Synthetic Judgment
Revelation and the monotheistic religions are understood here as a single field that opens reading onto shared layers and deep structures rather than confining it to creedal belonging.
What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Two Atoms
What emerges from the conjunction of the two atoms is that revelation is not treated as a subject closed off to faith, but as a fact open to historical study insofar as it is a cultural, intellectual, and linguistic phenomenon. This shift does not strip revelation of its religious status, but it repositions it within a horizon that can be analyzed and compared. Conversely, the shared structure among the monotheistic religions does not mean erasing differences; rather, it means that there is a common layer that makes it possible to see multiple formations within a single structural horizon. When the two atoms come together, a field of inquiry is formed that does not stop at affirming the existence of similar religions, but investigates how revelation itself operates within history, language, and foundational conceptions. In this way, the comparative becomes part of understanding revelation, and history becomes a means of uncovering what works beneath the surface of visible differences.
The Logic of Composition
| Atom | Its role in the composition | What it adds |
|---|---|---|
| Revelation as a subject of historical study | Moves revelation into the domain of analysis | Opens a horizon of historical and linguistic understanding |
| The shared structure among the monotheistic religions | Defines the level of deep commonalities | Makes structural comparison possible |
Argumentative Function
Expansion
Constituent Atoms
Limits of the Inference
The inference remains tied to the possibility of comparative and historical study, not to the erasure of doctrinal particularities or the merging of religions into a single formula.