Saturday 6 August 2011

The 3 Questions Part I

Ideas without labels..
When you wake up tomorrow, were do you expect to find yourself?
In bed in the safety of your home? In a hotel? On the sofa if you fell asleep watching a movie? Once you wake up, you may start to think about the time, getting to the bathroom for a shower, what to eat for breakfast, what to wear and so forth. You will then start your day based on your goals and objectives.
Instead of this familiar setting, try to imagine the following: you wake up tomorrow and find yourself in the boot of a moving car! You hear some faint voices coming from inside the vehicle, voices you do not recognise. What would be the first set of questions that come to your mind? Would they be?
  • “Am I going to be late for work?”
  • “Am I going to miss my breakfast?”
  • “Am I going to be able to get my children to school on time?”
      Or would they be:
·   “How did I get into this boot?”
·    “What happens at the end of the journey when the boot swings open?”

Based on answers to the above 2 questions,
·     “What do I need to do right now?

It is self evident that the second set of questions would be what your mind would be focussed on unless you were so overtaken by fear and anxiety that you started to panic and started behaving irrationally and emotionally, by screaming and crying, a strategy that would be far from the ideal response.
Firstly you would use all the information available to try to understand how you got into this situation. You would no doubt use all your five senses to gain as much information as possible from your surroundings. You would try to listen to the conversations happening within the car. Are they familiar voices? If not are the accents familiar? Do I understand what is being discussed? Do the voices sound hostile?
Based on the answer to this question, you would no doubt try to predict what would happen at the end of the journey. Will I become a hostage for a ransom? Will I be killed straight away? Will it be a police officer that will take me to a prison cell? Or will it be my friends taking me to a surprise party? 
Based on the answer to the previous two questions (how I got here and what happens at the end of the journey) you would have a view towards what to do here and now! Do I try to escape? Do I try to bargain with the driver? Do I give up and accept fate? Do I relax and enjoy the ride? This answer would follow from the previous answers.
Let us assume that our hypothetical passenger were a thinking person. Let us show two different sets of answers and the key to note is how, in both cases, the answer to the first two questions shape the answer to the third and most important question, “What do I do now whilst I am in the boot?” 
Answer 1
How I got here?
My school friends came into his flat with my parent’s permission carefully put me into the boot of their car while I was still asleep as it was my 18th birthday and they wanted to give me a surprise party.
What happens at the end of the journey?
The boot flings open and a party hat is thrust onto my head and a party popper is popped in my face.
What do I do now?
Just relax and enjoy the journey!
Answer 2
How I got here?
I have been abducted by a gang intent on killing me if a ransom is not granted to them.
What happens at the end of the journey?
I will be blindfolded and gagged and kept in a dark cellar and possibly tortured and under constant threat of assault by armed guards until the ransom is paid. Even then there is no guarantee I will be released.
What do I do now?
I need to try and escape!
The main point to note is that the answer to one question influences the answers to subsequent questions.
Mixing up the answers and breaking the flow
If for example you were to mix the answers up, you would cause a disaster. You could be relaxing when you should be trying to escape captors with disastrous consequences for what would happen at the end of the journey!
Substituting the Boot for this Life
Is this life not similar to the boot of the car?
Doesn’t this life also have a before, during and after aspect just as this unanticipated journey in the car has a before, during and after ride in boot aspect?

Look at the parallel :
Before:  Didn’t we come into this world without information just as we found ourselves in the boot with no information?
After: Doesn’t the question of what really happens to us when we die (the end of the journey of life) cross our minds when we are free of life’s distractions?
During: Doesn’t the question of the purpose of life come to our minds naturally once we have answered the previous 2 questions?  
The irony is that distractions and preoccupation with ‘living life’ distance our minds from thinking about these most fundamental questions about our existence the answers to which can shape our existence and drive our purpose through life.
We are however innately programmed to ponder and think about these questions as evident when we observe very young children bursting with curiosity who start to ask similar questions such as
“Were did I come from?” (How did I get into the boot?)
“My parents!”, OK but who made my parents? Who made the first human being? Did we come from apes as suggested by Charles Darwin, or was the first human being created by a Creator? Or is there another explanation that science will eventually uncover?
“What happens when I die?” (What happens at the end of the journey?)
Will I just turn to dust and become part of the food chain? Or will I be raised back to life and made to answer for my actions? Will my soul be re-incarnated into another living entity?
“What is the meaning of Life?” (What do I do now?)
Is life just about following your desires and squeezing every little drop of personal enjoyment out of this short life? Or is there some other goal or direction that is worthy to be the answer to the question of the what meaning of life is?
For the majority of people, once society has provided some form of answer to these questions, most folk stop thinking about these questions critically and become so preoccupied with life and all its distractions, that we simply fail to notice the signs around us that are informing us of the true reality of these questions in a way that satisfies the mind and fills ones heart with tranquillity.
If we were zapped from our life routines and put onto a deserted Island, after we had secured our basic needs, we would inevitably start to ponder about these questions. This is perhaps a reason why prison inmates find answers to these questions when confined to a cell free of life’s distractions and preoccupations.
These Questions have already been answered in three different ways.
There are other answers, such as reincarnation, but these answers are beyond the context of this document for reasons why will be made clear in a later section.
Each of these 3 different ways has resulted in a fundamentally different viewpoint towards LIFE, its objective and how to live it.
Communist Viewpoint
How did I get here?
According to Communism there is no creator of man, life and the universe who made the world and life on Earth, and instead, we came here through a process of Darwinian evolution.
What happens when I die?
It is irrelevant as we are just part of nature and so it is not of consequence as our bodies are part of a cycle of nature and we just form part of future living things.
What do I do now?
We just serve the state and all personal aspirations such as the intrinsic desire for property and wealth are said to not exist!  So there is consistency between the three questions even though the conclusions are wrong.
Secular (West’s) Viewpoint
How did I get here?

