Formulation of the Claim

Arkoun calls for caution toward preconceived definitions of religion and society.

Explanation

Arkoun holds that beginning with ready-made definitions obscures the diversity of the historical and actual manifestations of religion and society. He therefore prefers an approach that captures what appears in reality rather than imposing prior molds upon it.

Within this horizon, the aim is not to fix a final definition, but to keep inquiry open to transformations and contexts. Meaning is determined by what research reveals in the facts, not by what preconceived propositions impose.

Its Place in the Book’s Argument

This atom falls within Arkoun’s critique of approaches that rush to encompass religion and society through closed definitional boundaries. It is close to his call to describe phenomena in their historical and social manifestations, which makes understanding more closely tied to reality and less subject to abstraction.

Limits of the Claim

This atom does not mean rejecting definition altogether or dispensing with it entirely, nor does it mean that every definition is wrong. What is meant is a reservation toward definitions that precede research and prevent one from seeing complexity.

Brief Evidence

Religion should not be approached through rigid preconceived definitions, because that obscures the diversity of its historical and actual manifestations. Religion, like other discourses, takes multiple forms that cannot be confined to a single mold. The matter therefore warrants returning to it with a mind open to what appears in reality.