Explanation
The Qur’an is the axis of the entire book. It is treated as a divine discourse manifested in human language and requiring historical, linguistic, and critical reading. Its function in the argument is that it is not a closed text, but rather a symbolic and narrative structure and a field for the struggle over interpretations, authority, and meaning.
Referred to by
- Four assumptions governing traditional exegesis
- Arkoun calls for a scientific critical reading
- Arkoun calls for a scientific critical reading of the Qur’an
- Arkoun rejects separating the heart from reason
- Arkoun calls for redefining the marvelous and captivating
- War verbs indicating violence
- The Mother of the Book and the revealed books
- The priority of historical and anthropological study
- Abraham as a new founding construction
- Abraham combines biblical and Arab elements
- Concealing concrete data
- Projecting later concepts onto the text
- Ibn Mujahid’s reform changed the history of the text
- Reconstructing tradition historically and critically reveals the plurality of exegetical methods
- Redefining the concepts of reason and the heart
- Rereading the Qur’an historically
- Denying the historicity of the Qur’an is linked to Hanbalism
- Denying the historicity of the Qur’an is linked to the rigidity of the Hanbali position
- Doctrinal differences in the reports
- The stabilization of Qur’anic discourse
- Religious discourse shares general features
- A Meccan objection to revelation
- Legislative verses highlight the legal dimension in Orientalist reading
- Legislative verses in Orientalist reading
- Legislative verses are not the only criterion for reading
- The signs-symbols refer to transcendent truth
- The legislative verse as an example of the legal character
- The sign is associated with reflection
- Myth as a foundational concept
- Myth and Qur’anic discourse function as positive foundational expression
- Qur’anic Islam is understood as a historical-political phenomenon that reconstructed the community
- Classical Islam is formed through struggles over legitimacy and power
- Islam and politics are studied historically and critically
- Colonialism, national movements, and authoritarian regimes
- The objection treats the separation as a modern projection
- The binary structure of the Qur’anic world
- The narrative structure of the Qur’an
- The Qur’anic structure is dialogical
- Extreme structuralism neglects history
- Structuralism is useful so long as it does not isolate the text from its history
- Traditional and metaphysical interpretation froze the symbolic character of the Qur’an
- Juridical interpretation produces a particular Islam
- Early Islamic history distinguished between stages and did not reduce them
- Religious history is formed by the interweaving of the spiritual and the worldly, not by material causality alone
- Historicity requires a complex reading, not a positivist description
- The prophetic experience founded Islam as a historical-political experience
- Textual criticism raises decisive questions
- Linguistic-semiotic analysis reveals the unthought
- Analysis focuses on linguistic operation
- The social imaginary shapes societies
- Synchrony and historicity are complementary
- Arbitrary fundamentalist exegesis turns the Qur’an into an instrument of violence
- Traditional exegesis produces a material reading of myth and the unseen
- Traditional exegesis obscures the historicity of the Qur’an
- Traditional exegesis obscures the historicity of the Qur’an and turns its symbolism into realism
- Popular and historical exegesis reshaped the story of the People of the Cave
- Ancient exegesis produces a continuous interpretive narrative
- Classical exegesis narrows the field of the possible
- Inherited exegesis freezes meaning
- The distinction between imagining and imagination
- The distinction between the two events
- Distinguishing the oral from the written is a condition for understanding revelation
- The distinction between the oral and the written
- The distinction between the primordial and the historical Qur’an
- Distinguishing original meaning from theological meaning explains semantic transformations
- The distinction between Qur’anic consciousness and later theology
- Lexical frequency shows relative presence
- The first community becomes a recurring paradigm
- Encyclopedic compilation in al-Suyuti
- Combining philology and history
- Contemporary intellectual stagnation
- The need for a Qur’anic typology
- The need for multiple approaches
- Pilgrimage is a rite that reshapes the sacred and the human
- Critical modernity expands the field of thought in confronting fundamentalism and dogmatism
- The Qur’anic event is not the Islamic event
- Archaeological excavation between text and tradition
- Truth and violence
- Islamic discourse deploys the Qur’an politically
- Qur’anic discourse is a dialogical structure requiring pronominal and temporal analysis
- Qur’anic discourse was formulated primarily for action and legislation
- Qur’anic discourse nourished the protest imaginary
- Qur’anic discourse is multidimensional
- Qur’anic discourse is multi-generic
- Qur’anic discourse is distinct from later Islamic discourse
- Qur’anic discourse is a positive mythical model
- Qur’anic and prophetic discourse is powerful because it is suggestive and expansive in meaning
