Argument Type: Critical
470 pages
- The restoration of foundational Islam is rejected
- Fundamentalism as forced conversion
- Islam has become an ideology of power
- Islamism as a protest identity
- The media and politics amplify Islam’s image
- Orientalism and Islamic discourses reinforce essentialism
- Liberation begins from within
- Puritanism as the preservation of purity
- European education erased religion and cultures
- Hagiographic education entrenches sectarianism
- Education and the university fuel misunderstanding
- Reductionist development excludes people
- Technological modernity increases the debt of meaning
- Modernity has surpassed materialist extremism
- Modernity is dominated by pragmatism
- Moral judgment is an neglected question
- Imposed solutions produce backlash
- Superstition weakens resolve
- Religion as an ideological tool of regimes
- Technocratic reason reduces the human being
- Exclusionary secularism excludes religion
- European positivist secularization is excessive
- The Muslim intellectual needs a cool diagnosis
- Modern societies produce their own mythologies
- Vital meaning is not provided by rationality alone
- The margins deconstruct Islamist discourses
- Some Orientalists contribute to it
- Liberating the Arab-Islamic spirit
- The politicization of Islam in contemporary discourse
- Multiple Arab diagnoses of the crisis
- Rejecting the dichotomy between the religious and the worldly
- Rejecting the mythical and ideological vision
- The conflict between reason and closed faith
- A gap between discourse and practice
- The inadequacy of previous strategies
- Erasing Islam’s historical dimension
- Revisiting ideological assumptions
- Critique of the myth of the Western model
- Critique of analogy as racializing
- Critique of dominant Western moralizing
- The North-South model is an ideological construct
- Principles of jurisprudence were ideologically recuperated
- Most interpretations fall into a historical fallacy
- Women’s reform runs up against tradition
- The exhaustion of ijtihad halts generative thought
- Fundamentalists use religion politically
- Consensus and analogical reasoning according to Arkoun
- Orientalism benefited scholarly inquiry
- Colonial Orientalism raises an epistemological problem
- Interpretive discontinuity has wide-reaching effects
- Research backwardness and cultural ruptures
- Oral teaching weakens critical reason
- Colonial education obscured historical understanding
- Stagnation appeared with the guardians of faith
- Dialogue with preachers is nearly impossible
- Lexical Arabic is detached from contemporaneity
- Extreme rationalism eliminates imagination
- Great scholars build faith
- Atrocity did not die with the triumph of the Enlightenment
- The text was transferred into closed sanctification
- Modern criticism is necessary for belated thought
- Wahhabism is a freezing of Hanbali doctrine
- School history in France was apologetic
- Turning human judgments into the sacred
- Confusing the Sharia with jurisprudence
- Clerics are the guardians of belief
- The terror of revolution and bloody violence
- Suppression of creativity continued after independence
- Arkoun’s critique does not negate the Qur’an
- Critique of Orientalism and superficial reading
- Critique of inherited traditional exegesis
- Critique of Islamic reason
- The crisis of contemporary reason
- Islamizing the sciences is a fundamentalist demand
- Patterns of interaction among minds
- The closing of ijtihad is the ruling of imitation
- Objections to Arkoun’s project
- Fundamentalism imposes an old model
- Theological systems produce clashes
- Islam grants an ontological privilege
- Orientalism constrains the study of Islam
- Later grounding became linked to fundamentalism
- Critical deconstruction of monotheistic traditions
- Western modernity empties the spirit
- Islamic discourse has closed itself within a dogmatic fence
- Victim discourse disables criticism
- Confusing struggle with privilege
- Religion and thought weaken as ideology
- Islamist reason is an ideological reaction
- Exploratory reason is threatened by rigidity
- Scientific-technological reason in its televisual form
- Dominant reason turns into domination
- European secularization lacks a spiritual alternative
- The social sciences neglect actual societies
- The fatwa is a sign of theology’s decline
- Sanctity was draped over a human work
- Sanctity conceals internalized standards
- The theological reading effaces origins
- The unthought in the Maghreb
- Taboos paralyze criticism
