Religion, law and learning in classical Islam

Bibliographic Information

Religion, law and learning in classical Islam

George Makdisi

(Collected studies series, CS347)

Variorum, c1991

Available at  / 23 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

"This volume consists of x + 324 pages"--Contents

Publisher of 2010 printing: Ashgate Variorum

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This second selection of articles by George Makdisi concentrates on the schools of religious thought and legal learning in the medieval Islamic world and their defence of 'orthodoxy'. The author aims to review and re-assess the implications of the conflict between, first, the 'rationalist' and the 'traditional' theologians (the one accepting the influence of Greek philosophy, the other rejecting it), and then between one of these traditionalist schools - the Hanbali school of law - and Sufi mysticism. One of the most important consequences of the first of these confrontations, he contends, was the emergence of the schools of law as the guardians of the faith and theological orthodoxy. The final section of the book also looks at the structure of legal learning, at the institutions themselves, their organization and the principles upon which they operated. As well as entering the debate over the existence of corporations and guilds of law in classical Islam - maintaining that they did exist - these articles further suggest links between such institutions and the evolution of universities in the medieval West, and the Inns of Court in England, and discuss the Islamic and Arabic contribution to the concepts of academic amd intellectual freedom and to the development of scholasticism and humanism. Cette seconde collection d'articles par George Makdisi se concentre sur les ecoles de la pensee religieuse et de la science juridique, dans le monde islamique medieval. L'auteur a pris pour objectif de reviser et de re-evaluer les implications du conflit entre, premierement, les theologiens rationalistes et traditionalistes (les premieres etant ouverts A l'influence de la philosophie grecque que les seconds rejettaient) et, deuxiemement, entre l'une de ces ecoles traditionalistes - l'ecole de droit Hanbali - et le mysticisme Sufi. L'une des consequences les plus importantes, selon lui, de la premiere de ces confrontations A ete la po

Table of Contents

  • Contents: Foreword
  • Ash'ari and the Ash'arites in Islamic religious history
  • The judicial theology of Shafi'i: origins and significance of usul al-fiqh
  • Al-Ghazali disciple de Shafi'i en droit et en theologie
  • Ethics in Islamic traditionalist doctrine
  • The Hanbali School and Sufism
  • L'isnad initiatique soufi de Muqaffaq ad-Din Ibn Qudama
  • Ibn Taimiya: a Sufi of the Qadiriya order
  • Muslim institutions of learning in 11th-century Baghdad
  • Institutionalized learning as a self-image
  • La corporation A l'epoque classique de l'Islam
  • The guilds of law in medieval legal history: an enquiry into the origins of the Inns of Court
  • Freedom in Islamic jurisprudence: ijtihad, taglid, and academic freedom
  • Scholasticism and humanism in classical Islam and the Christian West
  • Addenda
  • Index.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

  • NCID
    BA13326707
  • ISBN
    • 9780860783015
  • LCCN
    91019932
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    engfre
  • Place of Publication
    [Aldershot], Hampshire, Great Britain ; Brookfield, Vt., USA
  • Pages/Volumes
    1 v. (various pages)
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
Page Top