Thesis Summary
Shahrur criticizes Salafi thought because it marginalizes the human being and strips them of the right to understand, turning religion into a tool of social and political control. This effect extends into the public sphere when the authority of the jurist and the ruler overlap in directing reality.
Foundational Atoms
- The Salafi mind marginalizes the human being
- The Salafi mind deprives the human being of the right to understand
- The jurist and the ruler dominate reality
- Objectives are turned into an instrument of authority
- Human history is not as deterministic as nature
Place of Reliance within the Book
This reading appears in the first section, within the critique of backward-looking thought and the authority that confines understanding to what is non-human, along with the related critique of concepts that are harnessed to consolidate authority.
Limits of the Reading
The argument here is critical and composite, bringing together more than one closely related passage. It describes a general effect of the Salafi reading, not a judgment on all religious people.