خلاصه ماشینی:
The thorny and continuously debated relation between Islam and the West is the subject of four contributions: Ralph Coury's "A Neoimperial Discourse on the Middle East," Charles Butterworth's "On Others as Evil: Toward a Truly Comparative Politics," Ali A.
Hazim Shah ibn Abdul Murad's review essay on "Islam and Contemporary W estem Thought.
" Commonly, it is the reports of missionaries, travel literature, colonialist memoirs, or orientalist texts that have been the main field of research for studying western attitudes toward Islam.
Hazim Shah ibn Abdul Murad deals with the works of Akbar S.
Also worthy of mention is that, on page 111 of the same issue, the fourth life from the bottom of Yushau Sodiq's book review of Pragmatism in the Age of Jihad: The Precolonial State of Bundu, we wrote: "Third is the claim that many of the Almaamis did not adhering to the Islamic teaching, and drank alcohol and had more than four wives.