This is part of a section on a pamphlet I'm working on. Tell me how you guys like this sample.
Does the Quran seek to explain everything that encompasses life? In other words, does it seek to provide the Muslim a "life-view" of all things, like Kuyper would suggest life-views do? In the synopsis on the back of Pigthall's translation, we are told that the Quran gives the Muslim a comprehensive view of all things, namely, sociology, ethics and economics. Philosophical categories have been extrapolated from these three that would suggest all areas of life, viz., metaphysics, ethics, epistemology, and by inference, logic. A spirit of intellectual honesty would render the infidel without recourse of Muslim sentiment an unbeliever. This denial of Islam, under historical scrutiny, will not necessarily lead one to a particular view of faith since by its very nature is a negative critique; that is, it does not set forth to establish a positive view of faith, like Christianity or Judaism. (For more on negative and positive proof, refer to the end of this pamphlet for a more detailed definition.) Such a critique would even render an atheist within his or her rights a harsh denial of all Islamic claims, since by its very nature is a negative critique of Islam.