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E-book
Author Weiss, Bernard G

Title The search for God's law : Islamic jurisprudence in the writings of Sayf al-Dīn al-Āmidī / Bernard G. Weiss
Edition Revised ed
Published Salt Lake City : University Of Utah Press ; Herndon, Va. : International Institute of Islamic Thought, ©2010

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Description 1 online resource (xxx, 784 pages)
Series Utah Series in Turkish and Islamic Studies
Utah series in Turkish and Islamic studies.
Contents The Search for God's Law; Contents; Preface to the Revised Edition; Preface to the First Edition; Introduction; Part I Postulates; Chapter 1. The Theological Postulates; Chapter 2. The Fiqh Postulates; Chapter 3. The Lugha-related Postulates; Part II The Indicators of God's Law; Chapter 4. The Qur'ān and the Sunna; Chapter 5. The Ijmāc; Chapter 6. The Transmission of Texts; Chapter 7. Commands; Chapter 8. General and UnqualifiedExpressions; Chapter 9. Ambiguity, Lucidity, and Diversion to Nonapparent Meaning; Chapter 10. Implication; Chapter 11. Abrogation
Chapter 12. Analogy: Definition and Conditions of ValidityChapter 13. Analogy: Ascertaining the Occasioning Factor; Chapter 14. The Defense of Analogy; Chapter 15. Istidlāl and the Invalid Indicators; Part III Mujtahids, Muftīs, and Commoners; Chapter 16. Ijtihād and the Mujtahid; Chapter 17. Consultation and Advice: The Mujtahid as Muftī; Part IV The Weighing of Conflicting Indicators; Epilogue; Notes; Index
Summary In Islam, God is the sole, ultimate lawgiver. Given the absence of a living prophet, all law worthy of the name must therefore be derived from texts that contain divine revelation or possess authority grounded in that revelation. Classical Muslim jurisprudents regarded the effort to discover divine law through these texts exceedingly demanding, since it requires one to grapple with an enormous array of difficult text-critical and hermeneutic issues. Although the Qur'an itself was considered above challenge, other texts had to be subjected to rigorous tests of authenticity, while the meaning of the texts, Qur'anic and non-Qur'anic, became a topic of intense debate. Without an ecclesiastic institution vested with authority to proclaim "correct" interpretations, the development of law through interpretation became a largely individualistic enterprise, though imbued with a keen sense of communal responsibility
Using Amidi's work, Bernard Weiss explicates and discusses the various issues that define Islamic jurisprudence as an integrated system during the time of this important mainstream scholar. The Search for God's Law presents a lucid exposition of the relationship between sacred text and mundane law. It is the most comprehensive treatment of Islamic jurisprudence yet to appear in a Western language. --Book Jacket
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Āmidī, ʻAlī ibn Abī ʻAlī, 1156 or 1157-1233.
SUBJECT Āmidī, ʻAlī ibn Abī ʻAlī, 1156 or 1157-1233 fast
Subject Islamic law -- Interpretation and construction.
Islam and state.
RELIGION -- Islam -- Law.
Islam and state
Islamic law -- Interpretation and construction
Form Electronic book
Author International Institute of Islamic Thought.
ISBN 9781607819714
1607819716