Argument Type: Historical
420 pages
- Arkoun within the lineage of Enlightenment thinkers
- The Arab crisis concerns entering the age
- Early Islam was an explosive revolution
- Later Islam was submission to authority
- Colonialism reshaped local politics
- Decline is linked to the suspension of ijtihad
- Modern revolutions reorganize legitimacy
- The European secular revolution overthrew clerical legitimacy
- Modernity emerged historically in Europe
- Islamic discourse is a reaction to modernity
- The nation-state feeds this vision
- Religious authority legitimates rule
- The modern phenomenon is not an Islamic exception
- The return to religion is a modern phenomenon
- Historical differences explain the weakness of tolerance
- French thought began to take Islam into account
- Social repression generates explosion
- Arab societies are on the threshold of modernity
- The universal Islamic model
- Political transformations reproduced misunderstanding
- Religiosity is shaped by environment and history
- Rejecting essential, fixed particularity
- Misunderstanding between Islam and the West
- Weak tolerance is linked to delayed modernity
- Factors that feed totalizing movements
- The concepts of the individual and the citizen are linked to European revolutions
- The critique of modernity is difficult to receive in Arab contexts
- The Sword Verse is linked to balances of power
- The impact of colonialism and war
- The restoration of slavery after the French Revolution
- The historical episteme
- Islam experienced an early intellectual dynamism
- Critical history revises the Renaissance
- Civilizational mummification is linked to a later phase
- The turn toward Ibn Miskawayh as a subject
- Early Sufism was freer and less codified
- Education was a cognitive transformation, not a rupture
- Qur’anic exegesis declined after the thirteenth century
- Qur’anic exegesis was creative in earlier times
- The French Revolution between admiration and revulsion
- Fear of violating taboos
- Kabyle collective memory
- Direct recourse to the Qur’an declines in practice
- The sura announces a new law
- The new legitimacy after the Prophet’s death
- Sufism is taught orally
- Traditional scholars are mediators and guardians
- The sciences and reason are linked to a later development
- Al-Ghazali adheres closely to Qur’anic knowledge
- Early jurisprudence was a cover for a tribal reality
- The founder becomes a symbol through memory
- What continues later is repetition
- Arkoun’s Kabyle upbringing
- Revelation responds to the needs of the community
- The influence of the French milieu on his formation
- The meaning of Islam transformed historically
- The formation of transcendent time
- The concept of God formed historically
- The Qur’an’s multiple lives
- The role of childbirth in women’s status
- The village’s positive responses
- Surat al-Tawba as a moment of historical transition
- Surat al-Tawba is linked to the historical context
- The first phase of openness
- The phase of the closure of the schools of law
- Mecca before Islam
- Women of the family as social symbols
- The lack of artistic creativity in Islamic civilization
- Maliki dominance closes off ijtihad
- The contemporary crisis of meaning
- Colonial names fade after independence
- The historical closure of foundational texts
- The persistence of conflict in Christian Europe
- The persistence of inherited belief has multiple causes
- Continuity of texts and rupture in thought
- Islam takes shape locally
- Faith, text, and knowledge have a historicity
- Ijtihad requires independence from the caliphs
- Rapid importation leads back to fundamentalism
- Islamic belief formed historically
- Grounding is historical and non-final
- History is a hierarchy of intertwined civilizations
- Historical interweaving, not simple succession
- Local religiosity precedes the institution
- Sacralization has historically restrained violence
- Modernity produced major achievements
- European modernity grew gradually
- Western modernity is the fruit of multiple transformations
- Modernity is a modern European product
- Religious orality is strong in the Maghreb
- Orality and writing raise questions of tradition
- The Islamic phenomenon appropriates the Qur’an
- The new reason learns from two historical failures
- Emergent reason recognizes historical limits
- Secularization differs from country to country
- Jurisprudence and Sharia formed historically
- The Qur’an is a historical and linguistic event
- The Qur’an is a multi-stage historical text
- Historical reading reveals the historicity of texts
- The nineteenth century inherited traditional structures
- Rupture makes modernity
- The closed official text resulted from dogmatic formation
- Historical criticism arose in European conflicts
- The closure of medieval Islamic thought