- Qur’anic discourse builds symbolic perception mediated by language and open to transcendent truth
- Qur’anic discourse builds a faith-based rationality through hearing, wonder, and testimony
- Qur’anic discourse is historically formed through constraints and popular and normative interpretations
- Qur’anic discourse differs from Islamic discourse
- Qur’anic discourse derives its efficacy from organizing the community and expanding symbol and meaning
- Qur’anic discourse reorganizes the community and resources and grants believers an ideal status
- Qur’anic discourse aims at action
- Secondary discourses and the transformation of symbols
- Later discourses transformed symbols into normative systems
- The Qur’anic call to reason
- Religion becomes a political force when it oscillates between free thought, ideology, and the state
- Al-Razi and Orientalism as two examples of expanding the tools of exegesis
- Refusal and unbelief sever the connection with Qur’anic discourse
- Refusal severs the connection with Qur’anic discourse
- Eschatological time is higher than worldly time
- Hearing contrasts with direct human knowledge
- The sura as a linguistic exception
- Divine sovereignty and political legitimacy
- The original context of the discourse
- Legitimacy after the Prophet’s death
- The temporal slice is a condition for synchronic study
- Testimony links history to salvation
- Historical conflict in sacred language
- Pronouns perform an organizing function
- The symbolic energy of the Qur’an
- The Qur’anic phenomenon reshaped society, politics, and consciousness
- The Qur’anic phenomenon produces central binaries
- The Qur’anic mythical world
- Marvels are called signs
- Wonder is understood as a sign calling for reflection
- The astonishing marvelous as a field for the manifestation of the divine
- The marvelous is a basic element in religious consciousness
- Religious solidarity in place of familial solidarity
- Doctrines later become certainties
- Qur’anic reason is not Aristotelian
- Reason among the Mu’tazilites is the totality of knowledge
- Violence in the Qur’an is understood within a broader scriptural discourse
- Violence in a broader discourse
- Al-Fatiha reveals the interaction of Qur’anic discourse and its transformation into a corpus
- Al-Fatiha as an entryway into the total text
- The first civil strife embodies the struggle over Qur’anic legitimacy
- Orthodox thought strips revelation of historicity
- Traditional Islamic thought and the Orientalist approach are both limited
- The Qur’an reshaped the position of the individual
- The Qur’an between Muhammad’s horizon and later historical formation
- The Qur’an is a founding event with its own symbolic energy
- The Qur’an is an integrated divine discourse that cannot be fragmented
- The Qur’an is a founding symbolic discourse whose reception changes and is subjected to restriction and deployment
- The Qur’an is an organized narrative discourse with multiple systems and another meaning
- The Qur’an within symbolic knowledge
- The Qur’an in a competitive polemical context
- The Qur’an as the word of God and a historical document
- The Qur’an as a field of comparative scientific research
- The Qur’an as a closed and open corpus
- The Qur’an is an open corpus within a closed structure
- The Qur’an is a heard text before it is read visually
- The Qur’an is a heard text before it is a read one
- The Qur’an and meaning are open to revision
- The Qur’an is an integrated unity
- The Qur’an establishes a symbolic perception that opens the field of the marvelous to the manifestation of the divine
- The Qur’an founds religious consciousness within changing fields of knowledge
- The Qur’an founds a new community and meaning through symbolic and imaginative energy
- The Qur’an establishes a special relation to perception
- The Qur’an builds communal identity through rituals and a reversal of group solidarity
- The Qur’an arouses guilt
- The Qur’an needs an epistemic framework
- The Qur’an needs a critical historical reading
- The Qur’an needs a contemporary reading
- The Qur’an contains seeds of wonder and rationality
- The Qur’an links truth to power and violence and places the sacred at the heart of conflict
- The Qur’an links society to revelation
- The Qur’an reconstructs pilgrimage within the horizon of monotheism and the new sacred
- The Qur’an reshapes society and signification through imagining and metaphor
- The Qur’an reorganizes the community and resources
- The Qur’an reformulates pilgrimage as a sacred space of equality
- The Qur’an presents itself as the word of God
- The Qur’an belongs to symbolic knowledge that produces an effective mythical world
- The Qur’an is understood through psychological and social structures and a history of protest
- The Qur’an is understood in the context of historical polemic and religious competition
- The Qur’an is read by a modern method that rejects traditional restriction
- The Qur’an is read as a nonlinear symbolic structure moving among overlapping circles
- The Qur’an is read historically and linguistically in its original moment
- The Qur’an is read as a historical unity with multiple interpretations
- Projective readings do harm to the Qur’an
- The linguistic and historical reading
- The modern historical reading
- Historical reading separates the fixed text from the moments of its reception
