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Early Islamic Legal Theory: The Risala of Muhammad Ibn Idris Al-shafi-i (Studies in Islamic Law and Society) PDF

460 Pages·2007·2.25 MB·English
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Early Islamic Legal Theory LOWRY_f1_i-xvi.indd i 11/13/2007 5:13:46 PM Studies in Islamic Law and Society Founding Editor Bernard Weiss Edited by Ruud Peters and Kevin Reinhart VOLUME 30 LOWRY_f1_i-xvi.indd ii 11/13/2007 5:13:47 PM Early Islamic Legal Theory (cid:2) (cid:2) (cid:3) (cid:4) (cid:5)(cid:3) The Ris la of Mu ammad ibn Idr s al-Sh (cid:2) By Joseph E. Lowry LEIDEN • BOSTON 2007 LOWRY_f1_i-xvi.indd iii 11/13/2007 5:13:47 PM This book is printed on acid-free paper. A Cataloging-in-Publication record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. ISSN 1384-1130 ISBN 978 90 04 16360 7 Copyright 2007 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. Koninklijke Brill NV incorporates the imprints Brill, Hotei Publishing, IDC Publishers, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers and VSP. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Koninklijke Brill NV provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to The Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Suite 910, Danvers, MA 01923, USA. Fees are subject to change. printed in the netherlands LOWRY_f1_i-xvi.indd iv 11/13/2007 5:13:47 PM For Larry, Louise, Vanessa, Jonathan, and Michael LOWRY_f1_i-xvi.indd v 11/13/2007 5:13:47 PM LOWRY_f1_i-xvi.indd vi 11/13/2007 5:13:47 PM CONTENTS Acknowledgments ....................................................................... xiii Abbreviations .............................................................................. xv Introduction ................................................................................ 1 Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3) and Early Islamic Law ................................................ 2 Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Life ............................................................................. 6 Works Attributed to Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3) ..................................................... 7 Previous Studies of Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Legal Thought and the Ris(cid:2)la .................................................................................... 8 Method .................................................................................... 16 This Study ............................................................................... 19 Conventions ............................................................................ 21 Chapter One Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Concept of the Bay(cid:2)n .......................... 23 I. Introduction .................................................................... 23 II. The Idea at the Heart of the Ris(cid:2)la: Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Concept of the Bay(cid:2)n .................................................................... 23 A. Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s De(cid:2) nition of the Bay(cid:2)n ............................... 25 B. The First Mode of the Bay(cid:2)n: Stand-alone Qur(cid:6)(cid:4)nic Texts .......................................................... 26 C. The Second Mode of the Bay(cid:2)n: Qur(cid:6)(cid:4)n and Redundant Sunna ..................................................... 27 D. The Third Mode of the Bay(cid:2)n: Qur(cid:6)(cid:4)n and Explanatory Sunna ................................................... 30 E. The Fourth Mode of the Bay(cid:2)n: Stand-alone Sunnaic Texts ............................................................ 31 F. The Fifth Mode of the Bay(cid:2)n: Ijtih(cid:2)d and Qiy(cid:2)s ....... 32 G. Implications of Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Concept of the Bay(cid:2)n ........ 33 H. Mention of the Bay(cid:2)n Schema Elsewhere in the Ris(cid:2)la ................................................................... 34 III. The Bay(cid:2)n and the Structure of the Ris(cid:2)la .................... 41 IV. Previous Scholarly Accounts of Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Notion of the Bay(cid:2)n ......................................................................... 46 LOWRY_f1_i-xvi.indd vii 11/13/2007 5:13:47 PM viii contents V. The Reception of Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Concept of the Bay(cid:2)n ......... 51 A. J(cid:4)(cid:2)i(cid:7) .......................................................................... 51 B. The Case of Ja(cid:8)(cid:8)(cid:4)(cid:8) ................................................... 55 C. Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Bay(cid:2)n in Other U(cid:3)(cid:4)l Works: A Very Brief Tour ................................................................. 56 VI. Conclusion ...................................................................... 58 Chapter Two Hermeneutical Techniques ............................... 61 I. Introduction .................................................................... 61 II. General Hermeneutical Terms and Principles .............. 63 III. Hermeneutical Rubrics Describing Source Interaction ....................................................................... 69 A. (cid:5)(cid:6)mm and Kh(cid:2)(cid:3)(cid:3) ......................................................... 