Its not important, rather what is important is to agree we will most probably never know!
According to the West’s viewpoint (Secular viewpoint), the issue of whether a creator of man and the universe exists and hence the whole question of wether religion was the way to live our lives according to (question 3 ie in a personal and societal sense) needed to be avoided as a focal point and instead the focus needed to the need to separate Religion from life or societal governance. Put another way question 1 and 2 needed to be left unresolved and question 3 needed to be defined in a way that kept question 1 and 2 unresolved. What does this mean? 
Background to the rejection of Religion’s influence outside the Church.

The concept of religion needed to be replaced by Personal Freedoms (Freedom of Belief, Ownership, Individual and Speech) which, it was intended, would become the means to the achievement of the maximum amount of happiness and pleasure. 
Religion would only be allowed to have influence inside the Church and followed or rejected by individuals according to their own personal choice (Freedom of Religion).
In medieval times, Religion was being used to deny the rights of people and maintain the rich/poor divide between wealthy landowners, who took protection behind the Church who took away the right of poor peasants to complain about their condition of poverty by telling them that they would get their wealth in the next life (Heaven) and that they were going against God's will if they complained. It is quiet easy to see why frustration built up over many centuries, unfortunately towards the concept of Religion instead of the people who had manipulated it for their selfish aims.
It must be noted that the secular belief was established prior to the theory of evolution so it cannot be argued that Allah (SWT) and hence religion had been dismissed by the theory of Evolution as the secular belief referred to here pre-dated Darwinism. From this it is clear that the focus was on removing religion from life to appease those who rejected it on grounds of its implementation having a negative impact on life.
What happens when I die?
You may be questioned by a Creator (assuming you think that one exists) for your actions, or you may not be, we will never know as such knoledge is beyond scientific enquiry and therefore we shouldn’t preoccupy ourselves with the question!
What do I do now?
Mankind should pursue the path of seeking Freedom because, contrary to the idea within Christianity which asserts ‘Original sin’ and that Man is inherently evil, the advocates of Freedom assert that Man is inherently good, but needs Freedom to manifest the good that exists within him.
Islamic Viewpoint
In Islam, the answers to the 3 questions are very consistent and follow through with faultless flow and without contradiction.
How did I get here?
Allah is the creator and he created everything that exists including me.
What happens when I die?
When we die we will be reckoned on every action we have performed in our life and therefore we need to live in accordance with his guidance for success in a worldly sense as well as success in the next life which leads to Heaven or Hellfire.  
What do I do now?
I need to understand the solutions for life’s problems from the Islamic viewpoint and live by them.
These solutions are in harmony with my innate design because Allah (SWT) created me and hence is the one who is qualified to define the solutions to human problems.
Islamic viewpoint has an Intellectual basis for its answer to the 3 questions.
Unlike the other two ideologies, Islam makes the intellectual conviction in the answer to the three questions a condition for entering the belief in Islam.
This is a very profound distinction from the other two ideologies which do not draw their adherents to reflect upon the basis of the respective ideology, but rather encourage people to only think within the walls defined by the answers such ideologies define around the 3 questions.
Q1 – How did I get here?
Islam compels the human being to think and ponder over the creation. To probe the question, by studying the reality we sense around us, and ask questions relating to its cause. There is much literature on the intellectual basis to prove the existence of Allah (SWT) through the mind and it is beyond the scope of this document. However two pertinent points can be made.
The proof in the existence of Allah (SWT) is through the rational process of thinking, of which scientific thinking is a specific type vital in certain areas only.  Due to the tremendous advancements made in the area of science, industry and technology which are attributes to scientific thinking, any conclusion which is not within the realm of direct sensation is not given credibility. As Allah (SWT) cannot be directly sensed as in the case of water boiling at 100 degrees, the belief in Allah (SWT) is deemed to be based on superstition and conjecture and not taken as sure knowledge.
Secondly, as discussed within the subject of the compromise Secular solution, there is a vested interest in not allowing any return to any form of religious prominence within society. It is considered a threat to the notion of liberty and freedom.   Therefore many people in the forefront of attempting to explain the origin of creation beyond the scope of a divine explanation do so to further their materialistic career ambitions and behind the restricted scope of the scientific method of thinking, which as stated has an important but restricted scope.
Q2 – What happens after I die?
Believing in the existence of Allah (SWT) does little to help assist man in understanding what happens after death. Man is unable to communicate with Allah (SWT) to understand the answer to this question unlike Allah (SWT) who communicates with man by sending prophets defining the code by which to live (question 3) as well as details of the afterlife.
2 points can be said in this regard.
Why man needs Allah (SWT) in the first place?
Some would argue that the principles by which we need to live are not difficult to arrive at and in fact many philosophers, such as Confucius had defined such principles before prophets like Jesus came to humanity.
However the human mind, devoid of divine guidance, will tend to orientate towards solutions which do not take into account all the complex inter-relationships between different rules. Also law makers will tend to struggle to separate their interests from their impartial judgements.
 The mind will therefore tend to take into account one aspect and not other aspects in the legislative process. Take for example the solution to the housing problem in the 1960s. The solution was to build high rise flats but this caused other problems linked to depression, and subsequent drug abuse/crime caused by the lack of green areas needed for recreational needs. Contrast this with the rule of Zakat, which is a tax on disposable income. This is an economic rule which takes into account the impact on one’s ability so as not to damage the basic needs of the family which is a social dimension.
The textbook approach, according to Secularism, would be to advocate the bringing together (in the process of defining laws/solutions) of experts in different fields so as to remove the natural bias that would otherwise exist. However, even when this approach is employed, the fact that different experts are needed to understand the reality onto which laws are to be enacted is testimony to the complexity involved in the process of crafting solutions for society. The proof that the balance within the Secular framework is still far from the correct is in the visible deterioration within the secular society. Just considers the credit crisis due to the malaise within the free market due to the inherent imbalance within the framework of regulation and market freedom.     
This complexity is evident when one considers to detailed rules in Islam which have a complex interaction which the mind is sometimes unable to comprehend and appreciate. However, the proof of the suitability of such divine solutions is in their effect on society as far as the key performance indicators (KPI’s) of any viewpoint. Such KPI’s are in areas such as fostering the respect for citizens amongst themselves, generation of wealth for each and every individual, reducing the incidence of crime etc.
Democracy will find the right balance?
Many would argue that when the human mind is liberated from the notion of a creator, then the mind will find the right balance in time. Connected to this strand of thinking is the comparison with the past were children were sent up chimneys and workers had no rights and were enslaved to their employers. Also were decisions were made in the interests of landowners instead of the electorate. Aside from the discussion about how much influence corporations play in shaping the decision making bodies of government in a way that benefits the interests of corporate backers rather than the electorate, there is little merit in the view that a system that uses trial and error, should take precedence over a system that is perfect and in balance with the nature of man and his environment.
Who decides what Allah (SWT)’s law is?
