Intended Meaning

For Shahrur, Islam is a general religion of human nature; it is not limited to one group over another. It is addressed to all people and rests on a shared human foundation in harmony with human nature.

The Atom’s Structure in the Atlas

  • Type of argument: definitional
  • Argument movement: Islam is defined as a general religion in harmony with human nature.
  • Key terms: Islam, human nature, all people, universality.
  • Degree of centrality: central.

It shifts Islam from the meaning of closed affiliation to the meaning of general human nature, thereby linking it to the human being as such, not to a particular group or a narrow ritual identity.

Reading Aids

Grounds

  • Supporting text: “Islam is a general religion of human nature and of all people.”

Location of the Grounds in the Book

  • Book: Islam and Faith.
  • Location: near the beginning of the book, in the explanation of Islam and human nature
  • Type of support: direct evidence.
  • Marker that helps verification: Islam is the religion of human nature
  • Reading note: the text explicitly states that Islam is the religion of human nature, which makes the atom suitable for publication.

Degree of Documentation

  • Level: directly documented
  • Meaning of the level: the atom relies on an explicit witness close to the formulation of the claim.
  • Limits of reading: the formulation above is an analytical summary and should not be treated as a verbatim quotation unless the witness is quoted word for word.

Its Function in the Book

Its function here is definitional; it establishes a meaning or conceptual distinction on which Shahrur relies in building the idea.

Editorial Note

The atom needs a clearer distinction between the universality of human nature and the specificity of ritual obligation.