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9781851683246

Lessons in Islamic Jurisprudence

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9781851683246

  • ISBN10:

    1851683240

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2003-10-01
  • Publisher: Oneworld Pubns Ltd
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List Price: $60.00

Summary

This is an English translation of one of the most famous texts by thenfluential and charismatic Islamic activist, as-Sadr, who was executed byaddam Hussein in Iraq in 1980. As-Sadr's books have made him one of the mostelebrated Arab Muslim intellectuals of modern times.;This text is usedhroughout the Sunni and Shi'a world by students of Islamic jurisprudenceecause of its succinctness and intellectual vigour. Mottahedeh's translations accompanied by a detailed introduction which explains and places inontext as-Sadr's views.;Representing an attempt to relate a large body ofslamic law to scripture, this translation should be of great interest totudents of scripture, hermeneutics and law.

Table of Contents

Preface vii
Introduction 1(34)
1 Characterization of Jurisprudence
A preliminary word
35(2)
Characterization of jurisprudence
37(2)
The subject-matter of jurisprudence
39(1)
The discipline of jurisprudence is the logic of legal understanding
40(1)
The importance of the discipline of jurisprudence in the practice of derivation
41(1)
Jurisprudence is to legal understanding as theory is to application
42(2)
The interaction between legal-understanding thought and jurisprudential thought
44(2)
The permissibility of the process of deriving divine-legal rulings
46(8)
2 Substantiating Arguments
The divine-law ruling and its subdivision
54(1)
The division of rulings into injunctive and declaratory
55(1)
Categories of the injunctive ruling
56(1)
Areas of discussion in the discipline of jurisprudence
57(1)
Division of the discussion according to types
57(1)
[Probativity of assurance is] the element common to both types
58(4)
Type 1: substantiating arguments
62(1)
Subdivisions of the discussion
63(1)
1. The divine-law argument
64(1)
A. THE VERBAL DIVINE-LAW ARGUMENT
64(36)
Introduction
64(1)
What "designation" and "lexical connection" are
65(5)
What is "use"?
70(2)
Literal speech and figurative speech
72(1)
The figurative is sometimes turned into the literal
73(1)
The classification of language into substantive and relational meanings
73(2)
The form of the sentence
75(1)
The complete sentence and the incomplete sentence
76(1)
The lexical signified and the assentable signified
77(3)
Declarative and performative sentences
80(2)
Significations which jurisprudence discusses
82(9)
i. The form of the imperative
83(2)
ii. The prohibitive form of the verb
85(2)
iii. Absolute expression
87(1)
iv. Particles of generality
88(1)
v. The particle of the conditional
89(2)
The probativity of the prima-facie meaning
91(3)
Applications of the principle of the probativity of the prima-facie sense to verbal arguments
94(2)
The connected and independent context
96(1)
Establishing the source
97(3)
B. THE NON-VERBAL DIVINE-LAW ARGUMENT
100(19)
Rational arguments: the study of rational connections
103(2)
Subdivision of the discussion
105(1)
Connections arising between one ruling and another
105(4)
i. The connection between mandatory and prohibited
105(3)
ii. Does prohibitedness require invalidation?
108(1)
Connections arising between a ruling and its subject
109(16)
Promulgation and actuality
109(2)
The subject of a ruling
111(1)
Connections between a ruling and its dependent object
112(1)
Connections arising between a ruling and its necessary preliminaries
113(3)
Connections within a single ruling
116
3 Procedural Principles
Introduction
119(1)
1. The fundamental procedural principle
120(3)
2. The secondary procedural principle
123(2)
3. The principle of the inculpatoriness of non-specific knowledge
125(7)
The inculpatoriness of non-specific knowledge
127(3)
The analytical resolution of non-specific knowledge
130(1)
Occasions of hesitation
130(2)
4. The presumption of continuity
132(5)
The previous condition of certainty
133(1)
Doubt concerning persistence
134(2)
Unity of the subject and the presumption of continuity
136(1)
4 The Conflict of Arguments
1. Conflict between substantiating arguments
137(4)
The case of conflict between two verbal arguments
138(2)
Other situations of conflict
140(1)
2. Conflict between [procedural] principles
141(2)
3. Conflict between the two types of argument
143(2)
Summary 145(28)
Glossary 173(22)
Arabic terms mentioned in the glossary 195(6)
Index 201

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