Formulation of the Claim
The modern intellectual turns the world into a problem of meaning.
Explanation
In Arkoun’s thought, the modern intellectual is not understood as a mere transmitter of knowledge or a repeater of dominant discourses, but as a critical subject who places circulated meanings under question. He confronts ideology and hegemony by opening space for interrogation rather than settling for justification.
The modernity of this intellectual is defined by the fact that he does not merely describe reality as it is, but reveals the symbolic powers and ready-made assumptions it contains. His task therefore becomes tied to turning the world into an open question about meaning, not into a final certainty.
Its Place in the Book’s Argument
This atom comes within Arkoun’s construction of the intellectual’s position in the face of closed patterns of thought, especially when he links critique to the necessity of deconstructing the discourses that produce intellectual obedience. It is close to his theses on humanism, and on the need to interrogate the systems that prevent a historical and critical understanding of culture and religion.
Limits of the Claim
This atom should not be burdened with a comprehensive definition of all the intellectual’s functions in Arkoun, nor turned into a purely abstract moral judgment. What is intended here is the specification of one angle: the function of critique as the transformation of the world into a moral and cognitive question.
Brief Evidence Passage
The modern intellectual is not merely a transmitter of knowledge; rather, he is a bearer of a critical stance who confronts fragility and uncertainty at the very heart of the human condition. He engages in critique of contemporary reason as an intellectual strategy, not as a merely negative objection. Thus deconstruction is not a positive philosophy in itself, but one of the tools of critique.
Related Links
Islamic Thought: Critique and Ijtihad Battles for Humanism in Islamic Contexts