- Historical reading prevents projecting present standards and reveals contemporary stagnation
- Historical reading distinguishes between early political function and later religious meaning
- Historical reading and juridical reading
- Traditional and orthodox reading
- Synchronic reading against projection
- Traditional reading projects later concepts onto the Qur’an
- Modern reading reveals the Qur’an’s operation within contested social and symbolic structures
- Literal reading is insufficient for understanding the Qur’an
- Official reading entrenched literalism
- Juridical reading turns religious language into legislation and produces a particular interpretation
- Juridical reading codifies religious language
- Qur’anic reading needs a multi-framed historical and linguistic method
- Qur’anic reading needs a critique of philology and reductionism
- The Qur’anic reading of pilgrimage reveals historical and theological assumptions
- A contemporary reading of the Qur’an requires moving beyond traditional exegesis
- The comparative and structural reading of the Qur’an
- Critical reading dismantles orthodoxy and reconstructs the meaning of the Qur’an
- Critical reading resists orthodox rigidity and reopens questions
- Qur’anic stories are a representational structure
- Qur’anic stories need structural analysis
- Qur’anic stories need historical critique
- Qur’anic stories are understood as a representational structure and need a double critique
- The heart in the Qur’an is a center of knowledge open to the marvelous
- The heart is the center of psychological states among the Mu’tazilites
- The heart is an open center of knowledge
- The heart is the central organ of perception
- The heart and the marvelous determine the mode of Qur’anic perception
- Heart, reason, and hearing are integrated in understanding revelation
- The Book was linked to power and knowledge
- Sacred scripture becomes sacralized historically
- The Book completes an earlier Qur’anic project
- Symbol-words in the Qur’an
- The Qur’anic universe is a sacred spacetime
- The unthought expands because methods are insufficient
- God is the dominant semantic agent
- God and the Qur’an are understood through the historicity of concept and event
- Believers attain an ideal status
- Directness prevails over living metaphor
- The supreme speaker dominates the discourse
- Qur’anic metaphor changes signification
- Metaphor is a central element in Qur’anic discourse
- Metaphor and nonliteral reading are conditions for understanding the Qur’an
- The three fields of knowledge
- The closed official corpus
- The official corpus and oral genesis
- Later theological meanings
- Modern knowledge stalls when the intellectual weakens and schooling and politicization dominate
- Religious knowledge operates within interwoven symbolic and value systems
- Affective knowledge is the basis of religious consciousness
- The final meaning in exegesis
- The original meaning of Qur’anic words
- The usual meaning does not suit the Qur’an
- The historical fallacy in interpretation
- The Orientalist approach brings the Qur’an down into history
- The scientific approach to the Qur’an
- Qur’anic aims are not juridical aims
- The thinkable in the Qur’an
- The critical historical method
- The critical historical method reveals the limits of philological reading
- Abrogating and abrogated verses as evidence of revision
- The Qur’anic text between the stability of the corpus and the openness of signification
- The Qur’anic text remains open to multiple determinations
- The Muhammadan founding model
- The Qur’anic model endures thanks to its symbolic capacity
- Qur’anic unity in Islamic consciousness
- Revelation in Surat al-Tawba confronts violence and organizes the community
- Revelation is a Qur’an human in language but bearing superhuman layers
- Revelation guides the human being
- Islamic consciousness needs a reading that combines history, imagination, and rationalization
- Shi’i walaya presents a spiritual continuation of prophecy within the Qur’an
- The victory of the Hanbali-Ash’ari current
- The split between believers and unbelievers
- The division of addressees in Qur’anic discourse
- A program for reading Surat al-Kahf
- A critical program for understanding the Qur’an
- Founding a new sacred space
- The history of interpretation reveals the expansion of pilgrimage’s meanings and then their juridical narrowing
- Arkoun’s reading of the Qur’an is founded on the centrality of Islam as a decisive object
- Moving beyond inherited exegeses
- Renewing religious thought requires moving beyond the closure of tradition and regulating the function of the unseen
- Renewing the reading of the Qur’an needs historical, linguistic, and critical tools
- Renewing the reading of the Qur’an requires dismantling traditional exegesis and expanding the tools of independent reasoning
- Renewing the reading of the Qur’an requires dismantling inherited methods and expanding the tools of critique
- Modernizing the Qur’anic project
- Liberating religious reason passes through acknowledging the historicity of tradition and moving beyond closed sacrality
- Analyzing sacralization and desacralization
- Analysis of Qur’anic discourse reveals the formation of the community and the transfer of authority through human mediation
- Analysis of the network of pronouns
- Diverting the Qur’anic text into realism
- Transforming pagan pilgrimage into Islamic pilgrimage
