Not knowing Aramaic or Syriac, and considering that as you say, a fair amount of words in the Qur'an are obscure in the extreme, I can't really comment much on his alternative readings (though it looks to me like in the famous Surat al-'Alaq, the only change he made was to claim that 'alaq should mean "clay"? He can't suggest an alternative reading for the word there, at least not for the consonants... and the rest of the two versions you cited were essentially identical, or at least just two different interpretations of the text as it stands.)
The Islamic stance on the creation (or, more accurately, non-creation) of the Qur'an has been rather silly ever since the decline of the Mu'tazila and the heroic behaviour of that idiot Ibn Hanbal. Post-medieval mainstream Sunnism has been characterized by a rather anti-intellectual streak, honestly, or at least anti-critical thinking, with a number of obvious exceptions. There are so many dogma's that casting doubt on the most fundamental one of all is inevitably seen as a direct attack on the heart of the religion. Perhaps if they hadn't raised hadith to the completely undeserved status it has, or spent so many lives trying to make sense of it, they'd be more open to critical analysis of the Qur'an itself. And perhaps if the Mu'tazila had carried the day instead of the "ask no questions" brand of Sunnism... but well, that kind of remarks doesn't help very much.
The Islamic stance on the creation (or, more accurately, non-creation) of the Qur'an has been rather silly ever since the decline of the Mu'tazila and the heroic behaviour of that idiot Ibn Hanbal. Post-medieval mainstream Sunnism has been characterized by a rather anti-intellectual streak, honestly, or at least anti-critical thinking, with a number of obvious exceptions. There are so many dogma's that casting doubt on the most fundamental one of all is inevitably seen as a direct attack on the heart of the religion. Perhaps if they hadn't raised hadith to the completely undeserved status it has, or spent so many lives trying to make sense of it, they'd be more open to critical analysis of the Qur'an itself. And perhaps if the Mu'tazila had carried the day instead of the "ask no questions" brand of Sunnism... but well, that kind of remarks doesn't help very much.
The Syro-Aramaic Reading of the Koran by Christoph Luxenberg
31/05/2010 07:42:58 PM
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Nice review! *NM*
31/05/2010 08:35:42 PM
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Thanks! I realize most people aren't going to rush out and read this, but the book was interesting. *NM*
31/05/2010 10:01:28 PM
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Sounds interesting.
31/05/2010 09:11:31 PM
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Syriac is just a specific Aramaic dialect. You know one if you know the other, essentially.
31/05/2010 10:01:00 PM
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Right.
31/05/2010 10:58:16 PM
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Modern Arabic dialects should be considered separate languages.
31/05/2010 11:53:37 PM
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Your question about forgetting (before I forget)
01/06/2010 12:12:08 AM
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I see. Interesting.
02/06/2010 12:52:09 AM
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"nasiy" is just one of the possible definitions that Manna gave, not the "proper reading".
02/06/2010 05:07:41 AM
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Ooh, interesting.
01/06/2010 10:51:42 PM
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I'm glad you enjoyed the review. I doubt you'll enjoy the book.
01/06/2010 10:56:12 PM
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Damn.
01/06/2010 11:01:30 PM
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There will probably be a more "general reader"-friendly book on it in the future.
01/06/2010 11:27:15 PM
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The Syro-Aramaic Reading of the Koran for Dummies?
02/06/2010 12:33:47 AM
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That would be a great book
02/06/2010 12:40:38 AM
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excellent
02/06/2010 12:44:50 AM
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Tired?
02/06/2010 01:14:53 AM
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I'm sure he was referring to Sumerian theory in Akkadian grammar.
02/06/2010 01:50:30 AM
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Re: I'm sure he was referring to Sumerian theory in Akkadian grammar.
02/06/2010 03:32:13 AM
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I think there's even a "Children of Tiamat and the Parents Who Flay Them" section.
02/06/2010 05:11:02 AM
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