This section brings together the clusters extracted from the book.
- Islamic history moved from creative plurality to doctrinal and epistemic closure
- Civilizational stagnation turns religion and knowledge into guardianship and repetition
- Modernity and universality reveal the limits of reason, violence, and legitimacy
- Religion is symbolically formed through memory, time, mythologization, and meaning
- Jurisprudence and power reshape religion within the struggle over legitimacy
- The Qur’an and revelation are read within language, context, and historical conflict
- The Arkounian method deconstructs the episteme and goes beyond superficial description
- Arkoun’s intermediary position took shape through a multi-layered rural, educational, and colonial biography
- Arkoun’s project reveals the humanity of Islam through a dual, non-abolitionist critique