- Transforming facts into eternal symbols
- Transforming daily facts into models
- The official recording of Qur’anic utterances
- The politicization of contemporary Islam
- The faltering of the rule-of-law state and civil society
- The plurality of Qur’anic readings
- The multiplicity of the meaning of the Qur’anic text
- The disparity between consumption and critical study
- Interpreting the Qur’an in its original moment
- Distinguishing power and legitimacy
- The expansion of religious populism in Europe
- Deploying the Qur’an in political manipulation
- Deploying the Qur’an leads to political manipulation
- Deploying the text in political violence
- Three stages for reading the Qur’an
- The binary of unbelievers and believers
- The political binary of believer and unbeliever
- The limits of classical Orientalism
- Semantic movement within the Qur’anic world
- The specificity of religious language
- Confusing urban and popular Islam
- Studying the Qur’an requires integrating philology and history and identifying temporal slices
- A call for modern methods for the Qur’an
- The meanings of the word wonder
- The religion of Abraham establishes a new monotheistic code
- The religion of Abraham launches a third monotheistic code
- Rejecting confinement to traditional exegeses
- Rejecting a definitive choice between historicity and non-historicity
- Rejecting a simple linear reading
- The four symbolics of the Qur’an
- The symbolism of Qur’anic discourse
- Surat al-Tawba and cosmic polemic
- Surat al-Kahf as an example of historical reading
- Surat Yusuf and Muhammad’s experience
- The validity and efficacy of Qur’anic language
- The Constitution of Medina and the view of traditional exegesis
- The difficulty of reading the modern Qur’an
- The difficulty of reading the Qur’anic wording
- The necessity of studying Muhammad’s conception and his time
- The ambiguity of the text and the work of commentaries
- The absence of contemporary Islamic thought
- The absence of the nominal term reason
- The absence of the term violence from the Qur’an
- The efficacy of the Qur’anic model
- The loss of the first oral connection
- Understanding Islam requires historical and linguistic analysis that reveals the formation of power, meaning, and guardianship
- Understanding Qur’anic discourse requires analyzing pronouns and the exceptions of the suras
- Understanding Qur’anic discourse requires preserving its plurality before reducing it to legislation
- Understanding the Qur’an requires historical and linguistic interpretation that distinguishes it from later projections
- Understanding the Qur’an requires placing it within the history of religious conflict and the construction of authority
- Understanding the Qur’an requires dismantling inherited exegeses and adopting modern scientific reading
- Understanding the Qur’an requires taking metaphor seriously
- Understanding the Qur’an requires historical critique that frees revelation from the projections of later reading
- In the Qur’an are seeds of rationality and wonderment
- In the Qur’an there is a rationality linked to wonder, not to philosophical reason
- The revisability of meaning
- Reading the Qur’an is renewed when revelation is understood as a historical symbolic discourse that frees meaning and religion from orthodoxy and politicization
- Reading the Qur’an requires a critical historicity of event, meaning, and origins
- Reading the Qur’an requires freeing its symbolism from traditional freezing
- Reading the Qur’an requires a historical-linguistic method that reveals transformations of signification
- Reading the Qur’an belongs within a critical project for renewing religious thought
- Reading revelation requires combining linguistic origin, history, and anthropology
- A historical reading of the Qur’an
- The power of Qur’anic and prophetic discourse
- The centrality of the problem of divine validity
- The responsibility of Muslim mediators
- A distance between the Qur’an and later jurisprudence
- The legitimacy of the human sciences in relation to tradition
- Ibn Rushd’s miracle is philosophical
- The vocabulary of place and time as spiritual symbols
- The concept of the marvelous and captivating needs redefinition to suit the Qur’an
- Comparing translations reveals non-equivalence
- The aims of the Qur’an are not the later juridical aims
- The threefold method of reading
- The emergence of Islam and its confrontation with modernity are read through struggles over legitimacy and mobilization
- Critique of projecting present-day standards
- Critique of contemporary projection
- Critiquing religion and Orientalism requires a sociohistorical method without prejudgments
- Critiquing modern legitimacy requires moving beyond sufficiency with sharia without abolishing the need for meaning
- Critiquing Qur’anic violence requires dismantling fundamentalist interpretation and placing the discourse in its scriptural context
- Critique of Qur’anic philology
- Critique of the fundamentalist reading of the Qur’an
- Critique of the ideologized reading of Islam
- Critique of generalizing analogy to the Qur’an
- The paradigmatic character of Qur’anic stories
- The dominance of the Islamic symbol
- The dominance of the authorized reading
- The unity of Qur’anic discourse is manifested in the integration of stories and legislation within divine speech