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FRAENKEL, CARLOS (1) answer(s).
 
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Theocracy and autonomy in medieval Islamic and Jewish philosoph / Fraenkel, Carlos   Journal Article
Fraenkel, Carlos Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract According to both contemporary intuitions and scholarly opinion, autonomy is something specifically modern. It is certainly taken to be incompatible with religions like Islam and Judaism, if these are invested with political power. Both religions are seen as centered on a divine Law (sharĂ® 'a, viz., torah) which prescribes what we may and may not do, promising reward for obedience and threatening punishment for disobedience. Not we, but God makes the rules. This picture is in important ways misleading. There is, I argue, a substantive intellectual tradition, going back to Plato's Laws, which takes the purpose of a theocracy-a community governed by God through the intermediary of a divine Law-to be promoting rational autonomy, conceived as (1) the ability to rationally determine what is in one's best interest and (2) having the motivation to live accordingly. Among the most important representatives of this intellectual tradition are medieval Muslim and Jewish philosophers.
Key Words Judaism  Autonomy  Theocracy  Medieval Islamic  Jewish Philosophy  Islam 
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