again, what problem do you have? If you think that these issues has to be resolved within Islam, then why have you as a non-Muslim spent a few pages complaining about them, especially when you admit that you have no idea what most Muslims think?
Because they concern human rights, religious freedom, world politics, etc. It's sad that you apparently want to hush me up.
No, man. I'm looking at what you've said in this thread. And note the bracketed words. You just look like you might be doing that?
The specific words you've quoted didn't mention any other religion but islam nor did they imply that other religions were better. I did defend christianity against certain accusations as well as I negated some embellished images of islamic tolerance in this thread, but only by stating some facts, and, anyway, it wasn't me who brought christianity in this thread. It is in fact those who believe to be "defending" islam who brought this topic in, and so did you in this very precise case.
You are either just backpedaling now or have failed to put your points across well. But I'm getting the passive-aggressive vibe of someone who is not an outright bigot but is prejudiced against a certain group anyway, since you seem to be oscillating between "I don't think Islam is bad" and "Look, the Prophet said this!".
I reported this post, as it's offensive towards me, as were some of your previous remarks.
Anyway, as I've already mentioned, I claimed that traditional islamic thinking is "logical and consistent", and this should end this matter.
I think islam has some brighter and some darker points.
What's wrong in quoting Muhammad, especially if someone asked for it?
"religious viewpoint is 'logical and consistent', but simply its axioms are different" is not a coherent statement. And I think you might be mistaking rationality with logic. I think of rationality as having the quality of being reasonable. For something to be rational, it has be the acceptable to (if not necessarily embraced by) those who are capable of reasoning.
Unlike you (apparently), I do not deny muslims capability of reasoning. Going by the line of shari'a is completely reasonable for someone believing Muhammad is a prophet of God.
On the other hand, if you begin from an irrational premise, then no matter how logically valid your argument is you can't be rational.
It may not be rational in definitive terms, but subjectively, if one accepts the premise, it is.