Formulation of the Claim

This page presents five new postulates for reading as a procedural alternative to the old system, not merely a partial adjustment in the method of understanding.

Explanation

These postulates appear in Arkoun’s thought as a refoundation of the conditions of reading itself, not as a passing interpretive addition to what already exists. They point to a shift in reading from submission to inherited postulates toward openness to broader questions.

This transformation appears in the connection of reading to history, freedom, and inquiry, so that the interpretive process no longer remains confined within a closed framework. Reading then becomes an act that rearranges the relationship between the text, its meaning, and the conditions for understanding it.

Its Place in the Book’s Argument

This formulation falls within Arkoun’s attempt to rearrange the very conditions of reading, so that reading is no longer governed by inherited postulates, but opens onto a broader horizon that makes history, freedom, and inquiry part of the interpretive act. It therefore occupies a position that links the critique of the old system with the proposal of an alternative path for understanding.

Limits of the Claim

This page does not explain the details of the five postulates, nor does it elaborate their tools or internal sequence.

Brief Evidence

This methodology has a great advantage: it frees us from the self-evident postulates imposed by firmly established inherited tradition, as if they were certain truths, in light of the past and the present in light of the present and the past. They are absolute and admit no debate. In any case, if we continue going back and reread the corpus officially closed once and for all—that is, the codex of Uthman—what do we find in it concerning the creation or crystallization of values? Between experience

history