Formulation of the Claim
Al-Fatiha is built upon an exchange between God and the human being.
Explanation
The surah is read as not presenting meaning in a purely declarative form, but rather in the form of discourse in which address alternates from one party to another. Thus the dialogical structure itself becomes part of the surah’s meaning.
From this perspective, al-Fatiha is not understood as merely a devotional opening, but as a formulation that displays the relationship between the speaker and the addressee within the text itself. Meaning therefore advances through exchange, not through statement alone.
Its Place in the Book’s Argument
This atom falls within a reading of al-Fatiha as a text that discloses meaning through its discursive structure. It supports Arkoun’s thesis, which tends to examine how the Qur’anic text operates as discourse, rather than as meanings detached from their expressive form.
Its importance derives from its connection to his broader reading, which links text and history and traces the formation of meaning within linguistic and symbolic structure. Thus al-Fatiha appears here as an example showing that the exchange between God and the human being is not a meaning added onto the surah, but one of the keys to reading it.
Limits of the Claim
This claim does not mean that all the meanings of al-Fatiha are exhausted, nor does it replace other readings that address the ordering of the verses or their devotional and exegetical functions.
Brief Evidence
Arkoun holds that al-Fatiha contains an exchange between God and the human being. The surah does not present meaning in a purely declarative form, but rather in the form of discourse in which address alternates from one party to another. Thus the dialogical structure itself becomes part of the surah’s meaning.
Nearby Links
Critique of Islamic Reason Text and History Critique of Reason