The making of Islamic economic thought : Islamization, law, and moral discourses /

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Al-Daghistani, Sami, 1986- (Author)
Corporate Author: ProQuest (Firm)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2021.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to this title online (unlimited simultaneous users allowed; 325 uses per year)
Table of Contents:
  • Machine generated contents note: Premise
  • Western Philosophical Tradition and the Birth of Economic Science
  • Genealogy of Modern Islamic Economics
  • Classical Scholarship and the Moral Self
  • Methodology and Theoretical Framework
  • Scholarly Relevance of Premodern Economic Teachings
  • 1. Force of Revivalism and Islamization: Their Impact on Knowledge, Politics, and Islamic Economics
  • 1.1. Socioeconomic Paradigm against the Backdrop of a Colonial Past
  • 1.2. Contextualizing Muslim Reformists' Understanding of Socialism, Capitalism, and Spirituality
  • 1.3. Abu al-A'la Mawdudi and the Twentieth-Century Transition from Nation to Islamic State
  • 1.4. Islam and the Economic System between the 1930s and the 1970s
  • 1.5. Islamization of Knowledge Process and Contemporary Islamic Thought
  • 1.6. Islamization of the Islamic Economy (1979-Present)
  • 1.7. Concluding Remarks
  • 2. Present: Muslim Economists and the Constellation of Islamic Economics
  • 2.1. Introductory Remarks
  • 2.2. Theories and Definitions: Recent Developments and Contentions
  • 2.3. Methodologies of Contemporary Islamic Economics
  • 2.4. Islamic Economics and Forms of Conventional Knowledge
  • 2.5. Islamic Jurisprudential Economics and Islamic Law
  • 2.6. Contemporary Muslim Economists' Views on Classical Muslim Scholars
  • 2.7. Concluding Remarks
  • 3. Past Perfect: Shari'a and the Intellectual History of Islamic Economic Teachings
  • 3.1. Widening the Scope of Classical Economic and Legal Thought in Islam
  • 3.2. Sbari'a's Legal Supremacy versus Moral Cosmology
  • 3.3. Maqdsid, Istihsdn, Maslaha, and Economic Preservation in Shari'a
  • 3.4. Siydsa Shar'iyya: Between the Moral and Legal Realm
  • 3.5. Metaphysics and the History of Islam's Moral Economics
  • 3.6. Nature of Markets, Price Control, and the Notion of Fair Price
  • 3.7. Value of Wealth (Mdl) and the Hereafter
  • 3.8. Productivity, Value of Labor, and Cooperation
  • 3.9. Islamic Authority (Wildya) and the Principle of Moral Integrity
  • 3.10. Concluding Remarks
  • 4. Appraisal: Contemporary Islamic Economics and the Entrenchment of Modernity
  • 4.1. Introductory Remarks
  • 4.2. Modern Divergence of Shari'a's Moral Principles
  • 4.3. Critiquing the Discipline of Islamic Economics
  • 4.4. Islamization of Economics
  • 4.5. Concluding Remarks
  • 5. Pluralistic Epistemology of Islam's Moral Economics
  • 5.1. Introductory Remarks
  • 5.2. Moral Cosmology and Pluralistic Epistemology in Islamic-Tradition
  • 5.3. Economic Development in Light of Spiritual Prosperity.