Recognition of the fragility of Lebanon, a state that is officially secular but which in fact is upheld by criteria of communal belonging, led the Shi'ite thinker and imam Muhammad Mahdī Shamseddine (1936-2001) to relaunch the model of the civic state (dawla madaniyya), in which faith, without being denied or privatized, does not determine the rights of individuals.
Diez, M., Muhammad Mahdi, S., A Government without Religion for Religious Citizens, <<OASIS>>, 2012; 16 (ii): 76-79 [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/328720]
A Government without Religion for Religious Citizens
Diez, MartinoSecondo
;
2012
Abstract
Recognition of the fragility of Lebanon, a state that is officially secular but which in fact is upheld by criteria of communal belonging, led the Shi'ite thinker and imam Muhammad Mahdī Shamseddine (1936-2001) to relaunch the model of the civic state (dawla madaniyya), in which faith, without being denied or privatized, does not determine the rights of individuals.File in questo prodotto:
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