanced connotations, and its moral function in the Qur’anic text.

The third paper was by Dr. Lena Salaymeh (Max Planck Institute for Comparative and Private International Law –Hamburg) on "Secular translations of the Islamic tradition (دين): converting Islamic law into ‘sharia’ and ethics". She discussed in her paper the problems that inhere in the translation of the Arabic term dīn as ‘religion’, and the translation of al-fiqh al-Islamī as Sharia (sic.) in English speaking, mainly American, discourses, which she relates to a secular distortion of the law. After giving examples of how secular ideology translates the Islamic tradition, Salaymeh explores the differences between historical Islamic terms and secular terms and concludes that the translated ‘Sharia’ is part of a colonial system of meaning, more so than a reflection of the Islamic understanding of law.

The forth paper was by Dr. Ivan P. Dyulgerov (University of Sofia) on "The Qur’anic Concept of Religion and the Related Principle of Non-Coercion". He explored the semantic structure of the concept of dīn within the Ara-bic text of the Qur’an, and argued for a research approach called “intratextual semasiology” – a method aiming at establishing the semantic organization of the Qur’an, he found out that the Qur’anic dīn appears in three interrelated meanings based on the well-known meaning of “judgment”, the afterworld; the record of the deeds according to which everyone will be judged in the hereafter, and attributed to God Himself – (dīnu Llāhi). It turns out that dīn is in fact an evident manifestation of the humanity’s free will inside the Qur’an, as it comprises in a clearly separate way everyone’s records of deeds completed by following or disregarding God’s law. The only exception are the deeds that stemmed from an act of coercion while a person was acting against his free will.

Second day papers

The fifth paper was by Chafik Graiguer (Ministry of Education, Morocco) on “Insān and Marʾ: study the Moral Essence in the Qurʾān". He focused on the Qur’anic use of insān and marʾ and attempts to match them with the modern notion of the ‘person’ as an ethical subject. Graiguer defines the ‘person’ in the ethical sense of a subject possessing identity, responsibility and dignity. He argues that the word insān in the Qurʾān does not express this meaning, because of the latter’s metaphysical, rather than moral, connotations. It is the notion of marʾ, rather, that is closest to the philosophical concept of a ‘person’, in the sense of a responsible ethical agent.

The sixth paper was by Dr. Rachid Boutayeb (Doha Institute for Graduate Studies) on "Neighborhood as a Moral Concept: A Study in Islamic Heritage and Philosophy". He argued that the ethics of neighborhood, as expressed by monotheistic religions in general, and Islam in particular, establishes an open ethics that does not demand hegemony over the other, and that it would provide an answer to the challenges posed by immigration or multiple societies. He relies on Levinas' theory, and proposed a new approach called "critical ethics", and ha propose that "neighborhood ethics" transcends the closed horizon of identity or identities. He based in rooting the concept of Islamic neighborhood on the foundations of piety and good deeds in the Qur'an where faith is achieved through it, meaning living for others.

The seventh paper was by Dr. Nora S. Eggen (University of Oslo, Norway) on " al-ʾAmāna as a key ethical concept". She examined the notion of ‘social trust’ (Ar. al-amāna al-iğtimāʿiyya) through the contributions of four scholars: Ibn Abī l-Dunyā (d. 281/894), al-Kharāʾiṭī (d. 327/939), al-Māwardī (d. 450/1058), and al-Ghazālī (d. 505/1111). By investigating how the four prominent authors negotiated the issue of ‘trust’ in their works, the author sheds light on a network of ethical concerns that relate to elements of ‘trust and mistrust’ in a single semantic field that includes vocabularies pertaining to amāna, tawakkul, thiqa and ḥusn al-ẓann.

The eighth paper was by Aalaa Sarhil (Syria) on “Quranic Ethical Concepts Related to Repelling Harm: Semantic Fields and Their Moral Implications”. She attempted to formulate the Qur'anic view of the morality of repelling harm. Within two levels: The first is theoretical, asserting that harm is a continuous and steady phenomenon, and that repelling and eliminating harm is one of the major purposes of the Qur’an. The second level is practical, it establishes the approach to repel harm according to its type, and it varies according to different cases and people, that all kinds of legitimate repayment are conditional on not being unjust or offensive. She discussed the details by studying the semantic fields related to repelling harm in the Holy Qur'an.

