Formulating the Claim

The text links European progress to self-critique and makes the continuous revision of ideas and institutions part of the reasons for development.

Explanation

European progress is not presented here as the result of material or scientific factors alone, but as a path that was also associated with a clear tendency toward self-critique. Societies that continually reassess their ideas and institutions are better able to develop and correct their mistakes. Self-critique therefore appears not as an abstract moral value, but as an active element in historical movement.

Its Place in the Book’s Argument

This idea serves to create an implicit comparison with the contemporary Islamic context. And when the text links European progress to self-critique, it is not praising Europe for its own sake; rather, it uses it as an example of the relation between revision and progress. In this way, the claim enters into a broader argument: any renaissance requires mechanisms of examination and accountability similar to those that made this progress possible.

Brief Evidence

The text affirms that European progress was not associated with material or scientific factors alone, but was also accompanied by a clear tendency toward self-critique. Societies that continually reassess their ideas and institutions are better able to develop and correct their mistakes. Self-critique therefore appears here as one element of progress, not merely a peripheral stance.

Where Is Contemporary Islamic Thought?