- Western hegemony limits comparative critique
- The attempt to prove modernity through texts is invalid
- Grounding the foundations has become impossible
- Renewing religion through critique of reason
- Politicizing religion deepens scientific deficiency
- Mobilizing fundamentalism with inherited imaginaries
- The failure of fundamentalist thinking has multiple causes
- The triumph of the material and the consumptive
- Dismantling traditional positions
- The supremacy of juridical-theological reason
- Distinguishing religious reason from theological reason
- The defensive posture of Islamic scientific reason
- Rejecting modernity is not a solution
- Conservative dominance hinders research
- The paralysis of Islamic studies
- The image of Islam among Europeans
- The atrophy of critical reason
- Kinship loyalties impede the individual
- The absence of historical critique of tradition
- Critique of reducing Islam to responsibility
- Critique of schoolbook Islam
- Critique of interpretive Orientalism
- Critique of ideological veneration
- Critique of modern modernity
- Critique of rationalist modernity
- Critiquing modernity does not mean rejecting it
- Critique of Western Qur’anic studies
- Self-critique before blaming colonialism
- Critique of technological and scientific reason
- Critique of sterile identity debates
- Critique of Islam’s ideological totalization
- The crisis of contemporary Islamic thought
- Reducing the intellectual to mere identification
- Invoking texts as final authorities
- Islamism’s exploitation of sacred language
- Monotheistic religions build systems of exclusion
- Orthodoxy imposes a single meaning
- Popular Islam is based on the veneration of saints
- Academic neglect reproduces distorted images
- Destructive ideologies shrink critical thought
- Western researchers prefer brief description
- Cultural truncation weakens doctoral students
- Excessive specialization weakens the role of the intellectual
- Traditional religious education entrenches sectarianism
- The East-West division is a sterile cliché
- A destructive generation of the human being
- Modern movements mix ideology with tradition
- Dialogue goes beyond politics and commerce
- Defensive rights discourse
- Scientific discourse exposes ideological manipulation
- Legal-theological discourse granted legitimacy to existing regimes
- Historical rejection of the historical method
- The dogmatic fence determines what can be thought
- The dogmatic fence closes off religious discourse
- Political conflicts were wrapped in theological language
- Critical secularization and secularist thought
- Secularization is not a rejection of religion
- The West reduced Islam to its popular forms
- Jurists turn symbols into closed truths
- The scientific and political understanding of religious movements failed
- Philology is a first stage, not an end, in the study of tradition
- Forbidden issues in contemporary thought
- Theologians will reject critical comparisons
- The distorted Western imaginary of Islam
- The shared imaginary magnifies Islam
- Societies live through an invisible, actual secularization
- Revelation has not been studied adequately
- The persistence of the fence in Arab societies
- The renewal of Classical Arabic
- The decline of the critical intellectual because of dogmatism
- Applying the Sharia faces practical problems
- Elite collusion with the state
- The limits of medieval reason
- The siege of free thought
- Confusing Qur’anic Islam with juristic Islam
- Rejecting the literature of the old sects
- Rejecting the reduction of critique to secularization
- Rejecting prior religious superiority
- Rejecting the protest discourse of jihad
- Rejecting formulations of the death of man and the death of God
- The condition for intellectual emancipation
- The image of the Muslim in Europe
- The absence of production in the major fields of tradition
- The critical task of the intellectual
- A wave of religiosity may obscure other needs
- Critique of the European horizon
- Critique of formal humanism
- Critique of classical Orientalism
- Critiquing modernity is not rejecting it
- Critique of dogmatic readings
- The dominance of clerics and Islamists
- Traditional religious institutions should be curtailed
- Rethinking is not Salafi reform
- The impossibility of making God a problem
- Orthodoxy bypasses the historicity of the text
- Official Islam criminalizes deviation
- Ritual Islam is dogmatic and ahistorical
- Contemporary Islam is emptied of spirituality
- Utopian Islamic reform
- Exclusion is mutual among sects