Third day papers

The ninetieth paper was by Dr. Chafika Ouail (The Orient-Institute Beirut (OIB)- Lebanon) on "Towards the Ethics of Hearts: Love as a Moral Alternative in the Sufi Experience". In her paper, she studied the conceptual transition of ethics between Islamic schools and the mystical approach, and tried to highlight the features of that by building the concept of ethics and its ontological source, and Sufism replaced rational consideration with heart consideration or love. She concludes that Sufism provided empirical knowledge bearing ontological features of moral value. As in the moral experience of Al-Nefry, through the model of love as a model of divine ethics.

The tenth paper was by Dr. Hafid Harrous (Dār al-Ḥadīth al-Ḥasaniyya, Morocco) on “Wealth as an Ethical Concept in Sufism until the End of the Seventh /Thirteenth Century”. He traced the meaning of ghina (wealth, sufficiency) as a key concept of the Sufi tradition. He included in his analysis a discussion of the ethics of healing the soul from ailments of material attachment, and the role that the notion of ghina plays therein. His analysis surveys the career of the concept in the Muslim canon before it became a standard concept in the mystical tradition.

The last paper was by Dr. Eisa Al-Akoub (Aleppo University – Syria) on "Al-Shukr as an Ethical Concept in Islamic Sufism: Significance and Perspectives". He analyzed the development of the concept from Arab life before Islam as an opposite of kufr to the development of the concept's movement in the spiritual, mental and behavioral development that the Arabs witnessed since their pre-Islamic ignorance. It came to mean acknowledging the grace of the One God. And starting from the middle of the second century AH, thanking took an adjective standing among the Sufi shrines, becoming, with Al-Ghazali, an adjective for every verb that met the requirements of wisdom.

The final session of the seminar discussed the entirety of the papers of the three days, and the prospects for developing research for later publication in a special issue of the Journal of Islamic Ethics, which is issued by the CILE and Brill.

About the Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics (CILE):

CILE aims to contribute to the reform and renew the Islamic thought by developing a contemporary vision guided by the fundamental principles of the Holy Qur’an, Sunnah and the higher objectives of Islamic Shariah. For more information, please contact: CILE Office

Background Paper

CALL FOR PAPERS

INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR

Key Concepts in the Islamic Ethical Tradition: Semantics, Methods and Approaches

Dr. Abdulrahman Helli

 

 

Concepts and terms are at the heart of all disciplines and reflect their theoretical structures and general taxonomies, serving as gateways to understanding them. Specialized encyclopedias in any field include entries to key concepts and terms that serve to introduce and define them.

Equally, the foundational texts of any discipline can only be understood if analyzed through an approach that explicates their language and defines the meanings of their key words. For this reason, lexical enquiry has been central to understanding the Qur'an and has been studied as a major subject in exegesis. Qurʾanic lexicography is placed typologically on par with the authoritative exegetical books dealing with Sunnah and the other sciences of the text, each of which having its own specialized lexicon. It would, therefore, be arbitrary to approach a text or a discipline before analyzing the concepts and terms upon which this text bases its worldviews and theories. While the various Islamic sciences have claimed their fair share of lexical works for their concepts and terms, "Islamic ethics" as a major Islamic field of human inquiry that occupies a distinct place in contemporary scholarship is still in need of in-depth studies of its concepts and terms that remain scattered across texts and disciplines) where ethics constitutes the main subject matter.

Many researchers have come to grips with the importance of ethical terminology and some of its key terms have figured in numerous studies that treated of pivotal concepts in Islamic ethics such as the concept of ‘justice’ (Daud Rahbar, 1953), in combination with others axiological - negative and positive- concepts (Salih al-Shamma, 1959), or focusing on a single ethical semantic-field in the Qur’an (Izutsu, 1966), or on a single concept (Helli, 2017). This is in addition to dozens of dissertations featuring titles inspired by ethical vocabulary and content consisting of philological studies, whether in the fields of exegesis, Ḥadīth, Islamic speculative theology, Sufism or contemporary philosophy. The existing models of studies on Islamic ethical concepts, limited in number as they may be, reflect the importance of focusing on this field and exploring it further, since the framing of the meaning of a given concept would help change the view towards a cumulative series of perceptions that are built on it and have accumulated by virtue of effects that do not necessarily reflect its nature and meanings solely within its context. Moreover, the study of a network of ethical concepts in a given field reveals an ethicalsystem or paradigm that is more amenable to comprehension, theorization and further construction.