There is a criticism often levelled against any notion of a divine system namely that people will appoint themselves as the authority in interpreting divine law and will be above accountability. This is where Islam did not leave this onerous responsibility on the shoulders of one person or a group of people alone. Islam has made it compulsory for there to exist at least one (many are encouraged) political parties to account the ruler and by so doing create a climate of open debate around the solutions and their compatibility with the Islamic viewpoint. Also there is a specific judge that has the executive powers to remove the ruler if the ruler’s integrity is demonstrably compromised. As a final right, (for sceptics who may argue that such judges may also become part of the state apparatus the way many contemporary scholars have become mouthpieces for their governments), the people have the right to rebel against the ruler by force if necessary. The preservation of the integrity and purity of the Islamic foundation of state is imperative and in this regard, all ideologies share common characteristics.   
So what is Human Nature ?
Consider the above point from a different perspective. Man is not born inherently good or inherently bad but inherently neutral and unable to assess right or wrong. Rather than having an inner voice, man is tainted by his unique experiences that have befallen him during his life coupled with the solutions and ideas that are prevalent during his time and place. Such are the factors that influence and shape his sense of good and bad/right and wrong.
These factors become the standards for right and wrong and the criteria which society uses to define its conduct. So cohabitation outside marriage was regarded wrong and then it became acceptable. This is despite the fact that the inherent makeup of man had not changed during the 2 short spaces of time. Therefore a person born 100 years ago would have had a different definition of right and wrong in this regard as compared to a contemporary person born in the 1990’s for example. There is no inbuilt intelligence within the human makeup that defines when the rule being adhered to is right or wrong.
Allah (SWT) defines the correct standards from the onset and these do not change as they are perfect and accurately reflect the reality of man, his intrinsic design and are in harmony with the complex interaction between people in society, the environment.
The correct standards and underlying thinking in the divine system  creates a state of calmness and inner peace not witnessed in any man made alternative approach which causes turmoil, emotional anxiety and unnecessary stress.
This is just like the unique balance of nature which is disturbed by global warming which is when man decides how to undertake industry according to the human mind as opposed to following the industrial policy as defined by Allah (SWT). Just one of the many rules of the comprehensive rules of the Islamic ideology. 
How do we separate the prophets sent by Allah (SWT) from fraudulent claimants of Prophethood?
When Allah (SWT) sends a Prophet to deliver the instructions on how to live (Question 3) and also gives information on the afterlife (Question 2) and hence the connection between this life and the afterlife (Relationship between Question 1 and 2 with Question 3), he also appeals to the human mind by giving the Prophet a miracle that is beyond human capability and hence acts a validating mechanism to ensure that the message is genuine.
A miracle is therefore something that breaks or defies the rules of nature. This is not like an amazing feat that is very difficult but is humanly possible like running the mile within 3 minutes which may be possible at the current rate of progress in human athletic performance. Examples are the laws that are inherent within the physical and intellectual world are shattered. For example when Moses was able to suspend the laws of physics, by divine intervention, and part the red sea whilst being pursued by pharaoh.
The other thing to note is that when Allah (SWT) sent a miracle, it was a miracle in an area that the people were already infatuated with so as to make it easier for the mind to be drawn to it. Examples include the fact that the people to whom Moses was sent were infatuated with magic, the people of Jesus were infatuated with healing and the people of Abraham were infatuated by fire. Note the miracles for these prophets also tally up with these infatuations namely the turning of the stick into a serpent and the parting of the sea, the raising of the dead and the ability to withstand fire.
The intellectual belief of those believers that did not witness the miracle?
After a while, people who did not witness the miracle would start to drift from intellectual belief to emotional belief. Superstition and conjecture would start to prevail amongst many until another prophet with a new miracle would come to rejuvenate the intellectual basis behind the belief.
This is like the air that escapes from the tyre that is inflated.
The Quran explains that the Prophet Muhammad (SAW) is the last and final prophet before the end of time.   This face value, this may seem to presents a problem as far as the point mentioned above.
How can a miracle that occurred 1400 years ago keep people at the level of intellectual belief required to fulfil the command that the belief should be decisive and not based on conjecture and faith alone, but be intellectual and built on the objective mind.
The Miracle of Prophet Muhammad.
All the previous miracle were temporary in nature. They were limited to a particular place and time. The principle miracle of Islam is a physical miracle which exists for ALL times and ALL places!
Note : Some miracles were also limited in space and time, such as the splitting of the moon, however unless this was seen at the time, it is questionable whether this miracle can be relied upon today. However there is a crack that runs across the perimeter of the moon according to satellite images and ancient records report this phenomenon in other parts of the world.
How is the Quran a miracle?
Does it withstand burning? Does it bring back to life anyone who touches it?
To understand this question, one needs to understand the law that the Quran broke and the infatuation of the Arabs of the time. The Arabs were infatuated with poetry and there were indisputable laws within which poetry could be written. These were not manmade rules but natural rules of the language that had evolved naturally.
To help understand this, although the analogy is not 100% accurate consider writing English poetry. Let’s assume the key variables to consider are the style or rhyme of the writing, the meaning of the narrative and the grammar. Naturally if one wants to express a particular meaning, then there will need to be a compromise in other aspects such as rhyme or style.
Classical Arabic poetry follows similar but more complex inescapable rules. The Quran so excelled in every variable contained within its rules, that it is considered indisputably beyond human capability even by the enemies of Prophet Muhammad who wanted nothing more than to disprove the authenticity of his miracle.
The Quran is amongst us today, so we are as privilege as the immediate society of the last prophet to witness its miraculous nature.
I don’t appreciate Arabic so how can I appreciate this miracle?
Even though one may not appreciate the rules of classical Arabic, this does not mean that the miracle of the Quran cannot be appreciated.
The fact that nobody has been able to reproduce a chapter like the Quran, and to this day those determined to refute Islam have not even focused on this area is an intellectual evidence as far as its inimitability. This can be appreciated even for those who cannot read and asses the miracle from the language aspect.  
As far as the meaning contained within the Quran, there is such astounding and consistent correlation with known and undisputed matters, for example scientific knowledge which was not known until many centuries later that to ascribe this work to other than the creator of man and the universe cannot be given any credibility whatsoever. Furthermore, as Allah (SWT) mentions in the Quran, if the book was from other than him, there would be much contradiction and inconsistency. There is no rule is Islam which solves one problem but creates another problem. This is something that can only happen by a perfect legislative source.
For further reading, see resources found online
Miracle of meaning - 
All views expressed by these authors are not necessarily the same as the author of this post. The links are meant to give an overview in the subjects in question.
Q3 – What do I do now?
Based on the firm belief in Allah (SWT) through the rational process of thinking(Question 1), and also the Quran being the word of Allah (SWT) and its description of the afterlife (Question 2), it is possible to know what to do now. The Quran not only answers question 2, but also defines, along with revelation which came in the form of the prophet’s actions, the complete conduct for life as far as the relationship between man and Allah (SWT) in the form of worships, the relationship between man and himself and society.

