This section collects the structure extracted from the book.
- The Sword Verse organizes the status of opponents within the logic of force and jizya
- Arkoun builds his project from a position between Islam and the West
- Arkoun rejects superficial reading and proposes a historical critical method
- Arkoun reveals the diversity of local religiosity instead of the homogeneous image
- The episteme guides the visible systems of ideas
- Qur’anic Islam is spiritual submission, but its historical meaning shifted toward a combative identity
- Early Islam knew intellectual vitality, then stagnation set in
- The media stifles critical voices
- For Arkoun, the human being is understood through spirit and history together
- Faith is a dynamic inner experience
- The initial openness was later closed off by the doctrinal schools
- The family and village environment formed a social and moral sensibility
- Intellectual freeze persists when power dominates the religious and cultural sphere
- Epistemological periodization reveals cognitive structures rather than external narrative
- Research backwardness is linked to historical ruptures and cultural choices
- Spiritual Sufism and critical reason confront oral transmission
- Education did not sever Arkoun’s ties to his village roots
- Qur’anic exegesis flourished, then declined into repetition
- The Enlightenment did not end violence; it exposed its historical limits
- For Arkoun, the French Revolution became an example of the transformation of political consciousness
- For Arkoun, modernity is an epistemic criterion, not merely temporal contemporaneity
- In Arkoun’s view, Islamic civilization suffers from technical and institutional deficiencies
- Juristic discourse appears coercive
- The religious state does not solve the crisis of legitimacy
- Power historically nationalizes religion
- Sharia is understood historically, whereas confusion turns into human sanctification
- Village childhood generated a comparative religious sensibility
- Reason is historical, and its limits reveal the need for a broader alternative
- Reason and the Qur’an acquire their meanings through context, not abstraction
- The scholars stand between preservation and the construction of faith
- The Qur’an carries a political dimension
- The Qur’an is read in a historical-linguistic way
- The Qur’anic narratives have semantic coherence
- Universality is an open project nourished by historical reform
- The French intellectual climate contributed to shaping Arkoun’s intellectual tools
- The historical-critical method is not sufficient
- The text was transformed into closed sanctification
- Modern criticism is a condition for overcoming the setbacks of late Islamic thought
- Wahhabism froze Hanbali doctrine
- The discontinuity of exegesis reveals a broader rupture in thought
- After the Prophet’s death, the problem of interpretation becomes central
- Studying the Qur’an and the early Islamic sciences requires a historically grounded episteme
- The clergy guard belief, not living faith
- Surat al-Tawba is a text that establishes a new legitimacy within the context of covenant and conflict
- The imposition of a monolithic education contributed to the impoverishment of the Algerian personality
- Arkoun’s project includes interreligious dialogue, human rights, and reforming the view of Islam
- Arkoun’s project reveals the human formation of Islam
- The concept of God is historically formed
- Arkoun’s critique of tradition does not deny the Qur’an and is inseparable from interpreting the origins of Islam
- Critique of Islamic reason distinguishes between religious history and religion itself
- Critique of religious and Western rationalities