Therefore, the importance of dedicating a seminar to ethical concepts is justified by the need to elucidate and enhance the following aspects:

1. Ethical concepts represent an interdisciplinary field in which specializations and disciplines intersect, in the same way the subject areas of ethics do. At the level of the texts, these include materials from pre-Islamic literature, as manifested in poetry and other genres, that have been ‘processed’ through the semantic shift to which the Qur'an has contributed by adding its own conceptual elements and shades of meaning. The resulting semantic shifts have led to of the Qur'an becoming the focal point in the history of the concept of ethics. As such, the use of an ethical lexicon for the texts of the Prophetic Ḥadīths (both the narrated verbatim and the paraphrased). In addition, Philosophical, Islamic literary and scientific texts, and more emphatically and specifically exegetical sciences, Ḥadīth interpretation, Islamic speculative theology, philosophy, Sufism, the fundamentals of jurisprudence, and political and literary books constitute the loci classici of ethical concepts. Interplay and commonality may exist among these texts and disciplines at the semantic level; yet, some of them must claim their unique semantic values that are not shared by others. This variation of commonality and distinctiveness is an important catalyst for new interdisciplinary approaches that have rarely received the necessary attention befitting their status (Al-Khatib, 2015).

2. The study of concept in texts or in sciences is a two-dimensional process: theoretical and practical, and the function of the ethical concept itself varies between theoretical and practical uses. Tracking the concept as such would result in important standards for the theoretical and practical classification of the subject of ethics and other related sciences.

3. The ethical concept in the Islamic field is also interdisciplinary in nature, since the ethical meanings, which are reflective expressions of texts, religions and philosophies, are common across religions. These texts reflect this commonality explicitly or tacitly. Many of them, have commonalities with conventional practice at the time of the Revelation, both at the literary and aesthetic levels, and are markedly present in pre-Islamic poetry. Also, within the purview of the sciences, other philosophies influenced the significance of ethical concepts, including, inter alia, the concept of "Creation" itself, as well as borrowing or Arabization of concepts that were alien to the Islamic domain. The seminar will seek to examine in depth this interesting movement and development of the concept.

4. The presence of concepts in fields whose subject matters vary in terms of importance and content is worth considering here. In ethical concepts, there is a difference between recurrent and rarely used concepts, and within the recurrent and the rare, there are those that central and others that are secondary. Identifying both can only be attained through the study of the concept itself within the semantic field, which would help unfold standards that enable identifying the central and the secondary in ethical concepts, and then its relation to other dependent concepts. As such, the proposed enquiry will serve as a rigorous introduction to the division of the subjects of Islamic ethics and the arrangement of their levels of importance in theory and practice.

Within the larger context of the organization of this seminar by the Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics (CILE) to explore methodological theorization within Islamic ethics as a science, by framing it within its introductory texts (“Seminar on Quran and Ethics”, 2015 –Ḥadīth and Ethics, 2019, or by introducing a central concept in approaching it (Trusteeship Seminar, 2018) or through surveying its theoretical or practical subjects (Migration, Ijtihad, Genome, etc.). This seminar seeks to discuss comprehensive critical approaches that can provide a basis for the study of ethical concepts in Islamic texts and heritage as well as their utility in modern thought. It seeks to identify their semantic values and thereby provide a coherent conception of the ethical structure of the central texts and enable a comparative approach with the traditional sciences.

In addressing the seminar's topics, authors of papers are expected to take into consideration the questions and issues raised in the above introductory statement and the definition of the axes, and should focus in particular on the following general methodological approaches:

• Historical: Periodization of the semantics of the ethical word(s) under study at the level of language, texts and contexts.

• Polyvalent: considering the variation or diversity in the semantics of the word within the structure of a single text or a single context at a particular stage, depending on the place and grounds of its incidence, derivation or difference in typology.

• Theoretical: treating the basic problem of conceptual analysis as such, and methodological difficulties related to identifying its semantic charge, highlighting its commonalities with and differences from other concepts, and the value that this kind of study adds to our knowledge of Islamic ethics in theory and practice.

• Comparative: to consider, as far as possible, the comparative framework, noting the linguistic, textual, religious and philosophical origins of each concept, tracking its semantic development until it becomes firmly anchored, and documenting it through its oldest specialized sources.

• Specificity: the allocation of each axis to a particular ought not to prevent a comparative approach into different disciplines, since the study of an ethical concept from an intertextual and interdisciplinary perspective is the worthiest of objectives.