Impact of Life’s Viewpoint on society and the individual.
These three viewpoints can be referred to as Creeds. The way of life that arises from this creed can be called an Ideology or civilisation.
A Creed is the most fundamental template for shaping every aspect of life as far as driving people’s goals, generating all the solutions to mans problems and defining what a nation is prepared to go to war for, propagate to other nations. All Creeds are not unique in this respect. They all share these qualities and that is why the answer to the 3 questions is such a powerful and over-riding thing that it is like a dye which stains or taints every solution within the civilisation that adopts it. 
Are all the solutions adopted by a government shaped by a particular Life’s Viewpoint?
Let us consider some examples to illustrate this point.
Communism:
 In the Communist Creed, it is believed that Allah (SWT) does not exists (in contrast to the Secular Creed were the issue is not resolved and left open). Everything is considered material and part of nature. All humans are considered equal in every respect.
As a result of this Creed, which views man as just a cog in a wheel, it flows that individual human aspirations such as the inherent desire for materialistic possessions are given no regard and deemed to not even exist as part of human nature. They are considered nurtured desires from exposure to the Capitalist free market model. This is just one example of how the Creed shapes the solutions used to treat problems within society, in this case an economic problem related to wealth production and distribution. Because there is no desire for private property there is no reservation to make all property public and divide it on the basis of people needs as opposed to their contribution to the wealth generated in the form of work.
Secularism (Freedom & Democracy):
Secularism in many respects is a knee jerk reaction to the feudal system. This system was a power sharing arrangement between Church and Kings/Landowners were the latter were able to exert influence over the general population and subjugate them by throwing Religion at them when they complained. When conflict between the 2 parties erupted, facilitated by the actions of people like King Henry VIII who rebelled against the Church, albeit for alternative motives, the solution was a compromise were the influence of the Church would be sectioned off to places of worship and left to individual discretion for areas such as having individual virtues such as morals.
State would be a separate institution and Democracy, or Demos Cratos i.e. ‘People Power’  would be the form of government were the people would now be sovereign and rightful in making laws instead of the Church who made rules as Allah (SWT)’s agent on Earth.
From Secularism, as Allah (SWT) was removed from the centre of mans focus, the idea of Freedom and enlightenment overtook Europe and a new age was borne from the ruins of the middle ages which were marked by amongst other things intellectual backwardness and subjugation of poor by the rich.
Freedom has effectively shaped every aspect of Life in the West. From the goals that exists within individuals to the goals that drive the governments in all countries that have adopted Capitalism.
As an example, consider the concept of the Free Market. One of the forms of Freedom is Freedom of ownership which advocates that the market should be left unregulated for all goods and services bar those that are directly tied to the safeguarding of freedoms such as the judiciary. This is an example of a solution that is defined by the Secular creed.  
Islam
The Islamic Creed asserts that an unlimited and all powerful creator (called Allah) created life and governs every aspect of the universe. It is Allah who created man and is therefore the only entity qualified to define the solutions to solve all problems humans face in life. This Creed then resolves the final question, namely what is the purpose of life in a manner that is consistent with the other questions, namely how did I get here and what happens to me after I die.
As an example, the Islamic economic system views the fundamental economic problem as needing to ensure adequate production but the focus is on distribution of wealth.  It is therefore dissimilar to both the Secular view which asserts that production is key to solving the economic problem which includes the distribution of wealth through the trickle down effect and the communist view which believes that distribution is paramount and doesn’t leave any scope for incentivising individuals to increase production through  the market mechanism which entails private ownership as an integral component of its functioning. Instead it denies private property altogether.
As a result of this unique Islamic viewpoint, key utilities such as electricity, water, oil and telecoms infrastructure should not be available for private ownership unlike in Capitalism. These key utilities should be held in public ownership and administered on behalf of the public good.
This is not the same as the Socialist/Communist model which pushes everything towards Nationalisation and shuns the private sector as Islam has a very vibrant and prolific concept of private ownership and markets.
Another economics example is the fact that there is a raft of legislation to prevent various practices that restrict the circulation of wealth amongst the participants of the market. This is in contrast with the Secular model were everything is pushed towards private ownership and the evidence is that such trends facilitate the increased polarisation or increased gap between wealthy and less wealthy in society. The result is that great wealth is both produced and more fairly spread. 
A political example is the concept of sovereignty and authority as far as the election of the political authority.
Sovereignty is the entity entitled to decide the legal rules is firmly in the domain of the Creator, Allah. As far as the authority to appoint the ruler, this is in the hands of the people and no person has the divine right to rule. As long as specific conditions are met, then the person can be appointed as the ruler or Caliph. There is a rule commanding the formation of political parties which are key in ensuring accountability outside the state apparatus exists and even within the state apparatus, a specific judge exists to remove the ruler if the ruler diverges from the rules of Islam which are the foundation of the Islamic Society. This is a different concept from the equivalent idea coming from the Secular creed which bestows sovereignty to a parliament which in principle rules on behalf of the people but in reality tends to be hijacked by corporate interests. The aspect of voting for the ruler however is similar in as far as the majority vote is what brings the ruler into power. However this is not sufficient to argue that Islam is Democracy as in Democracy, or Demos Cratos, the people have the power and authority to decide on laws.
Communism, which views Allah (SWT) to not exists and people as an extension of nature and hence of low value sacrifices the rights of individuals to the collective ‘good’ has a very paternalistic view of public participation. The governments effectively decide on behalf of the people what is in their collective interests.
Hence the form of the solutions are clearly shaped or fashioned by the Creed. This is the main point of this section.  It is like a die that is placed in a washing machine. All clothes removed from it will be coloured by the die without exception. However some areas, such as traffic lights will be independent of the viewpoint.
The individual is also shaped by the specific ideas found in each of these societies in a unique way. In the Secular society people become very individualistic and selfish driven by materialistic drive. Morals are not generally prevalent after a long exposure to these values which can be summarised as “life is short, enjoy yourself!” & “be free” and “me first”.  
The communist person has effectively squashed their innate drives and lives as an unconfident and subservient personality.

