Synthetic Judgment

The French Revolution is formed here as a symbol that shifts from an object of admiration to a field of critique, and from a sign of liberation to a test of the limits of political consciousness itself.

What Appears from the Conjunction of the Atoms

Together, the atoms show the shift in Arkoun’s view from celebrating the Revolution to reassessing it when its contradictions opened up before him. The initial admiration was not the end of judgment, but its beginning, because subsequent historical experience reordered the meaning assigned to the event. Colonial education and the justificatory character of French school history also explain one aspect of how the first view was formed, since they place the Revolution within a ready-made narrative more than within a critical historical examination. The issue, therefore, is not an emotional fluctuation, but a change in the conditions for reading major symbols. Here the Revolution becomes a mirror in which the movement of consciousness from acceptance to reassessment is reflected.

Logic of Composition

AtomRole in the CompositionWhat It Adds
The French Revolution between Admiration and DisgustShows the shift in positionMoves the Revolution from admiration to critical aversion
Colonial Education Obscured Historical UnderstandingExplains the formation of the first visionReveals the effect of the educational framework in obscuring history
French School History Was JustificatoryReveals the function of the school narrativeShows how history turns into justification

Argumentative Function

Transference

Included Atoms

Limits of the Conclusion

This composition does not make the French Revolution the sole model for understanding politics; rather, it makes it an example of the mechanism by which major symbols are reassessed.