Idea
This claim starts from the view that the problem lies not only in the details of the inherited legacy, but also in the conception that makes the “origin” a final reference that cannot be questioned. When the origin turns into a closed standard, critical thought becomes limited from the outset. The critique here therefore seems directed at the mental structure that precedes judgments, not only at isolated judgments themselves.
Concise Formulation
Critique of fundamentalist thought: requires critiquing the concept of origin itself
Its Place in the Book’s Argument
This claim occupies a foundational place in the book’s argument, because it shifts the discussion from describing fundamentalist thought to examining its deeper condition. Instead of merely tracing what the fundamentalist says about the past, the book raises the question of the meaning of origin itself. In this way, theoretical deconstruction becomes a necessary prelude to any broader reassessment of fundamentalist discourse.
Why It Matters
Its importance stems from the fact that it explains why it is not enough to respond to fundamentalism from within its usual vocabulary. Arkoun’s understanding here passes through the recognition that the decisive question is: how is origin produced as a final truth? This opens the door to a critical reading that is broader than a mere dispute over historical facts.
Reading Questions
- How does examining the concept of origin itself change the way fundamentalist thought is understood?
- Why is a historical study of origins insufficient if the meaning of origin itself remains unquestioned?
Documentation Level
High: the claim appears in a clear location in the book’s material.