How different viewpoints view each other
It is clear from the preceding discussion that different viewpoints have the same elements namely a creed or unique answer to the three most fundamental questions of human existence, and a complete system that is coloured by the Creed (see previous discussion) and has a way of protecting the creed and subsequent solutions and a way of spreading the solutions to others.
It is therefore of no surprise that these three alternatives (which we may refer to as Ideologies) cannot peacefully co-exist with each other. They are like competitors who would love for their competitors to go out of business so as not to impact their own influence and market share.
This point needs no elaboration in light of the hostilities between the Soviet Union and the West during the cold war era. Now we are seeing the same friction between Islam and the Western Secular nations.
The Secular attack on Islam has relied on misrepresenting the Islamic alternative, stating things out of context and judging specific rules of Islam in the broader context of the Secular model. This is an unfair and intellectually bankrupt approach to enhancing an informed approach to debate. It is a sign of fear and defeat as any informed debate would demonstrate the supremacy of a Divine system over a man-made one which is formed from the mind which is limited and subject to prejudice and bias.  
The key difference is that Islam has no presence in the form of a Government to practically contribute to the discussion at the international level and demonstrate the supremacy of the Islamic solutions in the face of the unfolding collapse of the Secular ideology.
Can we implement different solutions from the different viewpoints together?
Not only do these viewpoints not tolerate each other, they are like different blood groups which means they cannot be mixed together. So we cannot take some rules from the solutions that come from Secularism and implement them in the Islamic Society as the underlying philosophy is completely different. This is equivalent to trying the ban interest or usury (which is from the Islamic economic system) in the Capitalist system that comes from the Secular viewpoint. This is impractical and unworkable as there is so much dependency on interest as far as the Capitalist system is concerned. To remove it would have insurmountable implications as far as the Secular notion of free markets which view currency as a commodity as well as a medium of exchange.
This is why the trial with specific aspects of Islam in isolation of the whole lead to the failure of the Islamic experiment undertaken by the assassinated Military leader Zia-ul-Haqq in Pakistan in the 1970’s.
However in Islam, the ban on interest sits in a wider context were money is purely a medium of exchange and not a commodity. There are many ways of generating wealth through work and rules of investment to overcome any synario of restricted wealth generation (that critics would argue renders the prohibition on interest impractical) which do not lead to wealth polarisation and instability in currency markets and all that this entails.
Conclusion
It should be clear that all civilisations share a common basis in that they all have a framework grounded in the answer to the three fundamental questions of life and existence.
It should also be clear that these questions have a clear role in fashioning the outlook on life and the solutions which are needed to uphold such an outlook. These solutions are not transferable amongst different civilisations as the roots of these solutions emanate from completely different viewpoints which are irreconcilable.
What is now needed is an analysis of the different viewpoints so that the viewpoint most consistent with the objective reality that the untainted human mind senses is adopted for humanity. This is the subject of part II.

