Synthetic Judgment
Religious experience appears here as a movement from the external scene to inward transformation, such that the rite becomes a sign of depth rather than a substitute for it.
What Emerges from the Aggregation of Atoms
The atoms combine a rejection of sufficing with appearance with a function for the pilgrimage that begins from within rather than from outward motion. Piety in this construction is no longer a sum of collective behavior or a public celebration, but a path that tests meaning in the self and reshapes consciousness. The first atom removes the exhaustive character from appearances, the second grants the pilgrimage the value of a spiritual beginning, and the third prevents it from being understood as a purely spatial displacement. From this convergence it becomes clear that the rite functions as a threshold: it opens onto the interior instead of enclosing it within visible performance. Thus the collective and the inward side by side, but neither explains the other except through the transformation the ritual effects in being.
The Logic of the Construction
| Atom | Its role in the construction | What it adds to the relation |
|---|---|---|
| Inner religious experience is deeper than appearances | Rejection of reduction | Separates existential depth from the public image |
| Pilgrimage is a spiritual beginning | Giving the act an inward meaning | Makes the rite a starting point for inner transformation |
| Pilgrimage is not a geographical transfer | Blocking a literal interpretation | Shifts pilgrimage from place to meaning |
| Inner religious experience is deeper than appearances | Establishing the principle | Relinks piety to the interior rather than the display |
| Pilgrimage is a spiritual beginning | Connecting the rite to transformation | Makes the ritual a generator of meaning |
| Pilgrimage is not a geographical transfer | Undermining sufficiency of the scene | Prevents pilgrimage from being confined to physical movement |
The Argumentative Function
This structure expands the concept of the rite within the argument by returning it to its existential effect rather than leaving it at the level of mass practice.
Bridges within the Atlas
It adjoins structures that address the distinction between the outward and the inward in piety, and other structures that deal with the symbolism of pilgrimage and passage in Arkoun’s related works.
Included Atoms
- Inner religious experience is deeper than appearances
- Pilgrimage is a spiritual beginning
- Pilgrimage is not a geographical transfer
Limits of the Inference
This construction may not be generalized to all forms of ritual as if they were exclusively inward, nor should the collective value of religious appearance be denied in favor of the interior alone.