Formulation of the claim

The relationship between Islam and politics is studied historically and critically.

Explanation

This claim means that understanding the link between Islam and politics does not stop at describing it in its outward form, but instead seeks to trace it through history and to explore its formation and transformations. Within this horizon, critical inquiry becomes a tool for distinguishing what is historical in this relationship from what is presented as fixed or self-evident.

This is consistent with Arkoun’s method of approaching Islamic phenomena as subjects of historical, anthropological, and critical study, rather than as a mere field of declarative reception. The relationship between religion and politics here is understood within a long process of formation, use, and interpretation.

Its place in the book’s argument

This atom belongs to Arkoun’s effort to move the study of Islam from the level of general judgments to the level of historical-critical analysis. It aligns with his related theses that stress the need to question the concepts and representations that have accumulated around Islam throughout history, rather than settling for ready-made explanatory formulas.

Limits of the claim

This atom does not mean reducing Islam to politics, nor does it make historical criticism a substitute for all other forms of understanding; rather, it defines an angle from which to read the relationship between them. It also does not deny the existence of religious or spiritual dimensions, but instead limits its subject to this relationship as it is studied within history.

Brief evidence passage

Most of these researchers, Orientalists in French and Western universities in general, are content with descriptive and narrative study of facts, events, and Islamic texts, and they do not undertake an archaeological excavation to uncover the depths hidden behind the discourses of social actors, that is, Muslims themselves. It is well known that these Islamic discourses reinforce the defeat of reason within its long Islamic trajectory, and thus the new functions of politically militant Islamist movements are endorsed without any general inventory or general survey being carried out to determine the historical repercussions of all these variables. As for political leaders, we note that Islam, which has become merely fundamentalism, is nothing but an ideological pillar or fertile fuel, according to Nag’s term