Following the daily news flow and people’s debates about it, and being fed up with the series of doctrinal deviations, jurisprudential deviations and intellectual comments that proliferate on social networks, and being drawn into the pursuit of intellectual squabbles and petty issues, and continuing to stare in anticipation of their mutual quarrels and annoyances, and the unconscious rotation in such a vortex, especially with the constant presence of smart phones, leads one to gradually separate from the spirit of work, implementation and production, and to feel that watching and commenting is the natural state in which the seeker of knowledge and reformer lives.
The task of addressing this issue is complex. We need scientific, intellectual and advocacy figures who have a detailed, documented position on the problem of excessive preoccupation with following events, such that it can be considered an “intellectual model.” At the same time, we lack the ability to experience some of these people’s experiences in order to invest it in maintaining the motivational maladies that are born from being absorbed in current events.
In this book, we will attempt to review the governing boundaries of this study. We will then examine the status of current events in the view of Muslim scholars. We will then move on to network events, recent studies on them, and the student's relationship with them. As for political events, we will attempt to understand them by examining serious and productive scientific and intellectual models that have taken a stance on this issue.