I'm not Muslim but I'm a religious person (I follow a Brazilian-African religious tradition called Umbanda) so I think I can try to respectfully chime in with my perspective.
For me personally it all boils down to recognizing that different spheres of your experience can be governed by different processes, with different rules.
When it comes to material interaction with the sensible world, I'm thoroughly and 100% materialistic. I don't attribute metaphysical explanations to material processes.
And honestly I think presuming that religion necessarily means attributing metaphysical explanations to stuff is a very stubborn miscomprehension of how religions other than Christianity works. Most religions are really not very interested in building systems of reasoning about the world and doctrinal orthodoxy like European Christianity is.
They are much more focused on ritual, on human connection, on sociality, and experience of the divine. And those things aren't at all incompatible with a thoroughly materialistic view of how the sensible world works.
EDIT:
Sorry for editing, but I think my answer wasn't complete enough.
I think looking at religion as a system of beliefs is a fundamental eurocentric misunderstanding of those things we call religion that aren't western european Christianity. Specially protestant Christianity, which is a very specific practice, extremely focused on belief, and rationalistic systems of thought.
Most of the things we call religions: eastern varieties of Christianity, Buddhism, a lot of branches of Islam, Judaism, etc, etc are decidedly not about belief, but about practice, sociality and experience.
Think like this: what you have to do to be a good protestant christian? You have to have specific beliefs about who Jesus was, what he did, the significance of his actions, what is sin, what is salvation, what is grace, etc, etc, etc. It's a whole system of thought.
What do you have to do to be a good Muslim? Practice the tenets of Islam. Practice the pillars. It's not a person who adheres to a long list of beliefs. As a system of belief it can be summarized in a single phrase: there's only one God and a specific person is a prophet of this god. That's it. The rest is about practice, ritual, sociality and experience.
That is not incompatible with a thoroughly materialistic view of how society organizes, of the processes that create exploitation in capitalism, etc, etc.
EDIT 2:
That's the last edit I promise.
Just a quick comment that there are those who argue that the word "religion" is a bad category. That lumping together all those different human experiences as instances of the same phenomenon is kind of unhelpful. Precisely because it necessarily draws an eurocentric comparison with Christianity which is prone to cause misunderstanding of those phenomena.
This makes a lot of sense to me. The sterile belief based system of Christianity, followed by the spiritually dead and toxic atheism, played a big part in me becoming a bad person. When you put religion the way you just did, then I think that should be promoted to drive out the soulless atheism so common in western left wing circles.
swiftessay:
undefined> They are much more focused on ritual, on human connection, on sociality, and experience of the divine. And those things aren’t at all incompatible with a thoroughly materialistic view of how the sensible world works.
Human connection, sociality (I'd say you mean socialization) are very much material, and so is behavior, communication, etc. The "experience of the divine" is beyond those, and you seem to want to mix things in order to connect them. How does one who is not a metaphysical believer exeperience the divine? If there is such divine how does it relate and affect our material existence?
I know it is very mechanistic as is our understanding of the material world though science. Science, begins with certain axioms, assumptions if you will, and builds up on those in a rational way for which you can backtrack back to the assumptions at any point you are in doubt. Just to see if you have made an error somewhere in the "line" of thought and end up with incorrect conclusions.
With metaphysical thought of any religion, eastern western, northern, southern, there is no such sequence, things are all over the place and not necesseraly need a connection.
The Christian religion you attribute to European origin, may have spread through Europe initially, but it is just a fork of a middle eastern religion, Judaism in specific. So is islam, an non-European religion, also a fork of Judaism, Historically and archaeologically it is hard to separate Judaism from the Greek times and language, in which rationalism and materialism is born, and on top of this philosophical base science and methodology. The religious claims may be going back thousands of years but the scripts in their earliest found and mentioned references data back to Hellenistic times. Jesus comes 7 centuries after Heraclitus wrote, whose writings were available and are referenced by others in the library of Alexandria which christian clergy says were destroyed.
To be a scientist or attempt to be scientific and serve metaphysical beliefs at the same time, if nothing else, to me it indicates mental contradiction and discomfort. If the metaphysical can not have any relation to anything physical/natural/material process or condition, why bother with it? It doesn't belong in this universe and in this physical life and presence. Why would illusion be necessary to a someone in search for material reality, in order to know what to do to change it, or improve it? It can only be an obstacle.
Is it because some religion serve as providing a social contract under which people are expected to behave against each other? We can do this by other agreements, social, political, legal. To maintain a social contract in fear of the metaphysical consequence is just a way to terrorize and manage humans to control them, with ultimate political and economic benefits of doing so.