Questions/Comments/Feedback to

Thursday 4 August 2011

The 3 Questions Part II

                                 The 3 Questions: Part II

                                                

Viewpoints and their error
Communism
As far as Communism, their fundamental error was in the denial in the existence of a creator namely Allah (SWT). All subsequent solutions that are formed from this root error are destined to be in error much like a ‘follow through error’ in mathematics. As this ideology has effectively failed due to its implementation and denail of human nature (as opposed to the Islamic Ideology which failed due to its misapplication) thorough analysis is not required. The fact that human nature is denied by this ideology as far as the rejection of private ownership which is an instinctive need, is sufficient to dismiss it as a credible alternative to the current order.
Secularism
As far as the secular Ideology (Capitalism) is concerned, at the point of the 3 questions, the root error was in mixing two contradictory positions into a compromise solution.
Bringing two contradictory positions into a compromise
To explain this, consider an example:-
Imagine two security guards arguing over a combination lock. Guard A asserts that the 5 digit code is composed exclusively of odd numbers whereas Guard B asserts that it is made up exclusively of even numbers.  This position adopted by Guard B’s is based on a discussion he overheard in which he learned that the code was changed from odd numbers to even numbers.
What would you think if they, rather than probe the authenticity of the evidences either way, and instead agreed to compromise and conclude that the code is a mixture of odd and even numbers to satisfy both parties!
Why would you Compromise in this situation?
Nobody would settle for this unless either the implications of not being able to unlock the vault were not considered important or desperation had set in and both parties feared that a conclusion was unreachable and they would end up destroying each other in the pursuit of reaching the correct conclusion. The compromise settlement is made up of a mixture of purity (the correct code) and impurity (the incorrect code) so it cannot by definition be pure and free of error. It establishes a precedent that the pursuit for truth is not the highest goal. In some aspects of life, there is scope to agree to differ however as a society and nation, such fundamental foundations should be rigorously debates and found upon a sound basis which is in conformity with reality due to the fact that all resulting thoughts and ideas will be based on it. If the basic idea is weak, then anything which results from this basic idea will be tainted by this flaw or error.
Can this Compromise be correct?
This compromise would be an invalid response and would certainly be wrong as opposed to guessing in which case there would be a greater probability of being right.
What has the security guard analogy got to do with the Secular Creed?
This is exactly what happened with the two parties being the State and Church on one hand and the common people on the other.
The two views were being expressed by the peasantry on the one hand through calling for the need to remove the influence of the Church from life’s affairs and the Monarchs and feudal lords on the other hand who argued that Allah (SWT) and the afterlife were a reality and could not be sidelined either as a belief or a set of rules for deciding on legislative matters without disastrous consequences in the hereafter.
The former party’s stance was predicated on the implausibility of a good Allah (SWT)’s standing for the corruption that the church has come to symbolise. It was not at the time predicated on the atheist creed which took momentum much later through the Darwinian movement of the later 18th Century. Either way, it was nonetheless a radically opposite stance to the counter view and one needing resolution via the definitive basis of the society at the time (Christianity) and not one requiring settlement upon a ‘middle ground’ solution.
So in essence the 2 views were as diametrically opposed as the view of the code being either odd or even with no room for the middle ground being valid. Yet the middle ground was settled upon to appease both sides. This was tantamount to the code being a mixture of odd and even numbers and hence definitely an erroneous conclusion.
How did this debate between church and common folk arise?
Up until this point, whenever the common man who was oppressed by landowners and kings tried to seek justice, they were told that their actions were against Allah (SWT) and they should be patient as Allah (SWT) would give them great riches in heaven and that it was Allah (SWT)’s will for them to be poor otherwise they would be born into nobility! It is clear why people sought to rise up and target religion given the way it was being used to conceal greed and power hungry monarch and kings.
So one party (common folk) wished for religion to be completely removed from life and those that used it to subjugate the people in its name (Kings and Clergy) sought to maintain the current order.
 The final conclusion was to allow it but to restrict its power to the 4 walls of the church and state or governments would be run by and for the people, hence the concept of Democracy, that was written about much earlier by Plato, was adopted as a form of government. Hence the term Secularism which is from the Greek term ‘secular’ which means area outside the temple.
The 2 options defined above, just as choosing either odd or even codes, have 2 distinct implications, either there is a Allah (SWT) and hence his authority needs to be respected else there are consequences in the afterlife, or there isn’t a Allah (SWT) in which case he can be completely removed from every aspect of Life and worships is an unnecessary diversion from what man could be doing instead.
Both goals are antagonistic and in the opposite direction and hence it is not valid to compromise in this situation. However at this critical juncture, Western Europe chose to adopt the pragmatic approach and compromise to preserve order. Hence the notion of pluralism was founded, were people can agree or disagree as much as they like, as long as they believe in secularism and freedom/democracy. I.e. as long as they accept the fundamental viewpoint as their boundary.
This is why Muslims who accept the hijab (female head scarf) on the basis of freedom of choice are acceptable within the secular mindset whereas those that accept it as a command from Allah (SWT) are considered working outside these boundaries and hence a threat to the ideological fabric of the secular society.
Parallels with Security Guard example
Both cannot be correct. To mix both positions into a compromise means that truth and falsehood have been mixed together into a hybrid solution. This is similar to the security guards. It is impossible for anything built on this foundation to be pure and correct.
This is the basis for what is termed pluralism in the West. This is the notion of open society, of acceptance of disparate and varying often antagonistic ideas built upon a common framework. There is great infatuation with the belief that the Secular creed accommodates varying views of different persuasions; it being argued that this is a unique strength of this viewpoint. It is not ironic that when the FIS in Algeria one the election, the election was cancelled because a divine solution contradicts the foundations of the secular creed and viewpoint.
