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Khalil evaluates the discourse of gratitude in positive psychology through the Sufi understanding of divine benefaction and gratitude (shukr). Building on the work of Andalusian scholar Ibn ‘Arabi, Khalil disputes the uncritical account of gratitude as a universal good. Rather, if exercised for the wrong reasons, or towards the wrong benefactors, gratitude can become a vice.
Nguyen explores how the Qur’ānic understanding of gratitude to God spills out into other relationships, so that all ethics is founded on the response to divine benefaction: as righteous deeds are incomplete without gratitude to God, gratitude to God is incomplete without righteous deeds.
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