The author, Aaron Lynch, looked at several institutions in his book — families, politics, and religion — and in the religion section, he looked at most of the major religions. Including Islam.
What can memetics (study of memes) tell us about Islam and the trouble in the Middle East?
Memetically, Islam is a very successful memeplex (group of memes). Several embedded memes help make it so. For example:
If Muslims drift away from Mohammed's teachings, God will end the world. That makes converting others and promoting Islam a matter of survival. It also motivates Muslims, as Lynch points out, "to dissuade each other from losing faith."
It is a requirement of Islamic faith to make a public prayer five times a day. The unusual posture attracts attention, and the prayers can be heard by nearby people. This helps the religion spread. And the fact that the Muslim is repeating his prayers five times a day makes it very easy for him to stay focused on his religion. It would be almost impossible for him to forget his beliefs.
Islam different from other religions in at least one important way: It began at a time and in a place where no empire constrained its spread. In other words, if you start a religion within the Roman Empire, you're going to have certain limitations. The Romans would see any new religion — especially a militant or political religion — as a threat to its power and would make sure you stayed peaceful. A religion that preached tolerance and goodwill toward others might survive, but a violent or militant or political new religion would be quashed immediately.
But Islam had no such restriction when it began, so it could incorporate "conversion by warfare" into its memeplex, and it did. As Lynch wrote, "The faith provides for a jihad or holy war, which historically led to Islamic rule over whole societies." Once a country has been attained by war, pagans were given the choice: convert to Islam or die. If any members of the newly acquired country were Christian or Jewish, they were required to pay special taxes and become a second-class citizen, unless they wanted to convert.
This information answers a question I've had for a long time. Why are there "Muslim" countries? Do you see Buddhist countries? Hindu countries? Christian countries?
I know there are countries where these religions are in the majority, but has the religion taken over the government? No. But the way Islam was created, taking over the government is what the faithful will do. Not the extremist. Not the crazy ones. The faithful Muslims, if they follow the teachings of Mohammad, will take over the government, establish the religion as the national religion, and rule using Islamic law. These memes make Islam unique among religions, and obviously causes problems for non-Muslims.
memes for war
According to the Koran, if you die while fighting for Islam, you are guaranteed eternal paradise. This meme not only encourages bravery in battle, but it encourages continual warfare against non-Muslim nations. You cannot die fighting for Islam if there is no fighting going on.
This answers another question I've had for a long time: Why can't the people in the Middle East just work out their differences and get on with their lives? My question assumes warfare is not desirable. I'm assuming war is a temporary break in an otherwise progressive, peaceful, productive life. But that is an assumption not shared by the writer of the Koran.
So continual warfare is part of the teachings of Islam.
And another meme has been added to reduce the costs of war. When men die, the ratio of women to men changes, of course, leaving widows childless or unable to take care of the children they already have. But the Koran says each man can marry up to four wives and encourages them to marry widows.
This makes the men more at ease with going to war (knowing their families will not be destitute), and makes sure warfare doesn't reduce the numbers in the next generation of warriors. In fact, even with lots of warfare and death, the numbers in the next generation can actually increase.
This is all very interesting in a detached, academic sort of way, but as you can easily surmise, this has profound implications.
How then, should the rest of the world interact with Muslim countries? The religion has slowly spread and taken over countries. Should they be stopped? How can you stop such a thing?
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