Clusters gather closely related claim atoms into a single argument or one semantic line, so that small details do not remain scattered across separate pages.
By book
- Where Is Contemporary Islamic Thought?: 6 pages
- The Human Formation of Islam: 9 pages
- Fundamentalist Thought and the Impossibility of Grounding: 12 pages
- Islamic Thought: Critique and Ijtihad: 6 pages
- When Islam Awakens: 8 pages
- Readings in the Qur’an: 39 pages
- Battles for Humanism in Islamic Contexts: 12 pages
- From Manhattan to Baghdad: 6 pages
- Towards a Comparative History of the Monotheistic Religions: 12 pages
Its place in the atlas
This layer is read together with the atlas map and reading paths, because it does not work on its own. Every page here returns to a book and connects to a broader concept, path, or theme.