Synthetic Judgment
Within authority, religion turns into a managed and reshaped domain, such that it no longer remains independent of the logic of rule but enters into its historical form.
What Appears from the Conjunction of the Atoms
The atoms show that authority does not merely use religion as an external symbol; it also contributes to shaping its social and political meaning. The persistence of group solidarity within Arab authority reveals that tribal and kinship structures do not leave the political sphere even when its outward form changes. In this context, the claim that early jurisprudence was a cover for a tribal reality shows that religious discourse itself may support an existing social reality rather than separate itself from it. From here, the historical nationalization of religion appears as a process of containment rather than a direct declaration, because rule rearranges religion’s presence in ways that serve its own continuity. Religion is thus no longer only a domain of faith, but part of the mechanism for regulating the community.
Logic of Composition
| Atom | Its Role in the Composition | What It Adds |
|---|---|---|
| The Persistence of Group Solidarity within Arab Authority | Revealing the social structure of authority | Links rule to kinship and tribe |
| Early Jurisprudence as a Cover for a Tribal Reality | Showing the function of religious discourse | Shows that jurisprudence may cover reality rather than change it |
Argumentative Function
Foundation
Included Atoms
- The Persistence of Group Solidarity within Arab Authority
- Early Jurisprudence as a Cover for a Tribal Reality
Limits of the Inference
This composition does not reduce religion to a purely political function, but it does establish that its historical presence occurred within mechanisms of containment and direction.