Formulation of the Claim

The codex is a closed official corpus.

Explanation

the Qur’an is not presented here as merely a set of scattered texts, but as a form that was officially stabilized in a final shape. This means that it became a regulated reference to which nothing is added and from which nothing is subtracted after the completion of its inscription.

This description draws attention to the status of the text after the initial stage of reception, when it enters a system of collection and stabilization that distinguishes it from its earlier stages. In Arkoun’s thought, the importance of this formulation lies in its indication that the text was transformed into an authorized corpus, not into material open to further completion.

Its Place in the Book’s Argument

This atom serves a line of argument that distinguishes between what became officially stabilized in the text and the earlier forms of circulation and inscription. It is connected to the book’s argument when it discusses the Qur’an in relation to the history of its formation, rather than as a datum isolated from the processes of stabilization that accompanied its emergence.

Limits of the Claim

This atom should not be understood as a complete historical account of the process of collection, nor as a description of all the earlier stages of transmission. It says no more than that the text is fixed in its authorized form.

Brief Evidence Passage

The codex is presented here as a closed official corpus, not as scattered texts. It is a text that stabilized in a final form and became a regulated reference to which nothing is added and from which nothing is subtracted after the completion of its inscription. This draws attention to its status as both collected and closed at once.

the Qur’an