Many politicians and intellectuals have authored many books on war and peace, including the book "An Introduction to the Denunciation of Sectarian Thought" by its late Lebanese thinker Hassan Hamdan, and issued by his dynamic name Mahdi Amel to try to understand the Lebanese conflict that turned into a grinding civil war.

The "Outside the Text" program (31/5/202020) continued the subject of this study, which is an attempt to answer a question: How does the Lebanese bourgeoisie view with a class ideology its view of the Palestinian issue? In response, this ideology must be drawn in its broad outlines.

As well as presenting the basic concepts that organize it in an intellectual structure, it may be coherent and may not be, according to the political necessity that governs it in securing his specific class function, rather than according to his necessity.

Conflicts and wars
Professor of Social Sciences at the Lebanese University Hassan Hamdan considered that this book came as a beginning to explain the internal Lebanese conflict, which took the nature of the civil war, and then examined the causes of the Lebanese war.

As for the professor of philosophy at Istiqlal University, Riyadh Shraim, he saw that the book is directed at denouncing sectarian thought, and not only revealing the difference of this thought, but rather advanced to the stage of undermining, demolishing, and expressing complete difference with sectarian thought.

The starting point in this book marked the beginning of the controversy that revolved around it, as the operator of his book began a collision with one of the symbols of the modern Lebanese state, Michi Sheha, who is considered one of the most important thinkers whose constitution was based on their ideas after independence.

A worker saw that a shiha from his bourgeois position established a class interests, and put the economic benefit of the ruling class in front of the Lebanese and Arab national interest, and this was later strengthened by the Lebanese bourgeoisie 's association with the colonial countries, according to Amel.