Frasi di Muhammad Asad

Muhammad Asad, in arabo محمد أسد, nato Leopold Weiss , è stato un giornalista e scrittore austriaco naturalizzato pakistano.

È stato tra i principali influenti islamici europei nel ventesimo secolo. Si convertì all'Islam dall'Ebraismo nel 1926. Nel 1947 acquisì la cittadinanza pakistana. Nel mondo occidentale è conosciuto per i suoi libri The Road to Mecca e The Message of The Qur'an , quest'ultimo una traduzione in lingua inglese con interpretazioni e commenti del Corano. Wikipedia  

✵ 2. Luglio 1900 – 23. Febbraio 1992
Muhammad Asad: 35   frasi 0   Mi piace

Muhammad Asad: Frasi in inglese

“Their [Conservative Muslims'] insistence that a modem Islamic state would have to be an exact replica of the "historic precedents" of our past is apt to bring the very idea of the Islamic state into discredit and ridicule.”

Muhammad Asad libro The Principles of State and Government in Islam

Origine: The Principles of State and Government in Islam (1961), Chapter 6: Conclusion, p 97

“The ideology of Islam is as practicable or as impracticable as we Muslims choose to make it.”

Muhammad Asad libro The Principles of State and Government in Islam

Origine: The Principles of State and Government in Islam (1961), Chapter 6: Conclusion, p 107

“There can be not the least doubt that an Islamic constitution to be evolved thirteen centuries after the Right-Guided Caliphs may legitimately differ from that which was valid in and for their time.”

Muhammad Asad libro The Principles of State and Government in Islam

Origine: The Principles of State and Government in Islam (1961), Chapter 2: Terminology And Historical Precedent, p 27

“Human ingenuity has not evolved a better method for corporate decisions than the majority principle.”

Muhammad Asad libro The Principles of State and Government in Islam

Origine: The Principles of State and Government in Islam (1961), Chapter 3: Government By Consent And Consent, p 50

“The Law-Giver meant us Muslims to provide for the necessary, additional legislation through the exercise of our Ijtihad (Independent Reasoning) in consonance with the spirit of Islam.”

Muhammad Asad libro The Principles of State and Government in Islam

Origine: The Principles of State and Government in Islam (1961), Chapter 1: The Issue Before Us, p 14