Summary of the Thesis
Shahrur sees the occasions of revelation as not constituting a comprehensive key to understanding the Qur’an, and argues that generalizing from them leads to a deterministic reading. He also distinguishes between the text itself and the inherited interpretation that may conceal meaning rather than reveal it.
Foundational Atoms
- Reasons for revelation are not a comprehensive key
- Generalizing the reasons for revelation leads to determinism
- Inherited interpretation conceals the text
- The Salafi reading makes the past an absolute reference
- What is fixed is the text, while the content is renewed
Place of Support within the Book
This meaning is concentrated in the first section of the book, in the context of a critique of the reasons for revelation and Salafi interpretation, and a call for a contemporary reading of the text.
Limits of the Reading
Reliance on reasons and reports here is limited, because the aim is to distinguish between the text and the historical understanding that has accumulated around it.