Since God is an impossibility and cannot exists as real, the inherent evil ethos reflect the active evil tendencies of the authors[s]. Such an evil ethos is embedded within the Quran and is supposedly commanded to be immutable, thus there is no way the Quran can be reform in any way.Burning ghost wrote: ↑January 20th, 2018, 2:44 am I am very curious if you could frame much of the Koran's passages in Buddhist terms (or simply in terms more readily accessible to our world today)? That may well be an interesting project! If it needs reforming how about showing us how. I think that would be a very interesting project AND one which I would be very much interested in helping you with if you were so inclined?
Reformation of the religion cannot be done at present, but towards the future, believers should be weaned off from that evil laden holy texts and diverted to adopt beliefs and practices that are fool proofs without any evil laden elements.
Btw, I am not recommending Buddhism [even when I have high regards for it] as a religion [given any religion will have its negatives] in the future. Rather humanity can adopt the critical and useful elements from Buddhism and combine it with other positive elements from other beliefs and knowledge and repackage it as a generic and universal approach for all to deal with the same existential angst.