Formulation of the Claim

Arkoun distinguishes between imagination and the imaginary, and he gives imagination a dynamically historical meaning.

Explanation

Arkoun does not use these two terms as synonyms. For him, imagination is linked to the movement of meaning within history, and to the capacity to produce images and symbols that change as contexts change.

The imaginary, by contrast, points to another domain that is less directly connected to this historical dimension. The distinction between them therefore becomes part of the discipline of reading, not merely a linguistic difference.

Its Place in the Book’s Argument

This atom belongs to Arkoun’s effort to dismantle inherited concepts and rearrange them within a historical analysis of religious and cultural discourse. The distinction between imagination and the imaginary is consistent with his concern for the limits of language, and for the way mental images are formed within communities over time.

Limits of the Claim

This atom should not be taken as a definitive, all-encompassing definition in Arkoun, nor as a separate lexical distinction detached from the rest of his conceptual tools. It points to a functional difference within a specific context more than it offers a fixed classification for all uses of the two words.

Brief Evidence Passage

Here I would like to pause a little over this distinction, because the point is not simply the use of two synonymous terms. For Arkoun, imagination is connected to the historical movement of meaning and to the community’s ability to produce its images and symbols. The imaginary, however, refers to another domain that does not carry the same weight in shaping history.