This study maps the aesthetic vocabulary of the Holy Quran through a corpus analysis of ten Arabic roots (Ḥusn, Jamāl, Tazyīn, Bahjah, Taswiyah, Taṣwīr, Tartīl, Badī’, Zukhruf, Tarkīb) and proposes an analytical framework derived from the patterns that emerge. The study argues that Quranic beauty operates primarily as a method—a way of making, proportioning, and presenting—that produces genuine aesthetic experience. The Quran also identifies a critical tension: the same method that reveals truth can conceal it. In response, it calls not for the restriction of beauty but for holistic perceptual awareness. Situated within the contemporary debate on aesthetics and ethics (Gaut’s ethicism, Carroll’s moderate moralism, the Greek kalon), the Quranic data suggests a distinctive position: beauty is experientially autonomous yet structurally consequential. A supplementary verse-level chronological analysis suggests that structural beauty concepts tend to appear in the Meccan period before critical ones, though this finding is offered cautiously given the inherent limitations of traditional nuzūl chronology. The framework is an analytical construction, not a doctrine attributed to the Quran.
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Muzaffer Malkoç
Istanbul Medipol University
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Muzaffer Malkoç (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69c2299aaeb5a845df0d43de — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19168360