Synthetic Judgment
The atoms show that Bin Laden is constructed as a revolutionary figure that transcends the local, but this figure is not independent of a theological reference that gives it its meaning and support.
What Emerges from the Conjunction of the Atoms
Bin Laden and the revolutionary Guevara converge with Bin Laden’s theological reference to form a dual image: a revolution that assumes a global form, and a doctrine that grants it the capacity for justification and continuation. The resemblance to Guevara does not function here as a superficial comparison, but as a frame that raises the act from its operational level to the level of the revolutionary symbol. Yet this elevation is completed only through the theological reference that links the act to a doctrinal horizon determining its direction. In this form, the actor is presented not merely as political, but as a composition between the revolutionary imaginary and religious legitimation. Hence, the global in this page does not abolish the religious; rather, it feeds on it.
Logic of the Synthesis
| Atom | Its role in the synthesis | What it adds |
|---|---|---|
| Bin Laden and the Revolutionary Guevara | Constructing the image | Raises Bin Laden to the horizon of global revolution |
| Bin Laden’s Theological Reference | Legitimation | Links the act to doctrine and grants it symbolic support |
Argumentative Function
Expansion
Included Atoms
Limits of the Inference
This structure does not prove