So it is pluralism on the provision that the secular framework is the box within which differences are contained within. However the quest for truth is made secondary in many matters were it should be vital and key for humanity. The issue of the existence of Allah (SWT) being a prime example due to the implications of getting the balance in the 3 questions wrong and the implications of the understanding about life and its fundamental purpose and how to live it.
What would have been the correct response?
The correct action would have been to focus the discussion on why Religion had become a tool of human greed and corruption and not on the validity of Religion per se! And then rescue religion from the shackles of human greed and the power hungry clergy and kings.
(note: in Islam the possibility of this happening is significantly reduced due to the both the order to establish political parties to account the ruler and create a climate were the ruler is heavily scrutinised also a judge specifically with executive powers to remove the ruler or Caliph if he starts to manipulate Religion for his own aims)
This is the fundamental divergence from the root cause analysis of the problem. This would have been the balanced and impartial position and not as happened the emotional and reactionary position to take.
It would have been relatively easy to see how the problem was in the way religion was being manipulated for greed and how the societal mechanisms were setup in a way to protect this exploitation. Consequently the problem was in the forces surrounding religion and not in religion as an entity. Once this was identified, the problem would have been corrected and society would not have en mass turned their back on religion or institutional religion as happened and the legacy of that separation which still exists to this day as a result.
OK, we have decided on Secularism, what next?
Now that religion was separated from life, the question of what would replace Allah (SWT) as the goal to seek in life. This is the origin of freeing man from religion and turning him to his desires as a means of achieving happiness.
As a reaction to the position adopted by Christianity (man is inherently evil and needs laws to constrain his carnal desires that would otherwise tend towards vice), the founders of the Secular solution, as a reactionary response to all that Christianity stood for believed the opposite and said that man is inherently good. However he needs freedom to allow the natural goodness inherent within him to appear through his free will.
The View that Man is inherently good was the basis of Freedom.
The impact of this view is that as much freedom as possible should be granted to the citizens of the state. This it was argued was the key to individual happiness and ultimately collective prosperity. The only restriction to individual freedom should be when one man’s freedom restricts another man’s freedom. So one would not be allowed to steal from another person in the name of freedom as this would infringe or impact the freedom of the victim. The stated role of the state being to regulate this balance.
However, as we have and are seeing, the more free the society is, the more prone it is to corruption, decadence, abuse of the weak, exploitation and greed. This is a direct consequence of misunderstanding the nature of man and having the correct viewpoint. 
Does man have a Moral Conscience to decide right and wrong and hence not in need of divine guidance?
One may argue that man has a conscience or inner voice that guides him to the notion of right and wrong. The implication being that man is not in need of divine guidance.  There is no evidence for this as the goalpost for this moral arbitrator changes over time and from one place to another. Man does however have the in built propensity for good the way a seed has the propensity for growth. This propensity however, just like the seed, needs to be nurtured towards good by following the commands and prohibitions of Allah (SWT) through his divine instruction through the Prophets sent over time to warn and guide people. 
Correct View about Human nature is that he is neither good nor evil but has intrinsic needs and a mind and is born without any idea about good or bad.
Man has 2 sets of needs. The first sets of needs are needs which are biological in nature and failure to meet these needs would result in the person dying. Examples include the need for food, water, oxygen and rest. It is simple to identify whether these needs have been satisfied within a narrow band of acceptable methods as the number of actions that satisfy these needs are very small.
The second sets of needs are more complex as failure to satisfy them does not lead to a person dying, however the person would be miserable and in despair. This includes needs such as the need for reproduction, defence of loved ones, recognition by peers, desire for property and living with a sense of security.
It is not so easy to assess whether the fulfilment of these needs has been achieved through a correct action as there are simply so many ways these needs can be met in a manner which switches off the burning emotional state of agitation associated with the need being triggered.
So, if one didn’t know better, to steal property or to earn it through work would both be actions that would satisfy the need for amassing property. However one would not know which action was correct or necessarily better without an external criterion. There is nothing inherent in the need or its satisfaction that informs a person that the need was satisfied with the right action or method.
As man is inherently unable to assess whether the method used for satisfaction was good or bad, or more accurately right or wrong. He can be defined as being inherently neutral. If he was inherently good, then there is an argument to say that he should be left alone (i.e. religion should interfere with the process of his discovering through trial and error what is the best way to live and find the best methods of satisfaction).
These needs are pre-programmed from birth
Both these sets of needs are built into a baby from birth and the baby needs instructions which define how these needs can be satisfied. As mentioned above, there is nothing within the needs themselves which can teach a child what types of satisfaction are good and bad or right and wrong or which forms of satisfaction cause other problems. The human being is only able to judge when the need has been satisfied (ex when hunger stops) but nothing to tell him innately if the method of satisfaction was right or wrong. This information used to perform the action to satisfy the need comes from the environment. Therefore the correct view about the human being is that he is composed of needs (see 2 types) and a mind which he can use to learn and acquire information through which actions are performed to satisfy these needs.
Therefore the needs and the mind are both neutral. There is no inherent predisposition to being good or bad, just as the attribute of a knife to cut or fire to burn is not inherently good or evil. It is how these objects are used in an action that determines if the action was good or bad.   
This is the position taken in the Islamic ideology.  In Islam, the needs and mind are guided to the correct forms of satisfaction across all types of needs through the legislative guidance given by Allah (SWT) through prophets and messengers.
This guidance presumes that a person has had an independent and rational approach to coming to the creed of Islam namely in the belief in Allah (SWT), and belief that the Quran is the word of Allah (SWT). One cannot be expected to follow the instructions and guidance of Allah (SWT) until the mind has become convinced that such a deity exists and that the revelation sent to mankind through the last messenger is the correct source of such instructions.
