Comments on Mansoureh Tajik’s Articles (2020) "Understanding the Concepts of Imamat and Wilayat in Shi'a Islam" Comments on Mansoureh Tajik’s Articles (2020) "Understanding the Concepts of Imamat and Wilayat in Shi'a Islam"
Intimations of Political Philosophy

Comments on Mansoureh Tajik’s Articles (2020) "Understanding the Concepts of Imamat and Wilayat in Shi'a Islam‪"‬

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Publisher Description

Mansoureh Tajik is a Shi'a Muslim Twelve-Imami and a believer in Iran's current system of governance. In October 2020, the Saker website courageously posts his articles. In doing so, the Saker serves as a witness.
These comments consider only the first three articles. The first article is titled, "Understanding the Concepts of Imamat and Wilayat in Shi'a Islam: Iranian Revolution and Constitution, Part 1". The second article and third articles are "A Delegated System of Governance: Understanding the Concepts of Imamat and Wilayat in Shi'a Islam, Part 2 and Part 3". The third article finishes with a promise of more to come.
Despite this promise, these articles compose a cohesive critique, told through intertwining narratives.
Tajik describes the conditions which give rise to the Iranian revolt in 1979. In America, these same conditions ripen into Big Government (il)Liberalism and trigger the unanticipated election of a politically incorrect candidate, in 2016.
Persia turns away from her destiny as a satellite of the American Empire and sets upon a path to a form of governance that expresses the same relational structure as BG(il)L, but fills that relational structure with vastly different elements.
Is that surprising?
This same relational structure may be involved in a far deeper turning away, taking place over a thousand years ago. It is hard to say, but the suggestion cannot be denied. A foundational split occurs upon the death of Mohammed and its trace is found in the content-level normal context and potential in the interscope for the Iranian Republic. The content-level normal context and potential for American Big Government (il)Liberalism suggests how this historic trace may have come to be. A comparison of the two interscopes is instructive.
The associations in this commentary allows the reader to imagine a mystery, intrinsic to Mansoureh Tajik's discussion, yet invisible without the category-based nested form.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2020
November 22
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
26
Pages
PUBLISHER
Razie Mah
SELLER
Draft2Digital, LLC
SIZE
487.4
KB

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