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		The Active 
		Nihilism of Terror 
		By Mohamad 
		Khatami  
		Mohamad 
		Khatami is the president of the Islamic Republic of Iran. His remarks 
		are adapted from a talk on "Rejecting Terrorism" sponsored by the World 
		Conference on Religion and Peace at the UN in November. 
		Various 
		authors have talked about an end of history. They say that Western 
		history, which began in ancient Greece and passed through the medieval 
		and modern ages, is now coming to a triumphant close. With its science 
		and technology, the West attained global sovereignty. However, it is 
		precisely this hegemonic sovereignty that is coming to an end.
 Globalization implies the extension of communication networks and the 
		mutual resonance of political, economic and cultural events. Through 
		this process, ultimate uniformization threatens to spread everywhere. 
		But cultures and religions are attempting to resist and counter these 
		forces of global uniformity by preserving their own identity and 
		capacity to act with autonomy. This resistance amidst such a torrential 
		process has in turn awakened many nations and peoples to their own 
		culture and religions.
 
 Were this awakening confined to the realm of human morals and to the 
		preservation of the existential roots of each nation, it would be quite 
		welcome. As recent catastrophes have demonstrated, though, turning back 
		to the past in search of "pure" and "real" knowledge often begins with 
		the premise that the modern course of history is "satanic" and wrong. 
		This misguided assessment denies all the invaluable and essential 
		achievements of the modern era and calls for their eradication, even 
		through recourse to violent action.
 
 In this situation, never has a dialogue among civilizations been more 
		urgent.
 
 In the modern era, philosophy has faced natural science as an opponent. 
		Natural science, proceeding inductively, aims at turning philosophy into 
		an exact science. Not only Husserl, but most philosophers since the 18th 
		century have sought to make a scientifically exact discipline of 
		philosophy.
 
 Since Descartes the "object" has been relegated to what is out there 
		apart from the spirit-in philosophical terms, "the realm of extended 
		substance" to be conquered by man. Reality thereby becomes a 
		quantitative dimension without qualitative characteristics.
 
 Such a mechanical conception of the world reduces living objective 
		reality into a dry abstraction. Hume further transformed our world into 
		a stream of sense-impressions devoid of meaning and without causal 
		relationships. Following this, Kant argued we were only capable of 
		perceiving phenomenon, or appearances, while the noumena, or spiritual 
		essence, lay eternally beyond our reach.
 Fichte soon thereafter declared that phenomena was also illusory, a 
		projection of the self. Eventually, in the absolute idealism of Hegel, 
		the entire realm of objective reality was pronounced to be no more than 
		a thesis bound to become its opposite, evaporating in the course of 
		dialectical evolution.
 
 This disappearance of objective knowledge in Western philosophy has 
		continued in other idealist and subjective guises-positivism, 
		materialism, psychologism and historicism.
 
 In the wake of this elimination of objective knowledge, the knowing 
		subject [believer] was also slated to disappear. Freud depicted humans 
		as complexes of sexual instincts and drives. Marx reduced man to being 
		entirely defined by his social condition. In declaring God dead Nietzche 
		also condemned his superman to nihilism.
 
 The absence of values based in objective knowledge-nihilism-may prove 
		socially harmless as a mere philosophical indulgence. But what we are 
		witnessing in the world today is an active form of nihilism that 
		threatens the very fabric of human existence.
 
 This new form of active nihilism assumes various names, some tragically 
		bearing a semblance of religiosity and self-proclaimed spirituality. 
		Vicious terrorists who concoct weapons out of religion are superficial 
		literalists clinging to the most simplistic ideas. They are utterly 
		incapable of understanding that, perhaps inadvertently, they are turning 
		religion into the handmaiden of the most decadent ideologies. When 
		terrorists purport to be serving the cause of religion and accuse all 
		those who disagree with them of heresy and sacrilege, they are indeed 
		serving the very ideologies they condemn.
 
 Given the eruption of active nihilism in the name of faith, the role and 
		responsibility of religious scholars has become ever more crucial.
 
 Christian thinkers in the 19th century put forward the idea that 
		religion should be seen as a venue for social solidarity. Now that the 
		world is on the verge of chaos, struggling with violence, the notion of 
		Christian solidarity should prove helpful in calling for peace and 
		security.
 
 In the Holy Koran, human beings are also invited to join their efforts 
		in ta'awon, which means "cooperation to do good." Ta'awon is a 
		consequence of solidarity and implores us to cooperate in the cause of 
		doing good with courage, resolve and mutual understanding.
 
 Christian social thinkers have stated that solidarity involves mutual 
		interests, common approaches and an altruistic sense of duty and 
		compassion. We all need this important concept and should work together 
		in realizing it as a global goal.
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