Formulation of the Claim
The three monotheistic religions have historically practiced forms of mutual exclusion.
Explanation
Arkoun links this exclusion to each religion’s claim to possess revealed truth and to what he calls a history of salvation. When religious identity is understood as the exclusive possession of truth, relations between communities tend toward repudiation rather than recognition.
This meaning is not limited to passing disagreements among the followers of religions, but points to a deeper structure in the formation of religious consciousness within each tradition. Exclusion thus appears here as a recurring historical pattern in the monotheistic field.
Its Place in the Book’s Argument
This claim atom belongs to the book’s effort to compare the monotheistic religions in terms of the mechanisms by which they are formed discursively and historically, rather than in terms of doctrines alone. It is close to Arkoun’s theses criticizing the idea that each religious community monopolizes revelation and truth, and the reciprocal exclusion that follows from that claim.
Limits of the Claim
This claim atom should not be taken as an all-encompassing judgment on all believers or on every historical moment equally. Nor does it deny the existence of moments of coexistence or exchange within religious history; rather, it focuses on a general pattern of exclusion.