Synthetic Judgment
Taken together, the atoms show that the value of Qur’anic reading is not exhausted by reducing it to a linguistic origin or to a partial descriptive layer; rather, it is formed through a methodological resistance to any tool that turns the text into a meaning susceptible to unilateral extraction.
What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Atoms
What takes shape here is a critical synthesis that confronts two ways of dealing with the text: philology when it becomes the sole authority, and reductionism when it confines signification to only one of its levels. What the atoms reveal collectively is that the Qur’an does not present its meaning as an isolated linguistic mass that can be dismantled and then reassembled from outside its structure. It also becomes clear that the inadequacy of phonetic study is not due merely to a deficiency in the tool, but to the narrowness of the framework that governs it when sound is separated from the movement of meaning within the text. In this way, the issue is no longer simply an objection to a particular method; it becomes a defense of the plurality of layers of reading and a prevention of the reduction of the text to a single analytical path.
Logic of the Synthesis
| Atom | Its Role in the Synthesis | What It Adds to the Relation |
|---|---|---|
| Critique of Qur’anic philology | Sets a limit to the authority of derivation and origin as a sufficient key | Prevents reducing signification to its linguistic source alone |
| Inadequacy of current phonetic study | Reveals the limits of a treatment that stops at sound or rhythm | Shows that the phonetic structure is not equivalent to the semantic structure |
| Critique of Qur’anic philology | Reaffirms the objection to the illusion of methodological completeness | Protects the text from being exhausted by a single tool |
| Inadequacy of current phonetic study | Extends the critique from written language to partial auditory analysis | Shows that the parts of the text do not, individually, yield the whole meaning |
Argumentative Function
This structure performs a function of deconstruction: it dismantles the claim that partial linguistic tools are sufficient, and it opens the way for Arkoun’s argument that Qur’anic reading needs a method that does not imprison meaning either in the origin of the word or in its phonic material.
Bridges within the Atlas
It stands alongside structures in Arkoun’s atlas that critique sufficiency with the lexicon or with scholastic commentary, and alongside pages that address the plurality of levels of Qur’anic discourse and the limits of partial methods in dealing with it.
Included Atoms
Limits of the Inference
This position should not be generalized into an absolute rejection of philology or phonetic analysis; what is intended is to deny their sufficiency when used in isolation, not to deny their usefulness within a broader synthesis.
title: Contemporary Reading of the Qur’an Requires Moving Beyond Traditional Exegesis
Synthetic Judgment
The atoms show that contemporaneity here is not a temporal addition to exegesis, but a shift in the very conditions of the question: from an explanation that contents itself with inherited tradition to a reading that links the text to the horizon of present thought and confronts the absence of contemporary Islamic thought.
What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Atoms
The synthesis produced here is not based on a superficial preference between the old and the new, but on redirecting the function of reading. The atom connected to the Qur’an as God’s speech and a historical document gives the text a double presence: transcendent in its reference, and embedded in history through the forms of its reception and circulation. The atom concerning the absence of contemporary Islamic thought adds a practical tension: if present thought is absent or weak, then traditional exegesis is no longer sufficient to regulate the relation between the text and the present. From the conjunction of these atoms, it becomes clear that moving beyond traditional exegesis is not a negation of the text, but a transfer of reading from repetitive explanation to questioning the place of the Qur’an in the contemporary intellectual field. Thus, contemporaneity arises as a work on the text’s relation to the age, not merely as an updating of terminology.
Logic of the Synthesis
| Atom | Its Role in the Synthesis | What It Adds to the Relation |
|---|---|---|
| The Qur’an needs a contemporary reading | Sets the horizon of transformation in the mode of reading | Shifts the question from exegesis to the present presence of the text |
| The Qur’an is God’s speech and a historical document | Combines the faith-based reference with historical existence | Prevents reducing the Qur’an to either of the two dimensions |
| Absence of contemporary Islamic thought | Shows the void that makes traditional exegesis insufficient | Justifies the need for a reading that goes beyond inherited tradition |
| The Qur’an needs a contemporary reading | Redirects the argument toward a new horizon of understanding | Links contemporaneity to the principle of reading, not to an external embellishment |
Argumentative Function
This structure performs a function of transfer: it moves the argument from establishing the need for understanding to defining the horizon of that understanding within the present, and it pushes the reader from the limits of inherited exegesis toward the question of the Qur’an’s intellectual place today.
