伊斯兰伦理中的美德与男子气概

Cyrus Ali Zargar
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摘要

最近对美德伦理的兴趣导致跨学科和跨宗教的探究线的增加,从关注亚里士多德的方法转向研究较少的,通常是非欧洲中心的方法,包括对亚洲宗教的研究(例如,Seok 2017)。在伊斯兰研究中,伦理学的研究主要集中在与法律和元伦理学(尤其是神学)有关的问题上,因为人们认为伊斯兰美德伦理学在很大程度上是希腊实践哲学的衍生(例如,Hourani 1985)。最近关于美德伦理的研究——其中许多已经在本期中进行了回顾——试图弥合这一差距,并且有充分的理由:关于人类性格特征提炼的伊斯兰著作(tahdhh b al-akhlāq)经常为今天的伦理学家提供具有重大意义的原创观点。此外,正是在研究性别和美德伦理的交汇处,伊斯兰思想展示了一种发展轨迹,或许可以更广泛地为“世界哲学”提供信息。特别是在其将“男子气概”(murunaa或muruwwa)或“年轻男子气概”(futuwwa)作为美德的概念中,这对苏菲主义具有特别重要的意义之一,伊斯兰美德伦理学抓住了发展出适用于当代背景的道德完美的丰富词汇的悖论,同时也以固定性别规范的方式这样做。正是考虑到这一点,本期特刊中的文章回应了三个主题之一,这些主题由哈马德·本·哈利法大学伊斯兰立法与伦理研究中心(CILE)于2019年11月在多哈主办的关于未来战争主题的原始会议联系在一起,本系列的9位作者中有5位介绍了早期的草稿。这些主题是:(1)未来之战(“年轻”或“骑士精神”),尤其是在前现代的苏菲文本中;(2)从性别批判理论看前现代伊斯兰文本,特别是苏菲文本中的男性气质和男性规范;(3)经典伊斯兰著作中的美德伦理,包括abui Ḥāmid al-Ghazālī(公元505/1111年)和苏菲派作家的著作。Futuwwa为规范、性别和伊斯兰虔诚计划之间的关系提供了一个引人入胜的案例。这里的许多作者都感兴趣的是,与“年轻人”(fatā)的行为相比,未能达到放弃的标准被认为是没有男子气概的行为。作为适当男子气概行为的缩影,未来战不仅仅是专家(即精神精英和他们的学员)的一种美德:它变得
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Virtue and Manliness in Islamic Ethics
Recent interest in virtue ethics has led to increased interdisciplinary and interreligious lines of inquiry, moving away from a focus on Aristotelian approaches to less-studied, often non-Eurocentric ones, including the study of Asian religions (e.g., Seok 2017). In Islamic studies, research in ethics has largely centred on matters pertaining to law and meta-ethics (especially in theology), on account of a perception of Islamic virtue ethics as largely a derivation of Greek practical philosophy (e.g., Hourani 1985). Recent studies on virtue ethics— many of which have been reviewed in this issue—have tried to bridge this gap, and for good reason: Islamic writings on the refinement of human character traits (tahdhīb al-akhlāq) often present original perspectives of great relevance for ethicists today. It is, moreover, at the meeting place of the study of gender and virtue ethics that Islamic thought displays a trajectory of development that can perhaps inform “world philosophy” more broadly. Especially in its conception of “manliness” (murūʾa or muruwwa) or “youngmanliness” ( futuwwa) as a virtue, one of particular significance to Sufism, Islamic virtue ethics captures the paradoxes of having developed a rich vocabulary of moral perfection applicable in contemporary contexts, while also doing so in ways that fix gender norms. It is with that in mind that the articles in this special issue respond to one of three themes, tied together by an original conference on the topic of futuwwa in Doha, hosted by Hamad Bin Khalifa University’s Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics (CILE) in November 2019, where five of the nine authors in this collection presented earlier drafts. Those themes are (1) futuwwa (“youngmanliness” or “chivalry”), especially in premodern Sufi texts; (2) masculinity and male normativity in premodern Islamic texts, especially Sufi texts, as seen through gender critical theories; and (3) virtue ethics in classical Islamic writings, including that of Abū Ḥāmid al-Ghazālī (d. 505/1111) and Sufi authors. Futuwwa presents a fascinating case for the relationship between norms, gender, and Islamic programs of piety. Many of the authors here take an interest in the way failure to live up to standards of renunciation qualifies as unmanly behaviour, in contrast to the behaviour of a “youngman” ( fatā). As the epitome of proper manly behaviour, futuwwa was something much more than merely a virtue for the specialists, that is, the spiritual elite and their trainees: It became
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