Makes complete sense to me. You have people dedicating a significant chunk of their life to study the religion and here you are, trying to sell them on tech. Makes sense that they're uninterested by default.
The opposite needs to be done imo. People on here who are interested in decentralization, especially those who can build tech should be pushed to study the Islamic sciences to a scholarly level. The next step is to make lectures and educational content, posting on both YouTube and nostr and gaining a normie following. This should be broad based content on all types of Islamic questions. Build up a following and track level that people can't ignore, so that when they finally do their lecture on riba money, resisting haram laws etc. it's not coming from "anonymous internet rando".
Login to reply
Replies (2)
I'm actually become more of the opinion that scholars are mostly becoming luddites which is of no benefit to their scholarship. There has been very little advsncement in fiqh over the last century and perhaps the greatest example of the failure of muslim scholars is the litmus test that is Gaza.
All that said, there is a general lack of fundamental Islamic knowledge, fard ayn. This does need to be taught is owned at the community level. Curious how that best translates into digital communities. 🤔
There is a general trend that sharia studies have been devalued and are only a last resort for people who do not have the aptitude to get into STEM. Azhar entrance exam scores reflect this, need 90+ for STEM and 55+ for sharia... and its a positive feedback loop.