Cognate conceptual relations are organized into larger families. The detailed pages remain for their specific proofs and angles; this entry, however, brings the unifying relation into focus before moving on to the partial formulations.

Its place in the atlas

  • The unifying relation brings together more than one cognate formulation that has appeared in the relations pages.
  • The partial formulations remain present because they carry distinct proofs or different angles.
  • When there is a real difference between formulations, the partial formulation is read within its own group, not as a completely independent relation.

Relations that require a unifying reading

There are families in which the same idea recurs under more than one title. The most prominent are: the Qur’anic narratives and their function, Islam as a general horizon, the Wise Revelation and the fixity of the text and the mobility of understanding, the civil state, pluralism, and law, monism and its consequences, the messengerly and prophetic Sunna, and prohibition and the limits of state authority.

The existence of partial formulations is useful when they carry a specific proof, but the best entry point for reading is through the unifying family first.

The Mother of the Book: fixed determinate verses and the basis of the message

Three very close themes recur here: that the Mother of the Book consists of fixed determinate verses, that it is the basis of the message, and that it is the locus of commands and prohibitions. They describe a single conceptual field with different angles of presentation.

Formulations included in this relation

Monism: the opposite of pluralism and its outcome of injustice, despotism, and ruin

The titles converge around the outcomes of monism: backwardness, injustice, despotism, ruin, and the unjust village. The differences among them lie more in the angle of exposition than in the core idea.

Formulations included in this relation

Islam: a general human horizon prior to and broader than private faith

Here, formulations addressing precedence of the mission, human universality, and transcendence of narrow religious affiliation appear side by side. They are united by reading Islam as a general ethical horizon that is not confined to private belief.

Formulations included in this relation

The human being as a principal agent in history

These formulations affirm the presence of the human being as an agent in history, differing in degree of detail rather than in overall direction.

Formulations included in this relation

Prohibition: a divine authority not possessed by the state or by humans

These formulations bring together the restriction of prohibition to God or to messenger authority, and the denial that the modern state possesses this authority.

Formulations included in this relation

Pluralism as the basis of the civil state, civil society, and freedom

These formulations link pluralism with the civil state and civil society, and connect them to development and freedom. They are therefore read within a single political and social field.

Formulations included in this relation

the Wise Revelation: a living discourse with a fixed text and ever-renewed understanding

These titles revolve around the nature of the Wise Revelation: it is not a history book, it bears the quality of life, it requires a contemporary reading, and it is fixed in text while understanding remains dynamic; it offers knowledge rather than mere history.

Formulations included in this relation

Jihad is broader than fighting

The two titles meet in expanding the meaning of jihad, so that it is not confined to fighting and is not separate from establishing truth.

Formulations included in this relation

Freedom: the foundation of humanity and yet constrained by reality

These formulations present freedom as the basis of humanity, trace its manifestation in action and behavior, and note its limits in reality.

Formulations included in this relation

The Muhammadan message: establishing equality, critiquing masculinity, and internal abrogation

These formulations relate to the field of the Muhammadan message from multiple angles: equality between male and female, critique of patriarchal norms, rebuilding social life, and the denial of internal abrogation.

Formulations included in this relation

Sunna: dividing it into messengerly and prophetic

The two titles address the same division of the Sunna according to status: messengerly Sunna and prophetic Sunna.

Formulations included in this relation

Witnessing: a cognitive presence, not battlefield killing

These titles deny that witnessing is confined to being killed, and open its meaning to presence and knowledge.

Formulations included in this relation

Polytheism: fixing what is mutable and clinging to illusory permanence

The two titles converge in linking polytheism to fixing what is mutable and to clinging to an illusory permanence that rejects change.

Formulations included in this relation

The Qur’anic narratives: for moral reflection, knowledge, and extracting patterns, not for legislation

The formulations around the Qur’anic narratives gather around moral reflection, knowledge, and the extraction of patterns, while denying that narratives are to be turned into direct legislative material.

Formulations included in this relation

The Qur’an: semantic differentiation, reference, and knowledge

These titles approach the Qur’an from closely related angles: objective laws, the consolidation of pluralism, affirmation of some of what came before, differentiation between terms, and harmony with modern science. They are unified by the field of Qur’anic reference and semantic differentiation.

Formulations included in this relation

The civil state: law, citizenship, and pluralism without prohibition

These formulations overlap in constructing the model of the civil state: pluralism, separation of powers, obedience to law, protection of opinion, and the absence of authority over prohibition.

Formulations included in this relation

Report and tidings: presence and witnessing versus the unseen

The two titles distinguish between report and tidings in terms of their relation to presence and witnessing, or to the unseen, within a single semantic distinction.

Formulations included in this relation

Interpretation: correspondence to reality, reason, and objective outcome

The two titles point to interpretation as correspondence with reality and reason, culminating in a truth or law whose understanding changes historically.

Formulations included in this relation