I'm not Muslim but I'm a religious person (I follow a Brazilian-African religious tradition called Umbanda) so I think I can try to respectfully chime in with my perspective.
For me personally it all boils down to recognizing that different spheres of your experience can be governed by different processes, with different rules.
When it comes to material interaction with the sensible world, I'm thoroughly and 100% materialistic. I don't attribute metaphysical explanations to material processes.
And honestly I think presuming that religion necessarily means attributing metaphysical explanations to stuff is a very stubborn miscomprehension of how religions other than Christianity works. Most religions are really not very interested in building systems of reasoning about the world and doctrinal orthodoxy like European Christianity is.
They are much more focused on ritual, on human connection, on sociality, and experience of the divine. And those things aren't at all incompatible with a thoroughly materialistic view of how the sensible world works.
EDIT:
Sorry for editing, but I think my answer wasn't complete enough.
I think looking at religion as a system of beliefs is a fundamental eurocentric misunderstanding of those things we call religion that aren't western european Christianity. Specially protestant Christianity, which is a very specific practice, extremely focused on belief, and rationalistic systems of thought.
Most of the things we call religions: eastern varieties of Christianity, Buddhism, a lot of branches of Islam, Judaism, etc, etc are decidedly not about belief, but about practice, sociality and experience.
Think like this: what you have to do to be a good protestant christian? You have to have specific beliefs about who Jesus was, what he did, the significance of his actions, what is sin, what is salvation, what is grace, etc, etc, etc. It's a whole system of thought.
What do you have to do to be a good Muslim? Practice the tenets of Islam. Practice the pillars. It's not a person who adheres to a long list of beliefs. As a system of belief it can be summarized in a single phrase: there's only one God and a specific person is a prophet of this god. That's it. The rest is about practice, ritual, sociality and experience.
That is not incompatible with a thoroughly materialistic view of how society organizes, of the processes that create exploitation in capitalism, etc, etc.
EDIT 2:
That's the last edit I promise.
Just a quick comment that there are those who argue that the word "religion" is a bad category. That lumping together all those different human experiences as instances of the same phenomenon is kind of unhelpful. Precisely because it necessarily draws an eurocentric comparison with Christianity which is prone to cause misunderstanding of those phenomena.
This makes a lot of sense to me. The sterile belief based system of Christianity, followed by the spiritually dead and toxic atheism, played a big part in me becoming a bad person. When you put religion the way you just did, then I think that should be promoted to drive out the soulless atheism so common in western left wing circles.
swiftessay: undefined> They are much more focused on ritual, on human connection, on sociality, and experience of the divine. And those things aren’t at all incompatible with a thoroughly materialistic view of how the sensible world works.
Human connection, sociality (I'd say you mean socialization) are very much material, and so is behavior, communication, etc. The "experience of the divine" is beyond those, and you seem to want to mix things in order to connect them. How does one who is not a metaphysical believer exeperience the divine? If there is such divine how does it relate and affect our material existence?
I know it is very mechanistic as is our understanding of the material world though science. Science, begins with certain axioms, assumptions if you will, and builds up on those in a rational way for which you can backtrack back to the assumptions at any point you are in doubt. Just to see if you have made an error somewhere in the "line" of thought and end up with incorrect conclusions.
With metaphysical thought of any religion, eastern western, northern, southern, there is no such sequence, things are all over the place and not necesseraly need a connection.
The Christian religion you attribute to European origin, may have spread through Europe initially, but it is just a fork of a middle eastern religion, Judaism in specific. So is islam, an non-European religion, also a fork of Judaism, Historically and archaeologically it is hard to separate Judaism from the Greek times and language, in which rationalism and materialism is born, and on top of this philosophical base science and methodology. The religious claims may be going back thousands of years but the scripts in their earliest found and mentioned references data back to Hellenistic times. Jesus comes 7 centuries after Heraclitus wrote, whose writings were available and are referenced by others in the library of Alexandria which christian clergy says were destroyed.
To be a scientist or attempt to be scientific and serve metaphysical beliefs at the same time, if nothing else, to me it indicates mental contradiction and discomfort. If the metaphysical can not have any relation to anything physical/natural/material process or condition, why bother with it? It doesn't belong in this universe and in this physical life and presence. Why would illusion be necessary to a someone in search for material reality, in order to know what to do to change it, or improve it? It can only be an obstacle.
Is it because some religion serve as providing a social contract under which people are expected to behave against each other? We can do this by other agreements, social, political, legal. To maintain a social contract in fear of the metaphysical consequence is just a way to terrorize and manage humans to control them, with ultimate political and economic benefits of doing so.