The Islamic creed in essence is settled when a person has answered the 3 questions in an intellectually coherent and consistent way. At that point, the divine guidance takes over to provide the instructions on how to live in a way which is in harmony with mans nature and the rest of Allah (SWT)’s creation with its perfectly harmonious systems. If your laptop breaks down, you would take it to the manufacturer. Similarly who has manufactured the human being? Surely it is only he who is competent to define the instruction manual.
Why the axiom of Freedom is wrong
The fact that the Secular creed asserted that man is inherently good, and hence should be allowed to be free (subject to the restriction mentioned above) relied on a very mistaken assumption that the result of this assumption is unfolding before us.
All the abuses of politicians in power when for instance they place corporate interest above their mandate to serve the wider electorate (See the Silent Takeover), abuse of children, of the weak (nursing homes etc), exploitation of money markets for selfish creed, expense claims etc. The list is endless.
Rotten apple theory?
On a production line in an assembly plant, the same tools and materials will result in a very small number of defects being produced. This would not necessitate a review of the plants systems or design as this is just an inevitable aspect of production and exists in all aspects of manufacturing and for that matter life.  
It cannot be argued that the cases of abuse of whatever dimension we hear in the news on a daily basis are similar to the odd defect given the scale of the problem is countries which are ideological in nature and which call for freedom in all the apparatus of the state and society.
Defenders of liberty and freedom would argue that the problem is either in the balance of freedom and laws to restrict freedom being wrong or they state a set of unique factors and circumstances that have made people evil and the exception to the norm of them being inherently good.
Such unique factors include the individual being traumatised in some way through some circumstances such as being raised in a single parent home without receiving adequate love and care or someone who has suffered violent abuse for example. A key solution to avoiding such factors it is argued is the engagement of people in economic activity so as to create wealth and avoid the poverty trap and the social decay that is associated with poverty and unemployment. However freedom is always removed from the radar as far as the root of the behavioural problems associated with so many people in society. Much abuse of power is by people who are wealthy as an example.
These actions are a direct consequence of making the quest for freedom above all else. It creates individuals which cannot see beyond slogans such as “life is short, enjoy yourself” and “you only live once so live life to the max” and similar expressions. There is a built in clash between seeking freedom and laws that restrict it. This inherent conflict doesn’t exist in Islam as freedom is not the goal and hence there is not an inherent battle between goals and laws in society.
Note: This does not mean that Islam restricts valid drives such as Communism restricts mans drive for property. Islam does acknowledge innate drives and provides a method to satisfy such desires and needs in a manner which achieves tranquillity for all citizens irrespective of race and belief and also satisfies the individual in the process.
If man was inherently good, then this would mean that freedom will allow him to manifest his goodness through his free will and choice of actions. The reality of man and his actions however speak otherwise.
Are examples of societal break down really attributable to Freedom?
To measure this consider the incidence of extra marital relationships and associated damage caused to the family unit in the Muslim world now while it is under the influence of Freedom with the equivalent incidence during the period when it was under the rule of the Caliphate system. The magnitude of the difference cannot be attributed to the rotten apples theory but is as a result of the implementation of freedom especially in the area of media and music.    
Because the inherent makeup of man is that he is not inherent good or for that matter inherently evil, but instead he is inherently neutral, the foundation of giving him freedom as a goal is fundamentally flawed and a very dangerous concept due to the fallout from freedom in the West. Man will default to his animalistic drives when he is drugged with freedom and over time concepts such as integrity, justice and consideration for the group will only be believed in and upheld when the benefit to do so outweighs the benefit not to do so. Similarly the rich will help the poor only for fear that to not do so would mean that their wealth would be stolen by those in poverty.
Mankind drifts towards uncontrolled greed, lack of accountability, not thinking of others prior to undertaking actions. Since the Second World War we have seen the erosion of Victorian values which were founded in Christianity which were the basis of much of the morality that seems to be increasingly distant from the newer generations that are growing up in an increasingly free and deregulated market environment. Hence the calls for family values and the ‘back to basics’ rhetoric that freedom and the idea of allowing man to drift towards man’s supposed ‘inner goodness’ was so manifestly unable to achieve.
It is worth noting that the level of freedom especially market freedom granted during the increased freedom given to the free market by newly founded alliance between Reagan/Thatcher in the early 1980’s has had a direct relationship on the rapid decline in societal standards especially in the area of corporate and market irresponsibility, anti social behaviour/youth culture and standards in public life. Hence it is inaccurate to assert that increasing freedom will lead to mankind expressing his innate goodness.
Other areas of error within the Secular Creed
All other errors are a by-product of these 2 fundamental flaws in summary the compromise solution and changing the deity to be worshiped from Allah (SWT) to Freedom of the self.
The focus of this booklet has been on the creedal aspects and not a thorough refutation of the solutions that come from this creed. But there is a principle that if the underlying assumptions are incorrect, then the conclusions that are shaped by it will also be incorrect.

Conclusion
The error of the alternative civilisations should be clear from the preceding discussion.  This will help explain the basis for the attack on the Islamic viewpoint by vanguards of the civilisations based on the secular viewpoint given the insincere basis of the latter’s formulation.
Note: This does not include the folk who constitute the masses that  adhere to the secular creed and civilisation as the majority are unaware of the intricacies of this agenda to quell the alternative vision for humanity and are sadly lead by a lack of objective insight into the alternative vision for humanity which this booklet seeks to present at least as far as an introduction.
Furthermore as the basis of the secular viewpoint was not established on a clear process involving an objective assessment of reality, it is not feasible to use the secular basis to challenge the credibility of the Islamic basis which is based on an objective assessment of reality.
This explains why tactics such as misrepresentation, threats and bribes are used to maintain the status quo as far as perpetuation of the secular system in the Muslim lands and the forced acceptance of the secular values on the Muslim communities in the west.


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