Synthetic judgment
From the convergence of interpretive narrative, the density of the Qur’anic example, the history of hegemony, and popular sensibility, it becomes clear that exegesis does not merely explain meaning; it weaves an horizon that precedes thought and delimits what can even be imagined in the first place.
What emerges from the convergence of the atoms
These atoms do not operate as adjacent pieces of evidence, but as layers that form a single field: a narrative layer that places the Qur’an within a continuous memory, a semantic layer that grants certain concepts the authority to organize meaning, a historical layer that reveals how hegemony takes shape through repetition and codification, and an affective-social layer that makes popular reception part of the formation of understanding. From this convergence, exegesis appears not as an explanation of the text but as a framework that precedes the text in directing its reading. It also becomes clear that narrowing does not arise from a single element, but from the fusion of narrative with knowledge and collective taste. Thus the possible here is not absent; rather, it is reconfigured within an inherited horizon that presents itself as self-evident.
The logic of composition
| Atom | Its role in the composition | What it adds to the relation |
|---|---|---|
| Early exegesis produces a continuous interpretive narrative | Supplies reading with an encompassing narrative structure | Turns exegesis from explanation into a system that links meaning to memory |
| Surah al-Kahf condenses the features of early exegesis | Provides a dense example of traditional operation | Makes the narrative structure visible in a specific text |
| The three concepts reveal the history of hegemony | Reveals the mechanism by which meaning becomes entrenched over time | Shifts the issue from the level of example to the level of power formation |
| Popular culture contributed to shaping Islamic sensibility | Connects exegesis to social reception | Shows that the horizon of the possible is nourished by collective taste, not by the text alone |
The argumentative function
This structure grounds Arkoun’s critique of the authority of traditional exegesis by showing that meaning is not determined by the text alone, but by the network that surrounded it and narrowed its horizon; in doing so, it prepares the way for the necessity of a critical historical reading.
Bridges within the atlas
- Reading the Qur’an as historical discourse rather than as a closed self-evidence
- Structures of popular reception in the formation of religious meaning
- Mechanisms of symbolic hegemony in the interpretive tradition
Incoming atoms
- Early exegesis produces a continuous interpretive narrative
- Surah al-Kahf condenses the features of early exegesis
- The three concepts reveal the history of hegemony
- Popular culture contributed to shaping Islamic sensibility
Limits of the inference
This structure should not be generalized to all Islamic exegesis as if it were a single pattern; it describes a specific mechanism of narrowing that appears in this argumentative path, not an all-encompassing judgment on all forms of interpretation.