The Qur’anic structure of the concept of book, Qur’an, and remembrance

This work constitutes an in-depth Qur’anic study of central concepts that recur in the Qur’anic discourse, namely: (The Book, the Qur’an, and *Dhikr*. The researcher starts from a clear critique of traditional interpretive readings. This research adopts a structuralist approach that extracts the concept from within the Qur’anic text itself, based on linguistic and contextual analysis.
The book highlights the concept of (the Book) as a comprehensive divine knowledge system that includes the laws of existence, guidance, and reward, and acts as a cosmic organizational framework that governs existence and beings through the “Cosmic Book,” not just as a religious document. The author elaborates on the functions of the Book as revelation, predestination, collector, speaker, and ruler, and each function is carefully analyzed and linked to the context of the verses in which it is mentioned.
The Qur’an is presented as the graphical mechanism that downloads knowledge from the Mother of the Book to human perception. It does not replace the Book, but is a manifestation of it, a conceptual translation of a higher revelation. Dhikr is presented as a link between the two dimensions, acting as a living archive in human consciousness, available for recall and interaction.
One of the most notable features of this research is the depth of structural analysis: The depth of structural analysis, precise semantic awareness, and full commitment to the Qur’anic textual structure without falling into external projections, which makes the book a suitable model for contemporary Qur’anic studies, especially for those seeking to understand the Book as a cosmic and cognitive structure and not just a text.