Themes and Topics:

1. Approaches to ethical concepts in the Qur'an: Qur'anic ethical concepts constitute a semantic field and an integrated system. Most of the interpretations and studies have dealt with these words in a simplistic way that does not reveal the semantic specificity of each and its function in integration with other words. Therefore, it is expected that the papers submitted under this theme deal with the Quranic ethical concepts from a semantic perspective combining linguistic discourse in a way that helps detect the common Arab linguistic, religious and cultural practices in the era of the Revelation, while studying the linguistic root of the lexical item, its uses in Arabic and perhaps in other Semitic languages to help understand its meaning. This should also include analysis of the related textual approaches, such as pre-Islamic poetry and prosaic literature, and analysis of their implications in terms of contextual linguistic, literary or religious meanings in the pre-Revelation period, followed by scriptural study within the Qur'an, to enable the process of tracking the evolution of the use the concept through the stages of the Revelation. Papers should also look into the extent of the evolution of the uses of the concept, analyzing the structure of the text that contains the lexical item in each of the contexts of its incidence, the associated lexical items, subjects or methods, and investing all these data in tracking the meaning of the concept, especially as it relates to other terms, and its function in the ethical system structure of the Qur’an.

The study of the Qur'anic ethical concept should of necessity deal in a critical manner with the approaches to interpretation, lexicon and research studies so as to define the concept. The proposed study may also be a critique of studies or interpretations of a specific ethical concept or concepts in the Qur'an. Examples of concepts or semantic fields that can be studied may include: "ethical concepts and values related to divine justice: Mercy, punishment, etc.", "ethical concepts and values of rights: justice, equity, injustice, etc.", "ethical concepts and values related to human relations: charity, etc.", "universal concepts and values: virtue and vice, good and evil, righteous deed, patience, etc."

2. Approaches to ethical concepts in Ḥadīth: The texts of the Sunnah are replete with elements of ethical concepts, some of which overlap with the Quranic text. Some Ḥadīth texts have their unique wording system that is not found in the Qur'an; each has its own semantic system, either in terms of the very meaning that the Ḥadīth context adds to the Qur'anic lexical items, or the uniqueness of the meanings of the Ḥadīth as such. It is expected that research papers proposed under this axis adhere to the abovementioned methodological elements of the study of the Quranic concept, in particular the use of periodization as an approach. The study of the uses of lexical items in the Ḥadīth text is concerned with the framing of information, documentation, the analysis of the text, differentiation between what is narrated verbatim and what is paraphrased with a view to distinguishing between the periods of Ḥadīth production from the moment of the Prophetic utterance to its historical transfer, passing through the stages of compilation and interpretation. The papers under this axis may deal with ethical concepts as covered under the studies of Ḥadīth sciences but which should be approached from the ethical perspective, including concepts like “manners” (adab, paideia) “Nobilities of Character,” “virtues,” “branches of faith,” and “character traits.”

Papers may also take the form of practical studies that explore the meanings of the common ethical words in Ḥadīth texts.

3. Ethical concepts in ‘ilm al-kalām (Islamic speculative theology): Islamic speculative theology is a broad incubator of scientific theorization for a number of ethical matters, whether in the affirmation of Islamic creed or the discussion of the differences of Islamic schools and their teachings, or in religious and philosophical rhetoric. Terms and principles like "justice, good and evil, promotion of good and prevention of vice, faith and work, etc.” constitute in essence an ethico-religious discourse. The approaches used to examine them have been predominated by doctrinal or philosophical analysis. Papers under this axis are expected to unravel the ethical meaning and its semantic implications specifically in conceptual terms, showing the extent of their impact on the related polemics. In addition to the elements of the conceptological study, the topics under this axis require investigation into the relevance of the concept to the texts and the extent of its derivation from them or from other sources, especially philosophy, as well as the study of its development and the factors influencing it. The study of concept can also be carried out through a particular school or the corpus of a particular oeuvre.

4. Ethical concepts in the fundamentals of jurisprudence: While the mission of jurisprudence consisted of tracking the normative provisions set by the domain’s practitioners, an important aspect of its provisions has been founded on ethical grounds and references, especially in those parts where no textual provision is to be found. Many of the jurisprudential concepts, especially ones that under to different disciplinary rubrics, such as "aleatory, mitigating harm, achieving interest, averting vices, mitigating hardship, etc.). Also, the fundamentals of jurisprudence represent the theoretical framework on which jurisprudential provisions have been founded, and there exist fundamental conceptual principles which bear ethical significance, particularly in relation to the objectives of Sharia, such as "meliorism, etc.” Framing the ethical significance of the concepts of jurisprudence and its fundamentals is important in the development of the jurisprudential view and ethical theorization.

