Argument Type: Methodology
372 pages
- The horizon of fragility and uncertainty
- The three preliminary questions
- Islam within society historically
- Ideology threatens scientific research
- The transition to writing-based societies
- Media and political simplification weakens truth
- Linguistic analysis as a theoretical way out
- Tradition is studied through linguistic and historical methods
- Literal translation fails
- Diagnosis goes beyond the visible symptoms
- Religious education needs anthropological openness
- Ritual repetition consolidates discourse
- Modernity requires clearing historical blockages
- Confusing Islamic and Islamist is an error
- Arabic is an essential language for the renewal of thought
- Unexploited traditional rationality
- Secularism is a topic not thought through enough
- Secularization needs a local path
- The human sciences resist reductionism
- An epistemological rupture is a condition for the future of Muslim societies
- A cognitive break in reading texts
- The translator needs broad specialist knowledge
- The project reconsiders the concept of institution
- The historical-anthropological methodology
- The history of religions is a required teaching subject
- The renewal of terminology is a condition for the renewal of thought
- Intervention by non-specialists harms Islamic studies
- The translation of terms changes until it stabilizes
- Deconstructing historical doctrines
- Three goals for the new study
- The necessity of studying religion scientifically
- An open secularism for studying religion
- The absence of scholarly spaces hinders debate
- Continuing ijtihad instead of imitation
- Arkoun’s critical tools
- Neglecting imagination and memory
- The Bedouins as a social category within the tribal system
- Islam and religious anthropology
- Research begins with the intolerable
- Reflective critical history
- Epistemological periodization reads systems of thought
- Double deconstruction as a method for studying the founder
- Distinguishing between ideas and the episteme
- Qur’anic discourse is analyzed linguistically and semiotically
- External studies neglect cognitive structures
- Reason has multiple uses
- Reading dismantles the ideological palace
- A historical lexicon for understanding the Qur’an
- Texts are understood historically and spatially
- Al-Shafi’i’s ordering of the sources of inference
- Deconstructing the Qur’anic mind
- The limits of reason are historical
- Studying the system of Islamic knowledge
- Foucault changed his analytical method
- Reading the Qur’an requires its historical context
- Reading the Qur’an requires an anthropological method
- Reading the Qur’an as a historical-linguistic reading
- From oral to written: a productive transformation
- Arkoun’s task was historical, not religious
- The impact of modern methods
- Keeping questions scientifically open
- Replacing etymological obsession
- Anthropology goes beyond philology
- Islam as a central example of the religious phenomenon
- Applied Islamology as a scientific method
- The institutional exception for fruitful dialogue
- Recognizing religion requires studying and teaching it
- Geertz’s exploratory research is important
- Scientific research distinguishes between faith and reason
- Epistemological renewal breaks solidarity
- Explanation cannot be reduced to a single factor
- The historical deconstruction of discourse
- Deconstruction precedes the fixing of theological systems
- Distinguishing between the oral and the written
- Humility is a necessary intellectual virtue
- The need for epistemological critique
- Free dialogue needs academic spaces
- A call for an exploratory reason
- Instrumental reason is limited
- Critical reason opens historical understanding
- The social sciences suffer from a theoretical deficit
- The social sciences are necessary for transformation
- Violence results from the absence of preparation
- Critical historical reading
- Historical reading of the religious text
- Historical unveiling as a liberating step
- Major assumptions are hard to overcome
- The thinker analyzes and infers
- Modern methods open up a scientific reading
- The historical-deconstructive method
- The progressive-regressive methodology
- Historical criticism is a condition for understanding
- Scientific critique reveals the historicity of tradition
- The new research workshop on religion
- Teaching religion in a modern way
- Translating scientific studies into Arabic
- The plurality of methods for studying the Qur’an
- The fragmentation of rationality into specializations
- Preference for modern linguistics
- Distinguishing the researcher from the thinker
- Expanding secularism to include spirit and ethics
- Studying religion requires modern methods
- The necessity of problematization and de-naturalizing the obvious
- The necessity of studying societies through their own specific data
- The exploratory postmodern reason
- The value of reason in going beyond tradition
- The project of critiquing Islamic reason
- The methods of the social sciences need to be questioned
- Critique of traditional methodologies
- Critique of objectivity in the social sciences
- The fragility of Islamic sources
- Proposed critical tools
- Excluding Islam weakens the study of religion
- The strategy of scholarly emancipation
- Linguistics
- Militant Islam is not enough for understanding
- Applied Islamology dismantles sectarian divisions
- Applied Islamology opens onto contemporary reality
- Reform needs a historical-scientific approach
- Refusing interpretation is an epistemic abdication
- Historical analysis goes beyond description
- Distinguishing between the origin and later layers
- Distinguishing between religion and the historical framework
- Historical truth and traditional narrative
- Scientific discourse and religious discourse are different
- Sharia is not merely a textual reading
- Religious reason is studied historically and socially
- Open secularization and the history of religions
- The human sciences reveal historical mechanisms
- Islamic thought opens onto the social sciences
- Philology is not an end in itself
- Philology is a necessary first stage
- A modern historical reading of sacred texts is required
- The book is addressed to the general public
- Modern linguistics separates the word from the thing
- Muslim societies are a laboratory for the social sciences
- Women need sociological study
- Religious institutes open onto the human sciences
- The historical fallacy must be avoided
- New methods are necessary for understanding Islam
- The archaeological and genealogical method
- Historical criticism precedes philosophical criticism
- Newcomers to the religious field should open tradition to the human sciences
- Revelation as a multidisciplinary entry point
- The decline of philosophy needs a multi-method explanation
- The restraint of academic language
- Historical teaching of religions is more suitable for the public sphere
- Arkoun’s methodological distinction from Orientalism
- The expansion of applied Islamology
- An epistemological revolution is a condition for human rights
- The study of religion needs new terminology
- Studying religion historically
- The study of religious reason should be historical and social, not theological
- The question of Muhammad’s intention should be approached cautiously
- The absence of modern critical sciences
- Understanding Arkoun requires the human sciences
- Understanding discourse requires epistemological critique
- Revealing the historical origin of concepts
- The method of the historian and the philosopher
- The Islam-West conflict is fueled by scholarly neglect
- Critiquing imitation and reproducing methods
- Critiquing Durkheim does not reject development
- He is influenced more by sciences and methodologies than by individuals
- Islamizing the sciences hinders modern sciences
- Introducing revelation into the human sciences
- Calling upon the human sciences
- Islam needs critical knowledge
- Reform needs reflective theology
- Reform needs historical knowledge
- Tradition needs archaeological excavation
- Deconstruction for analyzing the social imaginary
- The need for a new epistemology
- The need for an emerging new reason
- Modernity is understood sociologically
- A call for an archaeological-genealogical reading
- The programmatic character in Arkoun’s thought
- Doctrines need critical historicization
- The new reason needs material force
- An epistemological reading of history
- The critical historical approach is necessary for understanding
- Scientific comparison precedes judgments
- Access to divine speech is indirect
- Defining cognitive paradigms
- Revising knowledge about Islam
- Studying the three religions without comparison
- The necessity of an ascending emergent reason
- The multiple meanings of secularization
- The debate on religious reform is necessary and rich
- Critique of the Islamization of knowledge
- Critique of the universalist textual approach
- Tools of the contemporary researcher
- Four Orientalist trends
- Arkoun calls for a scientific critical reading
- Occasions of revelation are not the same as context
- The horizon of fragility and uncertainty
- The priority of historical and anthropological study
- Projecting later concepts onto the text
- A critical historical reconstruction of tradition
- Historians’ neglect of mental data
- The connection of religious reason to the human sciences