The Post-Enlightenment Moral Crisis and the Emergence of Secular Tyranny in the Middle East
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Abstract
This article explores humanity’s ethical transformation during Europe’s
post-Enlightenment era and assesses its impact upon the origins
and development of secularism. Thereafter, it investigates how
secularism was introduced into the Middle East, isolating that importation
as directed through western colonialism or spellbound
indigenous elites. Eventually, introducing secularism into the region’s
socio-cultural milieu achieved nothing resembling what Europe
or North America had experienced, particularly as regards the
purported aims of social reconciliation, industrialization, and modernization.
Without the European context, secularism emerged in
a radically offensive manner, one that uprooted the local axiology
and thereby leading to unprecedented levels of secular tyranny as
well as entailing the justification of socio-economic and political
oppression.