Synthetic Judgment
When the failure of scientific and political understanding is combined with political frustration and the opening of applied Islamology, it becomes clear that Islam is not read from the moment of confrontation alone, but from a network of conditions that at once produce and limit its dynamism.
What Emerges from the Assembly of Atoms
The atoms here do not say that militant Islam does not exist; rather, they show that its presence is not enough to establish understanding. Scientific and political understanding, when it fails to explain religious movements, reveals an epistemic void that the militant image alone cannot fill, because this image is often fed more by political frustration than it explains religion itself. On the other hand, applied Islamology opens the angle of vision onto contemporary reality instead of settling for the scene of conflict. In this way, a synthesis is formed that links explanatory failure to the social and political conditions of the movement’s production, then shifts the discussion from reduction to plurality. What appears here is not merely a call for broadening the frame, but a dismantling of the idea that the moment of mobilization is the only key to meaning.
The Logic of the Synthesis
| Atom | Its role in the synthesis | What it adds to the relationship |
|---|---|---|
| Militant Islam is not sufficient for understanding | Undermines reliance on the movement’s visible face | Opens the way to multiple levels of reading |
| Scientific and political understanding of religious movements failed | Shows the limits of prevailing explanatory tools | Makes the need for an alternative method urgent |
| Political frustration fuels Islamic movements | Links religion to contexts of crisis | Shifts understanding from creed to social condition |
| Applied Islamology opens onto contemporary reality | Expands the angle of analysis | Connects the religious phenomenon to the lived present |
The Argumentative Function
This structure performs the function of broadening the explanatory frame, by removing Islam from confinement within a single militant image and placing it within a broader social and political network. It thus serves the book’s trajectory in resisting reduction and opening interpretation to empirical data.
Bridges Within the Atlas
- It converges with pages that reconnect religious phenomena to historical and social conditions.
- It can be linked to structures that dismantle the monolithic interpretation of Islamic movements.
- It serves as a connecting node with pages on applied Islamology as a methodological horizon.
Incoming Atoms
- Militant Islam is not sufficient for understanding
- Scientific and political understanding of religious movements failed
- Political frustration fuels Islamic movements
- Applied Islamology opens onto contemporary reality