Intended Meaning
Shahrur links human freedom to the rejection of historical determinism: history, for him, does not unfold according to the hard laws of nature. God’s knowledge encompasses all possibilities, but it does not make the human being compelled to a single choice; rather, the human remains a principal agent in bringing about their act.
The Atom’s Structure in the Atlas
- Type of argument: value-based
- Movement of the argument: it distinguishes between the comprehensiveness of divine knowledge and the denial of human freedom.
- Central terms: God’s knowledge, human freedom, historical determinism, possibilities.
- Degree of centrality: subsidiary.
Protecting the idea of responsibility from slipping into determinism, by keeping divine knowledge comprehensive without turning it into compulsion toward a single act.
Links That Help with Reading
Basis
- Supporting text: “Shahrur links the concept of human freedom to the rejection of historical determinism: history is not like the laws of nature, and the human being is a principal agent within it, while God’s knowledge encompasses possibilities without compelling the human being to a single choice.”
Place of the Basis in the Book
- Book: The Qur’anic Narrative, Part 2.
- Location: in the middle section of the book within the discussion of freedom and God’s knowledge.
- Type of basis: close witness.
- Marker that helps verification: the human being is free in choosing
- Reading note: the location states that God’s knowledge does not turn into control over actions and that the human being is free in choosing, which supports the atom.
Degree of Documentation
- Level: directly documented
- Meaning of the level: the atom rests on an explicit witness close to the wording 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 argumentative; it supports a larger conclusion in the chapter or prepares for it.
Editorial Note
The atom affirms the possibility of human action within divine comprehensiveness.