69 1. Structure of the Ris(cid:2)la’s Discussion of (cid:5)(cid:6)mm and Kh(cid:2)(cid:3)(cid:3) .............................................................. 72 2. Inheritance ........................................................... 79 3. Ablutions .............................................................. 80 4. Theft .................................................................... 83 5. Unlawful Sexual Intercourse ............................... 83 6. Division of the Spoils of War ............................. 84 7. Other Appeals to and Uses of (cid:5)(cid:6)mm and Kh(cid:2)(cid:3)(cid:3) ..................................................................... 85 B. Abrogation (Naskh) .................................................... 87 1. Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Theory of Naskh ..................................... 89 2. The Penalty for Unlawful Sexual Intercourse .... 93 C. The Jumla:Na(cid:3)(cid:3) Rubric .............................................. 104 1. Independent Qur(cid:6)(cid:4)nic Injunctions: Rama(cid:9)(cid:4)n .... 108 2. Quasi-Self Suf(cid:2) cient Qur(cid:6)(cid:4)nic Texts: Spousal Accusations of Adultery ...................................... 109 3. Why Have Redundant (cid:7)ad(cid:8)ths? The Case of Ablutions .............................................................. 111 4. Jumla: A Legal Rule Expressed Jointly by the Qur(cid:6)(cid:4)n and the Sunna ........................................ 113 5. Divorce and Remarriage ..................................... 113 6. Inheritance ........................................................... 114 7. Jumla and (cid:5)(cid:6)mm .................................................... 116 8. Sunna as Na(cid:3)(cid:3) ....................................................... 117 IV. Hermeneutical Rubrics Speci(cid:2) c to the Hadith ............. 118 A. Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Outline of Hermeneutical Dif(cid:2) culties Affecting the Sunna .................................................. 119 LOWRY_f1_i-xvi.indd viii 11/13/2007 5:13:47 PM contents ix B. The Distinction between Contradiction and Source Interaction Reiterated .................................. 123 C. Speci(cid:2) c Techniques for Resolving Contradictions within the Hadith Corpus ........................................ 125 1. Ikhtil(cid:2)f al-(cid:7)ad(cid:8)th ................................................... 126 a. Prayer during Battle Conditions .................... 128 b. Humanitarian Law and the Law of War ...... 131 2. Prohibitions in the Hadith (Nahy) ........................ 134 V. Ijtih(cid:2)d and Qiy(cid:2)s ............................................................... 142 A. The Function of Ijtih(cid:2)d and Qiy(cid:2)s and the Authority for Using Them ....................................... 144 B. Examples of Applied Ijtih(cid:2)d as Metaphors for Legal Epistemology ................................................... 146 C. Types of Qiy(cid:2)s ........................................................... 149 D. When Qiy(cid:2)s May not be Used .................................. 155 E. Examples of Applied Qiy(cid:2)s ....................................... 156 1. Shabah-Based Qiy(cid:2)s ............................................... 157 2. Ma(cid:5)n(cid:2)-Based Qiy(cid:2)s and Reasoning A Fortiori ................................................................ 158 VI. Conclusion ...................................................................... 163 Chapter Three Prophetic Sunna and Hadith in the Ris(cid:2)la .... 165 I. Introduction .................................................................... 165 A. The Term Sunna Prior to Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3) .............................. 167 II. The Authority of the Sunna .......................................... 170 A. Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s General Arguments for the Authority of the Sunna ............................................................. 170 B. Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Claim that (cid:7)ikma in the Qur(cid:6)(cid:4)n Means “Sunna” .................................................................... 176 1. Sh(cid:4)(cid:2) (cid:5)(cid:3)’s Qur(cid:6)(cid:4)nic Proof Texts ............................. 177 2. Extra-Exegetical Currents ................................... 184 III. The Khabar al-W(cid:2)(cid:9)id and its Wider Implications ........... 187 A. Authority for Using the Khabar al-W(cid:2)(cid:9)id .................. 189 B. Hermeneutical Aspects of the Khabar al-W(cid:2)(cid:9)id ....... 191 1. Personal Qualities of Transmitters ..................... 193 2. The Analogy with Testimony .............................. 194 3. Formal Characteristics of Isn(cid:2)ds .......................... 197 C. Epistemological Aspects of the Khabar al-W(cid:2)(cid:9)id and Lesser Varieties of Hadith ................................. 200 1. Recurrence vs. Non-Recurrence ......................... 200 LOWRY_f1_i-xvi.indd ix 11/13/2007 5:13:47 PM

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The Risala of al-Shafii (d. 204/820), the earliest preserved work of Islamic legal theory, has been understood in previous scholarship as the elaboration of a hierarchy of sources of law (Quran, Sunna, consensus, and analogical reasoning).
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