Principles for Progress
Title
Principles for Progress
Subtitle
Essays on Religion and Modernity by `Abdu'l-Bahá
Price
€ 140,99
ISBN
9789400603202
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Number of pages
410
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Also available as
Paperback - € 81,00
Table of Contents
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Contents
General Introduction
- B.bis and Bah..is
- Reformists Writing in Persian
- The Religious Intellectuals
- Intellectual Position of Azali Authors
- Ottoman and Arabic Reformist Writers
- Newspapers
- Masonic Lodges and Sufi Orders
Introduction to the Works of Abdu.l-Bah.
- The Secret of Divine Civilization
- A Traveller’s Narrative
- The Art of Governance
The Secret of Divine Civilization or Heavenly secrets as to the means of civilization
Translator’s Notes to The Secret of Divine Civilization
Selections from A Traveller’s Narrative written to illustrate the history of the B.b
Translator’s Notes to Selections from A Traveller’s Narrative
The Art of Governance
Translator’s Notes to The Art of Governance
Further reading
References
Indexes

Sen McGlinn (ed.)

Principles for Progress

Essays on Religion and Modernity by `Abdu'l-Bahá

"This book presents three of the works of Abdu.l-Bah., son of the founder of the Bah..i Faith, dealing with social and political issues. In The Secret of Divine Civilization (1875) Abdu.l-Bah. supports the administrative and broader social reforms of Mirz. Hosayn Kh.n, but looks mainly for organic reform through the efforts of Iranian intellectuals to waken and educate the masses. In this work, Abdu.l-Bah. gives virtuous and progressive Islamic clerics a leading role among these intellectuals, indeed most of his appeals are directed specifically to them. A Traveller’s Narrative (1889/90) is an authoritative statement of the broad lines of Bah.’i social and political thinking. The Art of Governance (1892/93) was written as Iran entered a pre-revolutionary phase, and ideas that we recognise today as the precursors of political Islam were spreading. It sets out the principles underlying the ideal relationship between religion and politics and between the government and the people. In addition to presenting the first parallel text translations of these works, the Persian texts incorporate notes on variants in the early published sources. An introduction outlines the intellectual and political landscape from which Abdu.l-Bah. wrote, and in which his expected readers lived. "
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Editor

Sen McGlinn

S. McGlinn is an independent scholar who writes and translates in the fields of Bahai studies, Iranian studies and Islamic studies.