The unifying idea
Shahrur links the renewal of Islamic thought to liberating the instruments of knowledge from rigid inherited tradition, then reconnecting jurisprudence and politics to the Qur’an as a continually renewed point of reference.
The propositions within the axis
- The crisis of the Arab mind stems from inherited epistemic tools that paralyze the production of knowledge.
- The Qur’an is a renewed reference that requires a contemporary reading and open-ended ijtihad.
- Jurisprudence is a historical human heritage that does not possess authority equal to that of the Qur’an.
- Islam is a value framework that consolidates conceptual distinction and pluralism.
Support for the axis from the atoms
- The Arab mind suffers from three ills
- The crisis of knowledge in the Arab mind
- The Qur’an: a new contemporary reading
- The Qur’an is the highest reference
- Traditional jurisprudence is a historical construct
- Jurisprudence is a human historical understanding
- Islam is broader than ritual practices
- Islam distinguishes between concepts
Reading method
This axis brings together a critique of the old instrument and the construction of a new horizon for reading. Thus, the return to the Qur’an here is understood as the renewal of both knowledge and jurisprudence, not merely as a traditional invocation of heritage.