Synthetic Judgment

It emerges from the conjunction of these atoms that modernity is understood as a utilitarian force capable of functioning, but when it is separated from the spiritual and the temporal and stripped of the authority of meaning, it produces a material expansion that guarantees neither universal validity nor human fulfillment.

What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Atoms

The atoms combine to form a critique that does not reject modernity in terms of achievement, but rather sets a limit on its claim to completeness. When material and consumer value are given precedence over the horizon of meaning, practical reason becomes capable of production, yet incapable of giving life its spiritual referent or its existential measure. The distinction between the spiritual and the temporal functions here as a revelatory tool: it shows that success in managing time is not equivalent to spiritual fullness, and that the sphere governed by efficiency is not necessarily the sphere measured by meaning. As for removing authority from clerics, this prevents the critique from turning into a simple restoration of traditional authority; what is required instead is the dismantling of one form of domination, not its replacement by another. In this way, a synthesis takes shape that places modernity before the question of its limits rather than merely celebrating its effectiveness.

The Logic of the Synthesis

AtomIts role in the synthesisWhat it adds to the relation
Critique of rational modernityOpens questioning onto the logic of utilityTurns modernity from a final criterion into an object of critique
Prioritizing the material and consumeristReveals the effect of value displacementShows where meanings recede before functions
Distinguishing the spiritual from the temporalSeparates two modes of realizationMakes practical sufficiency inadequate as a basis for judging the human being
Withdrawing authority from clericsPrevents a direct conservative responseKeeps the critique from turning into a substitute tutelage

The Argumentative Function

This structure performs a dual deconstructive function: it deconstructs, on the one hand, the Western claim to completeness, and on the other, the possibility of religious re-rooting as a ready-made answer. It thus prepares the ground for framing the crisis of Islamic thought as a crisis of structure rather than merely a lack of content.

Bridges Within the Atlas

It connects with the structures critiquing instrumental reason, with pages distinguishing the symbolic sphere from the functional sphere, and with every grouping that links the critique of modernization to the critique of fundamentalist restoration within the atlas itself.

Included Atoms

Limits of the Inference

This critique should not be generalized into a rejection of modernity as a whole; what is meant is the limits of its instrumental-rational model, not the denial of its historical achievements or of the possibilities of modernization beyond this reduction.


title: The Crisis of Contemporary Islamic Thought Lies in an Enclosed Dogmatism (Islamic Thought: Critique and Ijtihad)

Synthetic Judgment

It emerges from the conjunction of these atoms that the crisis lies not in the abundance of discourse, but in a structure that closes the question before it is even posed, making the text a final authority and rendering understanding in need of a critique of its mode of production rather than an increase in its content.

What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Atoms

The atoms come together to produce an image of an epistemic structure that does not allow thought to move beyond its pre-established pathways. The dogmatic fence determines what can be thought, not after thought but before it, and for that reason discourse keeps reproducing ready-made answers and invoking texts as final authorities that halt the question rather than open it. In this context, the defect is no longer a lack of cognitive material, but an enclosure in the conditions of understanding themselves. Hence the claim that understanding discourse requires epistemological critique, which shifts the struggle from the level of content to that of tools, limits, and method. This synthesis makes the crisis structural: what is prevented is not merely a different opinion, but the very possibility of difference coming into being in the first place.

The Logic of the Synthesis

AtomIts role in the synthesisWhat it adds to the relation
The crisis of contemporary Islamic thoughtSets the title of blockageIdentifies the locus of dysfunction, not only its consequences
The dogmatic fence determines what can be thoughtShows the mechanism of closureShifts the crisis from symptom to structure
Invoking texts as final authoritiesClarifies how closure is fixedMakes the text an instrument of prohibition rather than of questioning
Understanding discourse requires epistemological critiqueOpens a methodological exitMoves the solution to the level of conditions of knowledge

The Argumentative Function

This structure performs a foundational function for methodical critique within the book: it justifies why exhortational or remedial reform is insufficient, and why one must begin by questioning the cognitive structure that produces stagnation and recycles authority.

Bridges Within the Atlas

It stands alongside the structures critiquing closed consciousness, textual authority, and the need for epistemology in reading the heritage, and it is also linked to assemblages that deconstruct dogmatic discourse in Arkoun’s other projects.

Included Atoms

Limits of the Inference

This structure should not be turned into a blanket judgment on all forms of religiosity or all forms of Islamic thought; it describes a hegemonic pattern in the production of meaning, not a total exhaustion of the history of thought.


title: The Islamic Community Is an Ideal Image Shaped by Myth and History (Islamic Thought: Critique and Ijtihad)

Synthetic Judgment

It emerges from the conjunction of these atoms that the community is not presented as a mere historical fact, but as an ideal image constructed through shifts of power, symbolic mediation, and interpretive mythologization, so that it becomes the ideal that explains history and the history that reproduces the ideal.

What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Atoms

The atoms work together to transform the community from a name for a group into a structure of meaning. The Muhammadan community is the ideal community, granting it the status of a criterion, but this status does not remain suspended in abstraction, because the emergence of the community from weakness to strength links the ideal to a historical trajectory in which realization and expansion unfold gradually. Then the transformation of the community through the caliphs and jurists shows that the historical appearance of the ideal does not occur directly, but through mediations that shape its representation, governance, and stabilization in the practical sphere. As for building the concept of the community on a mythic structure, it pushes this meaning beyond the political or social description into the sphere of the collective imaginary, where symbols intensify and reorder memory. In this way, a double synthesis takes shape: the community is an ideal to be interpreted, and at the same time a historical narrative that produces the ideal and keeps it active.

