Formulation of the claim

A clear humanist rationality flourished in the Arab-Islamic tradition, but it remained dependent on a historical and epistemic openness that was not always available.

Why do these elements belong together?

These elements are connected because they sketch a single picture of the presence of human rationality in the Arab-Islamic tradition. Some establish the existence of this presence and its flourishing in specific historical moments, while others show that this flourishing was not a fixed trait, but was tied to particular cultural, political, and epistemic conditions. Rationality here is therefore not read as a stable essence, but as a historical possibility that emerged when its conditions became open.

These elements also complement one another in showing the relationship between flourishing and limits. Rationality flourishes when the space for philosophy, cultural exchange, and political and juristic openness expands, and weakens when orthodoxy tightens or epistemic conditions close. Likewise, Arabness, in this context, appears as an open culture rather than ethnic chauvinism, which adds a cultural dimension to this rational possibility.

The collection’s location in the book

This page comes within the book Toward a Comparative History of Monotheistic Religions, where Arkoun traces the presence of rationality in the Arab-Islamic tradition and shows that it appeared in specific moments tied to cultural, political, and epistemic conditions, then receded when those conditions closed. This page therefore gathers the elements that explain the flourishing of this rationality and the limits of its continuity within a broader history of monotheism and difference.

Collection elements

Brief testimony

Conclusion

These elements converge on the view that human rationality flourished in the Arab-Islamic tradition when conditions of openness were available, and then remained limited when those conditions narrowed.