5. Ethical concepts in Sufism: Sufism reflects the basic practical ethics of behavior. Sufi codes of different types enjoy a rich and unique repertoire of ethical terminology, which distinguishes the movement from other disciplines in their use of textual or commonplace ethical concepts. This axis will focus on Sufi ethical term within a conceptological framework by demonstrating its significance, sources and development, and comparing the ethical meaning it comprises to the ethical words used in other fields. The numerous lexical models used in the field of Sufism include “asceticism, piety, striving, forsaking, progressive expression of ethical values, etc.”

6. Ethical concepts in modern thought and contemporary discourse: The language of science is in constant flux, which also applies to everyday language and to key ethical words used in contemporary life belonging to different fields and specializations, such as philosophy, politics, sociology, media, etc. A number of these have been resuscitated from past legacies and texts, being theorized in books or used in discourse, while some new words have been coined and applied to emerging phenomena that carry ethical meanings. Some of these terms are inextricably associated with their authors (terminology of Taha Abderrahman), while others relate to public affairs (tyranny, etc.), popular words (bullying, intimidation, etc.) among many other neologisms, which could provide topical material for the conceptual approach and reveal its ethical dimension.

Description and Methodology of Research Papers:

The abstracts and research papers should observe the following criteria:

a. A specific ethical concept or concepts should be studied semantically using the conceptological methodology described above, or the submission may provide a critical appraisal of approaches to ethical concepts. Abstracts and papers that do not address the topical question will not be considered.

b. Abstracts and papers dealing with a general topic or those that do not address a clear and specific research problematic relevant to the subject of the seminar will not be considered.

c. Descriptive papers, which are based on compilation, statistics and typology and which do not offer an analytical and historical approach to the concept will not be accepted.

d. Papers that examine ethical conceptology as framed by a specific author or school should avoid delving into biographical information and should stick to only those biographical elements that serve the analytical purpose in relation to ethical theory.

e. In the event of proposing a topic that has already been studied, the abstract should justify the importance of offering it again, highlighting the gaps or deficiencies in the previous study and how the improvements will be carried out. Unless justified, no previously presented study will be taken into consideration.

The Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics invites researchers and academics interested in the above or related topics to send the following:

1. Abstract (300-500 words) which identifies the research problematic, the main question and the sub-questions to be addressed by the research paper, as well as the proposed methodology to answer them, highlighting the extent to which the study will differ from

previous studies, if any.

2. A brief CV (500 words maximum) stating the researcher’s (a) academic background, (b) major research interests, and (c) most important publications.

The authors of accepted abstracts will be notified and invited to submit full-length papers (7,000-10,000 words) according to the timeline shown below.

Proceedings of the Seminar:

Abstracts and full-length papers will be evaluated by a scientific committee which will select papers on the basis of scientific criteria and their relevance to the aims and objectives of the seminar as outlined in this Concept Paper. A limited number of the submitted papers will be selected for participation at the International Seminar organized by the Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics. Accommodation and travel expenses will be covered by CILE.

Publication of Accepted Papers:

Accepted papers, as well as those presented at the seminar, will be sent to two academic referees for blind evaluation in accordance with accepted publication norms and standards.

They will then be published in a special issue of Journal of Islamic Ethics or in a special volume in the book series Studies in Islamic Ethics, both of which are published by Brill. The open-access published works will be made accessible to the largest possible number of readers around the world.

Research and Seminar Languages:

Abstracts and research papers can be submitted in English or Arabic, and the discussion at the seminar will be conducted in both languages.

Important Dates:

➢ 20/07/2019: Deadline for abstract and short bio submission

➢ 27/07/2019: Notification of the committee's decision on abstracts

➢ 01/11/2019: Deadline for submission of full papers

➢ 10/11/2019: Notification of the committee’s decision on papers

➢ 1-3/12/2019 Seminar at the Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics in Doha, State of Qatar

➢ 10/01/2020: Deadline for the submission of final version of full papers after making the necessary editorial corrections in the light of the comments and suggestions of the scientific committee. The final papers will then be submitted to Brill for evaluation and publication

Contact:

- Submissions should be sent to: key.concepts@cilecenter.org

- For inquiries about this Call for Papers, please contact Dr. Abdulrahman Helli at ahelali2000@gmail.com

- For all inquiries about Journal of Islamic Ethics, please write to: jie@brill.com