Muhammad, in this book, is not merely the focus of sanctity; he is also part of a historical reading of legislation and the Qur’anic narratives. Shahrur presents him as the bearer of a mission that inaugurated the age of cities and the civil state, while his legislation remains a historical ijtihad directed to a specific community.
- Arab identity is cultural, not racial
- The civil state is founded on rights and freedoms
- Constitutional shura has multiple referents
- The family began as the first human cell
- Freedom and knowledge are twins
- Freedom is a fundamental social phenomenon
- Freedom is constrained by the constitution
- Human society develops historically
- Human values found the state and society
- Law regulates practice within the constitution
- Monolithic systems lead to ruin
- The moral referent is fixed and binding
- Muhammadan legislation is historically situated
- Nations are defined by conduct and language
- Patriarchy followed transformations in property
- Pluralism expresses divine oneness
- The prophet has no guardianship over people
- The Qur’anic narratives carry historical laws
- Shura means democratic freedom
- Shura is based on pluralism
- Society passes through family stages
- Adam and the villages explain the transition from humanity to social destiny
- Adam represents the first human transition
- Those in authority are obeyed in their legislation, not in their persons
- Abraham purified the House; he did not build it
- Imbalance in the relationship produces despotism
- Monism leads to despotism and ruin
- Monism leads to ruin
- Monism produces injustice, despotism, and ruin
- Monism produces the unjust village
- Monism is a divine, not a social, attribute
- Monism is a divine attribute, not a human model
- Monism and despotism lead to ruin
- Morality is not made by authority
- The nation and Arabness are a linguistic-cultural identity
- Modern monolithic systems are a continuation of the village
- Monolithic systems carry the seeds of their own demise
- The economy arises from the development of instincts
- The Muhammadan mission inaugurated the age of cities
- The Sacred House predates Abraham
- Social history moves from monism to pluralism
- History and society judge monism as injustice and ruin
- History moves toward pluralism
- Pluralism makes the civil state
- Pluralism is a condition of development and freedom
- Pluralism is the basis of the state and civil society
- Thamud were a union of multiple tribes
- Freedom regulates human action between will and volition
- Freedom is the الأصل that the constitution delimits and law regulates
- Freedom, shura, and democracy
- Freedom and moral awareness explain human action and responsibility for injustice
- Fear of God needs defined limits
- Imagination turns into reality
- The civil state presupposes pluralism and the separation of powers
- The civil state is based on pluralism
- The civil state is based on freedom, pluralism, and organized citizenship
- The civil state is based on obedience to the law
- The civil state and civil society are the horizon of history because pluralism and freedom defeat monism
- Democracy mediates between the individual and society
- The revelations regulate coexistence and rights
- The revelations and the Muhammadan mission found a society of rights and pluralism
- Slavery is a historical phenomenon that can be dismantled
- Slavery and possession of right hands are two historical phenomena that can be dismantled
- Falsehood and despotism corrupt morality, while morality remains fixed above politics
- Falsehood disables the mind and generates guilt
- Associating partners with God rests on illusory fixity
- The divine law and its general outlines
- The American people bring together multiple ethnicities and nations
- The French people cohere within one state
- The people and the state translate plurality within a political unity
- The people includes nationality and nationhood
- Desires are born from instincts through knowledge
- Shura is constitutional democracy based on pluralism and organized referents
- Tyranny is the hallmark of monolithic thought
- Injustice is a deliberate, conscious act
- Injustice is a conscious act that leads to ruin
- Injustice requires freedom
- Injustice means placing a thing where it does not belong
- Reason and knowledge turn speech into action
- Contracts are an alternative basis to slavery
- Violence is justified as a means of lifting oppression
- The Qur’an establishes pluralism and prevents monism
- The historical religious reading explains the emergence of society and directs it toward rights
- Monolithic villages are doomed to ruin
- The affluent drive village deviance
- The religious domain is individual
- Human society develops historically toward more complex and organized forms
- Civil society is based on pluralism
- Society develops historically through the family and property
- Society passes through three historical stages
- Will is not volition
- Ruin differs from death
- Identity and group are understood as historical and cultural constructions within society
- Changing the collective mind is one of the hardest tasks
- Multiplying prohibitions narrows religion
- The binary of monism and pluralism
- Freedom of opinion is part of the civil state
- The signification of the boy and the girl
- The citizen state is the state capable of continuity
- Rejecting the confinement of possession of right hands to slavery
- The story of Moses and the righteous servant symbolizes the struggle between knowledge and law
- Domains of possession of right hands
- The meaning of ‘abd in usage
- Mecca is not suitable as a civil capital
- Mecca and the Sacred House are understood as a ritual condition preceding political construction
- Possession of right hands as contractual relations
- Possession of right hands is a transitional stage toward freedom
- The ruin of villages is linked to collective injustice