Formulation of the Claim

European modernity is presented as a violent intrusion into the Islamic world.

Explanation

In Arkoun’s thought, modernity here is not understood as a calm transition or a natural progression, but as a force that came from outside and produced a shock in the Islamic sphere. The description is therefore linked to violence as a historical and epistemic effect, not merely as a moral judgment on modernity itself.

This claim places the reader before an unequal relationship between two worlds, where modernization does not appear as simple absorption, but as an incursion that imposed its questions, tools, and ways of understanding. Its most important effect thus becomes the disruption of inherited structures and the forcing of those structures to confront a new reality.

Its Place in the Book’s Argument

This atom falls within Arkoun’s broader position on the relationship of Islamic societies to Western modernity, where he does not merely describe lag or resistance, but also attends to the very nature of modernity’s entry and how its relationship to the Islamic world took shape. It therefore approaches other theses in the book related to rupture, shock, and the difficulty of introducing historical critique into the religious sphere.

Limits of the Claim

This atom should not be made to bear more than it can; it describes the mode of modernity’s entry and its effects, but it does not say that modernity was entirely violent in itself, nor that it closed off every possibility of interaction or reception.

Brief Evidence

European modernity is not understood here as a calm transition or a natural progression, but as a force that came from outside and produced a shock in the Islamic sphere. The text therefore describes its entry into the Islamic world as a violent intrusion. This description is tied to a historical and epistemic effect, not only to a moral judgment.