Formulation of the Claim
The Qur’an establishes a conception that links society to revelation.
Explanation
In Arkoun’s thought, this idea is read as indicating that the Qur’an was not presented only as a religious text, but as a framework that directs the community’s understanding of itself and of its relation to the transcendent source. Society here is not reduced to purely social explanations; rather, it is understood in light of a foundational relationship to revelation.
This means that Arkoun draws attention to the centrality of the Qur’an in constructing collective meaning, where revelation becomes a reference point that regulates the society’s religious and symbolic self-understanding. The relationship between society and revelation is therefore not a secondary detail, but part of the way Islamic consciousness takes shape in the text and in reception.
Its Place in the Book’s Argument
This atom belongs to the trajectory that shows how Arkoun views the Qur’an as a constitutive element in the history of the Islamic community, not merely as material for exhortation or citation. It approaches the book’s theses that focus on the historical formation of religious meaning and on the presence of revelation in building collective authority.
Limits of the Claim
This atom should not be taken to mean that society is wholly reduced to the religious factor alone, or that Arkoun denies any role to history or society in the formation of the Islamic experience. The point is to highlight the place of revelation in the initial shaping of authority, not to close the field to other factors.