Formulation of the claim
The Fatiha and the Qur’an are read in a way that combines linguistic analysis and socio-historical interpretation.
Explanation
Here the text is understood as a linguistic structure whose internal level is not sufficient on its own, because its meaning cannot be detached from the conditions that surrounded its formation. Reading therefore brings together the tools of language analysis with attention to the historical and social context that illuminates how meaning is produced.
This formulation belongs to Arkoun’s method of approaching foundational texts without confining them to exhortatory interpretation or to abstract linguistic explanation. It indicates that the Fatiha and the Qur’an are not to be treated as isolated words, but as two texts in which structure, meaning, and context are interwoven.
Its place in the book’s argument
This atom functions as a methodological entry point into the book’s argument in dealing with the Fatiha and the Qur’an, as it specifies that the required reading is based on bringing together two horizons: a linguistic horizon that studies structure, and a socio-historical horizon that reveals the conditions of formation. It thus places the reader before Arkoun’s way of constructing understanding before moving on to interpretive results.
Limits of the claim
This statement does not mean a detailed exposition of linguistic methods or a full account of social history, nor does it claim to provide a definitive interpretation of the text. It merely names the kind of reading that relies on combining the two levels.