Gabriella,
No it isn't because the point was that both require interpretation.
Yes it is, sometimes catastrophically so because when some people (though not it seems you) think they know what a god wants (
really know, untroubled by the doubts that the limits of interpretation would bring) then they will act on it. And sometimes what this god wants it seems is flying aeroplanes into buildings.
Now compare that with secular rules and instructions.
Assertion dismissed. How do you understand something without interpreting it?
It’s a pretty arid discussion and ultimately everything has to be “interpreted” in the sense that, say, “2+2=4” has to be read and understood – ie, “interpreted” – at least to have meaning. I was merely suggesting that ambiguity increases the need for interpretation and vice versa. Why then would a god not make his rules as unambiguously written as possible so as to minimise the risk of misinterpretation?
The point of it is to interpret it.
That’s not the point at all. You can interpret from here to doomsday if you like, but still all you’d have is whatever your ability to interpret gives you. Even if there is a certain meaning at the end of that rainbow, it would still be pointless in the absence of a means of knowing you’d ever found it.
That’s the point.
Until you come up with a method of understanding something and deciding how to apply it to your individual situation without interpretation, we don't have a choice but to use interpretation. Those of us who believe that there is a divine message find it useful to think that there is some form of communication to help us base our interpretations on.
That’s nice for you, but how does thinking that help you “base your interpretation” any more than a non-divinely authored text would. In other words, what relevance does it have?
Yes. No, not that unusual. I don't know any Muslims who practise everything.
That wasn’t the question. I was asking you whether you’d be content to behave one way even though your interpretation told you that Allah wanted you to behave a different way.
Yup. So do lots of Muslims. Religious content helps - as I have explained before the belief in God bit changes your outlook and choices. E.g. I would not pray or fast for Ramadan or not drink alcohol without the religious element.
Why not? If on the one hand you think it’s just a useful self help book that causes you to think on a cost/benefit basis about issues like going to the gym on women only day, why does fasting and teetotalism fall outside of that paradigm in some way? What does the belief in god change?