Bridges within the Atlas
It connects with structures in Arkoun’s atlas that address the historicity of the text, the plurality of levels of its reading, and the relation of revelation to the formation of modern Islamic thought, especially where the question is raised about the absence of contemporary tools for understanding.
Included Atoms
- The Qur’an needs a contemporary reading
- the Qur’an
- The Qur’an is God’s speech and a historical document
- Absence of contemporary Islamic thought
- The Qur’an needs a contemporary reading
- The Qur’an is God’s speech and a historical document
- Absence of contemporary Islamic thought
Limits of the Inference
It should not be inferred from this structure that traditional exegesis has no value, but rather that its value alone is not sufficient to secure the Qur’an’s connection to the questions of the present.
title: Critical Linguistic Reading Separates the Original from Translation
Synthetic Judgment
The atoms show that the Arabic original is not merely the first version of meaning, but a reference point of control that prevents translation from becoming a complete substitute, and makes comparison among translations a means of revealing differences that an isolated transfer obscures.
What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Atoms
The synthesis here rests on a precise distance between the inherited text and what other languages convey. The atom that translation is not the original text places translation in the position of mediator rather than in a position of equality, while the atom that comparing translations reveals non-correspondence turns this mediator into an instrument of examination rather than an instrument of replacement. The atom of critical linguistic reading gives this position its methodological character, because attention is directed not to isolated terms but to the structure of utterance as it takes shape in the text. The atom that linguistics distinguishes between utterance and text then supports the point that signification is not the sum of scattered words, but an internal organization that cannot be fully transferred except by taking its relations into account. Thus the Arabic original is defined as a point of control, not merely as linguistic material, and translation becomes a partial test of meaning, not a settlement of it.
Logic of the Synthesis
| Atom | Its Role in the Synthesis | What It Adds to the Relation |
|---|---|---|
| Translation is not the original text | Separates what is transmitted from what is originated | Prevents equating translation with the text |
| Comparing translations reveals non-correspondence | Turns difference among translations into an instrument of disclosure | Highlights differences that do not appear in a single translation |
| Critical linguistic reading | Gives the separation between original and translation a methodological basis | Links understanding to the text in its language and structure |
| Linguistics distinguishes between utterance and text | Places reading within a structural conception of discourse | Shows that meaning is formed within textual organization |
Argumentative Function
This structure performs a foundational function: it establishes a criterion of reading based on the Arabic original and critical comparison, and prevents slipping into a reading that treats translation as a complete equivalent of the text.
Bridges within the Atlas
It meets with structures in Arkoun’s atlas that treat language as a condition of understanding, and with pages that explain the limits of linguistic transfer in dealing with foundational texts.
Included Atoms
- Translation is not the original text
- Comparing translations reveals non-correspondence
- Critical linguistic reading
- Linguistics distinguishes between utterance and text
Limits of the Inference
This position does not mean that translation is useless; rather, it means that it does not take the place of the text in controlling meaning, and that it is not by itself sufficient to reach the text’s precise structure.
title: Critical Reading Resists the Rigidity of Orthodoxy and Reopens Questions
Synthetic Judgment
The atoms show that the critique of orthodoxy does not proceed only through a direct rejection of tradition, but through breaking the mechanism of interpretation that freezes meaning and makes the text be read as a closed answer rather than an open question.
What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Atoms
The synthesis here moves from the level of stance to the level of the reading act itself. The atom that the project of reading is a critique of orthodoxy gives the general direction: reading is not neutral, but enters into conflict with closed patterns of reception. The atom that the Qur’an arouses guilt adds a psychological-semantic dimension that prevents the text from being reduced to the statement of rulings; rather, it generates an effect that moves consciousness and unsettles its stillness. As for the atom that inherited exegesis freezes meaning, it clarifies the mechanism this path combats: turning signification into a fixed form that repeats itself. From the conjunction of these atoms, it appears that critical reading does not operate outside the text, but within its relation to its recipient and to the traditions that have surrounded it, and that reopening questions is the way meaning is set in motion again from within the structure itself.