- The separation of scientific reason from theology
- The delayed Qur’anic encyclopedia
- The historicity of faith
- The historicity of basic Islamic concepts
- The retreat of philosophy after the Seljuk rise
- The formation of orthodoxy
- Doctrines and jurisprudence formed later
- The text formed through a long process of recording
- The differentiation of historical stages
- Communities of the Qur’an are historically built with ethical functions
- The peak of confrontation in medieval Islam
- The rejection of philosophy weakened Arab-Islamic thought
- The conflict of fundamentalisms has a long history
- Kalam did not become a complete theology
- Understanding the formation of the Qur’an in its context
- The phase of repetition and scholasticism after the thirteenth century
- The historical dominance of religious reason in Europe
- The dominance of religious reason in the Islamic world
- Atatürk is a central example of secularization
- Systems of knowledge change historically
- Reshaping Turkish symbolic systems
- Islamic philosophy benefited from Aristotle and Plato
- The major orthodoxies in Islam
- The historical origins of human rights exist
- Popular Islam acknowledges the authority of saints in intercession and mediation
- “Correct Islam” formed later through conflicts and divisions
- The Medinan experience and the founding of the model
- Codification came in the time of Uthman
- Sunni, Shi’i, and Kharijite conceptions crystallized in the third Islamic century
- French education broadened his cognitive horizon
- Sacralization changes historically
- Secular revolutions reveal the hidden function of sacralization
- Jihad is linked to the first Medina
- Official discourse stands alongside local discourse
- Qur’anic discourse transcends history
- The Kharijites raise the slogan “No judgment but God’s”
- The Umayyad state strengthened writing and orthodoxy
- The imperial state and the confinement of official Islam
- Contemporary spiritualities rest on traditional structures
- The Sunna is a second foundational source
- Sunnis recognize the political fait accompli
- Political sovereignty is linked to an early spiritual crisis
- Sharia is the outcome of a historical formation
- Sufism is linked to social and political structures
- Violence and the social crisis
- The Mediterranean space is a historical cultural space
- The French rupture and secularization
- Writing is the basis of archive and authority
- Historical legitimacy remained in the hands of armed force
- Problems require long-term historical analysis
- Morocco possesses continuous political legitimacy
- The historical method
- Beginning change from contemporary history
- The broad history of thought
- The transformation of the umma through caliphs and jurists
- The transformation of the cultural arena since the nineteenth century
- The transformation of the concept of God is historical
- The retreat of ijtihad and the rise of imitation
- The formation of jurisprudence in the first centuries
- The stability of Islam in Semitic soil
- Human rights are a modern idea
- Surat al-Tawba defines the legal categories
- The rise of Sufism is linked to the age of decline
- A weak historical sense feeds Islamic attraction
- The repression of religious and political oppositions
- The duration of the Qur’anic experience
- Resistance to philosophical metaphysics
- The emergence of the umma from weakness to strength
- His critique of Orientalism stems from a colonial experience
- Regimes of truth are built historically
- Augustine is a reference for understanding religious transformation
- Ibn Abd al-Wahhab within a limited religious horizon
- The persistence of attachment to traditional religions
- The persistence of debate between reason and revelation
- Arab crises are linked to historical blockages
- Fundamentalism was linked to Arabization
- Contemporary Islam is historically contextual
- Historicity is absent from medieval thought
- The Algerian experience in the formation of the project
- Tribal solidarity compensated for women’s deprivation
- Western modernity separated ethics from economics
- Modernity did not put an end to religion
- Kalam discourse precedes faith
- The conflict exceeds colonialism and September
- Traditional Islamic thought is captive to jurisprudence and politics
- The Qur’an is the starting point of the project
- The Qur’an is a model for the transformation into a closed text
- The social imaginary makes history
- The marabouts as socio-religious mediation
- Maraboutism between center and margin
- The gulf between Islam and the West widened
- Judaism links the Law with the presence of God
- The spread of Arabization brought Kabyles closer to the texts
- The historicity of reading women’s status
- Early Islam is the reference for the value system
- The jurists of the past were more serious