Thesis Summary
Shahrur holds that falsehood disables reason and generates guilt, and that morality is not made by power or coercion. By contrast, the moral reference remains fixed and binding, while despotism corrupts the public sphere and narrows religion.
Foundational Atoms
- Falsehood disables reason and generates guilt
- Morality is not made by power
- The moral reference is fixed and binding
- Fear of God requires clear limits
- Multiplying prohibitions narrows religion
- Changing the collective mind is one of the hardest tasks
Place of Reference Within the Book
This appears in the early parts of the book and in its later sections, where discussion of the collective mind, moral law, and the boundaries of prohibition is tied to what corrupts or rectifies social life.
Limits of the Reading
This formulation brings morality, religion, and politics into a single line of argument, but that does not mean that every place in the book addresses them in the same order.