“Civil state” appears in these links as a state of law, citizenship, and pluralism, grounded in rights and freedoms and the separation of powers. It is also repeatedly associated with separating the public sphere from the authority of prohibition, and with making obedience owed to the law rather than to religious coercion.
Direct answer
The civil state in this center is a state of law, citizenship, and pluralism, not an apparatus for monopolizing religion or expanding prohibition. The links show the impact of constitutional freedom, separation of powers, obedience to the law, and the regulation of the public sphere. The page is also connected to ethical Islam and to the distinction between divine prohibition and civil law.
Concept keys
- The civil state is based on law and citizenship.
- Pluralism and separation of powers are among its recurring conditions.
- In it, obedience is owed to the law, not to religious coercion.
- The state does not possess the power of prohibition.
- The concept is connected to ethical Islam and to the trajectory of state and religion.
- In the human rights file, the civil state functions as the locus of public rights and the protection of freedoms.
Where does the tracing begin?
- civil state
- civil state
- The civil state regulates the public sphere by law and citizenship without possessing the power of prohibition
- Human rights, people’s rights, and public rights
Shared entry
Lexicon
Its appearance in the books
Related verses
- This page begins from a network of relations linking law, citizenship, pluralism, and the limits of prohibition.
Conceptual relations
- Pluralism establishes the state and civil society
- Political legitimacy comes from human pledge, not from religious mandate
- The civil state protects freedom of opinion
- The civil state presupposes pluralism and the separation of powers
- The civil state is based on pluralism, freedom of opinion, and the separation of religion from the state
- The civil state is based on pluralism
- The civil state is based on constitutional freedom, pluralism, consultative governance, and citizenship within a state of law
- The civil state is based on obedience to the law
- The civil state regulates the public sphere by law and citizenship without possessing the power of prohibition
- Unifying relations
Near claims
- Islam is allegiance to human values
- The state does not possess the power of prohibition
- Citizenship is the highest allegiance in the civil state
- Citizenship is based on law and equality
- Citizenship is allegiance to the homeland and the law
- Transnational allegiance is an individual religious allegiance
- National allegiance preserves identity
- Ethical Islam is translated politically and morally in freedom, citizenship, and resistance to tyranny
- The civil state regulates the public sphere by law, not by religious prohibition
- Humanistic Islam is re-founded Qur’anically as a system of values, freedom, and citizenship that transcends identity
- Political legitimacy comes from human pledge
- The civil state in the Muhammadic message derives its legitimacy from people and governs by law
- Nations are defined by behavior and language
- The Muhammadan mission inaugurated the age of cities
- History moves toward pluralism
- Freedom is constrained by the constitution
- Freedom, consultative governance, and democracy
- Freedom and knowledge are twins
- The civil state presupposes pluralism and separation of powers
- The civil state is based on pluralism
- The civil state is based on rights and freedoms
- The civil state protects rights
- The civil state is responsible for public rights
- The civil state is based on obedience to the law
- Messages regulate coexistence and rights
- Divine sharia and the general guidelines
- The American people bring together multiple ethnicities and nations
- The French people merge into one state
- The people include nationality and nation
- Constitutional consultative governance has multiple references
- Consultative governance means democratic freedom
- Consultative governance is based on pluralism
- Injustice is a conscious, deliberate act
- The law regulates practice within the constitution