Logic of the Synthesis
| Atom | Its Role in the Synthesis | What It Adds to the Relation |
|---|---|---|
| The project of reading is a critique of orthodoxy | Defines the direction of reading as resistance to closure | Places reading in confrontation with a structure of repetition |
| The Qur’an arouses guilt | Adds an existential effect of the text on the recipient | Prevents confining the text to a declarative function |
| Inherited exegesis freezes meaning | Reveals the mechanism of petrification within the explanatory tradition | Justifies the need to reopen the question |
| The project of reading is a critique of orthodoxy | Relinks critique to reading, not to a slogan | Makes the critical act practical within the text |
Argumentative Function
This structure performs a function of deconstruction and then reconstruction: it dismantles the rigidity of inherited exegesis, then rebuilds reading as a practice that revives the question and prevents meaning from settling into a final form.
Bridges within the Atlas
It stands alongside structures that address the critique of interpretive authority, the history of the formation of orthodoxy, and the connection of the Qur’anic text to its moral and existential effect on the recipient.
Included Atoms
- The project of reading is a critique of orthodoxy
- The Qur’an arouses guilt
- Inherited exegesis freezes meaning
- The project of reading is a critique of orthodoxy
- The Qur’an arouses guilt
- Inherited exegesis freezes meaning
Limits of the Inference
It does not follow from this structure that every inherited exegesis is petrified in itself, but rather that petrification appears when exegesis is turned into the end of meaning instead of being an entryway into it.
title: Heart, Reason, and Hearing Are Integrated in Understanding Revelation
Synthetic Judgment
The atoms show that understanding revelation for Arkoun is not based on a single faculty, but on the interweaving of heart, reason, and hearing as distinct channels brought together by human knowledge and divine guidance.
What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Atoms
The synthesis here does not merely place the faculties in one row; it distributes their roles within a connected structure of perception. The atom that Arkoun rejects separating the heart from reason prevents a clash between inward sensibility and rational reflection, and opens the way to understanding the human being as a unity of experience and understanding. The atom that the heart is the center of psychological states among the Mu’tazilites gives the heart an internal function that includes will, love, and thinking, so that it becomes a field of psychic activity rather than merely an emotional symbol. The atom that reason among the Mu’tazilites is the totality of knowledge makes reason the outcome of cognitive organization, not a power isolated from experience. Then the atom that hearing corresponds to direct human knowledge shows that there is something received through hearing as that which exceeds self-acquisition, before the atom that revelation guides the human being establishes that the ultimate aim is guidance, not sufficiency with a single perceptual mechanism. From this conjunction, it becomes clear that revelation is understood at the point of contact between human reception and transcendent guidance.
Logic of the Synthesis
| Atom | Its Role in the Synthesis | What It Adds to the Relation |
|---|---|---|
| Arkoun rejects separating the heart from reason | Removes the opposition between the inward and reflection | Integrates affective response with rational understanding |
| The heart is the center of psychological states among the Mu’tazilites | Defines the heart as a psychological-volitional field | Gives reception a complex inward dimension |
| Reason among the Mu’tazilites is the totality of knowledge | Places reason within an accumulated cognitive formation | Links it to experience and organization, not only to abstraction |
| Hearing corresponds to direct human knowledge | Distinguishes between what is grasped by acquisition and what is received | Opens the gate of reception to revelation |
| Revelation guides the human being | Gives the synthesis its directive aim | Links the interweaving of the faculties to the goal of guidance |
Argumentative Function
This structure performs a function of conceptual grounding: it builds a conception of the human being as a complex recipient of revelation, and supports Arkoun’s argument that religious understanding cannot be reduced to reason alone or to affect alone.
Bridges within the Atlas
It connects with structures in Arkoun’s atlas that address Islamic reason, the relation between knowledge and faith, and the rereading of the concepts of heart and reason in the theological tradition.