The Fate of Philosophy in the Arab world: Philosophy as Taught and Learnt in the Lebanese University

Volume 1|Issue 2| Autumn 2012 |Articles

Abstract

This study links the theoretical with the practical in its approach to the teaching and learning of philosophy in Lebanon as an exemplar for the Arab world. Philosophy in the Arab world is in crisis, and even its revival would be difficult and require enormous boldness to revolt against the certainties of the religious view and the givens of political allegiance. It would also require an understanding of the relationship linking philosophy with the positivist and human sciences, which is a clever epistemological link that gives philosophy the ability to contribute effectively in the formation of the broadest meaning of the human.
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Professor of Philosophy at the Lebanese University who writes on philosophical interpretation, philosophy of religion, and civilizations in confrontation and dialogue. He teaches philosophy at the Lebanese University . His publications include Between the Son and the Caliph: Man in the Conceptions of Christianity and Islam and Christian Political Thought in its Theoretical Structure and Lebanese Reality.

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Arab Center
Harvard
APA
Chicago