The Idea
Arkoun distinguishes between historical Islam and European modernity, and says that Muslim societies did not know modernity in its European sense, even during periods of strength. This does not mean denying scientific or political achievements, but rather that the intellectual transformation Europe experienced did not occur in the same way. Hence the need arises to understand the difference rather than equate the experiences.
Concise Formulation
Historical Islam: did not know modernity in the European sense
Its Place in the Book’s Argument
This claim is central to the book’s logic because it prevents projecting European concepts onto the history of Islam without distinction. The argument is that every experience has its own history, and that understanding delay or difference requires careful comparison, not broad judgments. For this reason, the book presents modernity as a criterion for comparison, not as a ready-made judgment.
Why It Matters
Its importance appears in that it explains why reforming modern Islamic thought is difficult: the problem is not only a lack of technical progress, but the absence of a deep transformation in modes of thinking. From here we understand that Arkoun wants to read the history of Islam within the questions of modernity, not outside them and not as a replica of them.
Reading Questions
- What is the difference between historical progress and modernity in its intellectual sense?
- Why does Arkoun insist on distinguishing between the Islamic and European experiences?
Level of Documentation
High: the claim appears in a clear location within the book’s material.