The Synthetic Judgment
The interpretive condition in Islam produces an internal plurality in reading, where difference coexists with the continuing debate between reason and revelation, so that meaning does not settle into a single form.
What Emerges from the Conjunction of Atoms
The atoms show that interpretive plurality is not incidental to Islam but emerges from its own discursive structure. The continuing debate between reason and revelation means that understanding is not settled from one side alone, but takes shape within a constant tension between two poles, neither of which dissolves into the other. With the introduction of the historical-critical approach, this debate becomes readable as part of the history of meaning rather than merely a passing disagreement about it. Thus, religious readings here do not appear as identical versions, but as conflicting movements operating within an open field governed by the tension between reference and interpretation, and between epistemic authority and historical openness. From the conjunction of these elements, the interpretive condition is formed not as a mental description, but as a structure of understanding itself.
The Logic of Synthesis
| Atom | Its Role in the Synthesis | What It Adds |
|---|---|---|
| The continuing debate between reason and revelation | Defines the original structure of difference | Shows that plurality is rooted internally |
| The historical-critical approach as a necessity for understanding | Opens reading onto history | Makes interpretation traceable and analyzable |
| The continuing debate between reason and revelation | Reaffirms the lack of final resolution | Clarifies that the conflict is structural, not incidental |
| The historical-critical approach as a necessity for understanding | Balances the debate through method | Links meaning to its historical context |
The Argumentative Function
Expansion.
Incoming Atoms
- The continuing debate between reason and revelation
- The historical-critical approach as a necessity for understanding
Limits of the Inference
This synthesis does not indicate absolute interpretive chaos, but rather a regulated plurality within a specific conflict over authority and knowledge.