The Logic of the Synthesis

AtomIts role in the synthesisWhat it adds to the relation
The Muhammadan community is the ideal communityGives the structure its criterionMakes the community a model image, not merely a group
The emergence of the community from weakness to strengthLinks the ideal to historyShows the passage of the idea into social realization
The transformation of the community through caliphs and juristsAdds mediations of formationExplains how the image is stabilized through institutions of interpretation
Building the concept of the community on a mythic structureElevates it to the level of the imaginaryExplains its endurance in consciousness, not only in events

The Argumentative Function

This structure performs the function of linking the normative and the historical, and of deconstructing the view that treats the community as a fixed essence. It explains how the book works to show that collective identity is made from the interweaving of ideal, mediation, memory, and myth.

Bridges Within the Atlas

It is connected to structures of collective memory, mythic symbolization, and the history of the formation of religious legitimacy, and it also stands near pages that depict the community in other Arkounian atlases, where ideal and interpretation are interwoven.

Included Atoms

Limits of the Inference

The ideal image of the community should not be turned into a direct historical report, nor should its history be reduced to myth alone; it is a structure of representation and meaning nourished by history as much as by the imaginary.


title: Islam, Philosophy, Theology, and Jurisprudence Form a Single Classical Fabric (Islamic Thought: Critique and Ijtihad)

Synthetic Judgment

It emerges from the conjunction of these atoms that classical Islamic culture was not formed from separate fields, but from a network of interaction in which philosophy, jurisprudence, theology, Sufism, and symbol intersect, so that the later separation becomes a historical effect rather than an underlying structure.

What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Atoms

The atoms compose an epistemic scene based on interweaving rather than division. The overlap of philosophy, theology, and jurisprudence reveals that the question of truth was distributed among multiple tools, not monopolized by a single field. The benefit that Islamic philosophy drew from Aristotle and Plato proves that the Islamic heritage was not closed in on itself, but entered into a relation of absorption and transformation with the Greek legacy. Yet the resistance to philosophical metaphysics reminds us that this openness was neither innocent nor straightforward; philosophy encountered its limits within the environment that received it. Then the claim that the decline of philosophy requires a multi-method explanation adds a decisive condition: one explanation is not enough to narrate the end, because textual, institutional, social, and epistemic factors are intertwined. By contrast, the inner and the outer as a psycholinguistic relation, and Sufi discourse as an expansion of symbol and myth, emphasize that Sufism was not a decorative margin, but part of the structure that expanded religious language and redistributed meaning between literal expression and allusion.

The Logic of the Synthesis

AtomIts role in the synthesisWhat it adds to the relation
Overlap of philosophy, theology, and jurisprudenceDenies a rigid separationConfirms the unity of the epistemic fabric
Islamic philosophy’s use of Aristotle and PlatoOpens the field to Greek heritageShows interaction rather than closure
Resistance to philosophical metaphysicsLimits philosophical receptionShows that interweaving is accompanied by selection and struggle
The decline of philosophy requires a multi-method explanationRejects causal reductionCalls for a synthetic reading of decline
The inner and the outer as a psycholinguistic relationAdds an interpretive dimensionReveals how meaning works within language and consciousness
Sufi discourse expands symbol and mythRaises interaction to the symbolic levelLinks knowledge with imagination and inner experience

The Argumentative Function

This structure works to recompose the history of Islamic knowledge so as to prevent it from being read as a map of separate domains. It thereby provides the book with a broad explanatory tool for the trajectory of philosophy and its decline, and for the place of Sufism, jurisprudence, and theology in shaping classical reason.

Bridges Within the Atlas

It meets pages on the history of Islamic philosophy, the critique of the split between reason and text, the structures of symbol and myth in Sufi discourse, and assemblages explaining the decline of philosophy as the result of a historical entanglement rather than a single cause.

Included Atoms

Limits of the Inference

This synthesis should not be generalized to all stages of Islamic history as if they were homogeneous; it describes a specific classical fabric, not a denial of differences or a dissolution of later ruptures.


title: Marginalization, Religiosity, and Historical Weakness Feed Islamic Responses (Islamic Thought: Critique and Ijtihad)

Synthetic Judgment

It emerges from the conjunction of these atoms that the Islamic response does not arise from religious discourse alone, but from the layering of social deprivation, weak historical consciousness, and the intensification of symbolic inclination under demographic pressure, so that religiosity becomes a channel for mobilizing suffering that exceeds religion itself.

What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Atoms

These atoms bring together social cause and symbolic mentality to explain the rise of Islamic responses. The crisis of marginalization feeding the revival of jihad makes violence/revival a result of the absence of justice and rights, not a direct translation of texts. The wave of religiosity may conceal other needs: when religion rises to the forefront, it can cover the demands of society, politics, and the economy, leaving visible only what possesses the language of mobilization. Then weak historical sense feeding Islamic attraction shows that the absence of historical reading turns the past into a source of attraction rather than an object of understanding, strengthening the tendency toward ready-made representations. As population growth reinforces the mythic tendency, it becomes clear that demographic pressure does not operate materially alone, but also pushes toward the concentration of the imaginary and the search for unifying narratives. Thus the Islamic response is not understood as a purely doctrinal choice, but as a point of convergence between deprivation, meaning, and mobilization.

The Logic of the Synthesis

AtomIts role in the synthesisWhat it adds to the relation
The crisis of marginalization feeding the revival of jihadLinks the phenomenon to deprivationRemoves it from a purely doctrinal explanation