Synthetic Judgment

Modernity breaks the linkage between politics and religion, but it leaves the crisis of legitimacy intact because separating out the source of authority does not eliminate the need for a source of meaning and power.

What Emerges from the Assembly of Atoms

The atoms show that modernity brought about a shift in the structure of the public sphere, not the elimination of the questions that sustained it. Separating politics from religious and secular legitimacy, and loosening the hold of political theology, define a clear institutional transformation. Yet this transformation does not solve the problem of revelation, nor does it remove the need for a reference point that gives political action a meaning beyond technique and administration. The atoms Islam, Politics, and the West, Western modernity separated ethics from the economy, and Western modernity elevated technical rationality show that modernity reorders the relationship between ethics, economics, and rationality, rather than ending the tensions that generate the question of legitimacy. In this context, it also becomes clear that clerics have no authority over beliefs does not mean the dissolution of the question, but rather its transfer to another arena in which society searches for the foundations of authority’s acceptability and reasonableness. Thus, the synthesis takes shape as an institutional separation matched by the persistence of the problem of reference.

Logic of the Synthesis

AtomIts Role in the SynthesisWhat It Adds
Separation of politics from religious legitimacyDefines the moment of institutional ruptureSeparates authority from the religious source
Secularization and the loosening of political theologyExplains the mechanism of separationShows how legitimacy is withdrawn from theology
Modernity did not solve the problem of revelationReopens the questionConfirms the persistence of the reference-point knot
Clerics have no authority over beliefsDefines the limits of clericsShifts the center of gravity outside the religious institution
Islam, politics, and the WestLinks the transformation to its civilizational contextExpands the field to a broader civilizational relationship
Western modernity separated ethics from the economyHighlights the reordering of valuesExplains the change in the bases of legitimacy
Western modernity elevated technical rationalityShows the rise of technical utilitarianismClarifies why technique alone is not enough to generate legitimacy

Argumentative Function

Dismantling.

Atoms Included

Limits of the Conclusion

This synthesis describes the limits of modernity in producing legitimacy, but it does not deny the diversity of its forms or the possibility of its formation outside religious reference.