Moral rationalism and Sharīʿa : independent rationality in modern Shīʿī uṣūl al-fiqh

著者

    • Bhojani, Ali Reza

書誌事項

Moral rationalism and Sharīʿa : independent rationality in modern Shīʿī uṣūl al-fiqh

Ali-Reza Bhojani

(Culture and civilization in the Middle East, 48)

Routledge, 2015

  • : hbk

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. [164]-169) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Moral Rationalism and Shari'a is the first attempt at outlining the scope for a theological reading of Shari'a, based on a critical examination of why 'Adliyya theological ethics have not significantly impacted Shi'i readings of Shari'a. Within Shi'i works of Shari 'a legal theory (usul al-fiqh) there is a theoretical space for reason as an independent source of normativity alongside the Qur'an and the Prophetic tradition. The position holds that humans are capable of understanding moral values independently of revelation. Describing themselves as 'Adliyya (literally the people of Justice), this allows the Shi 'a, who describe themselves as 'Adiliyya (literally, the People of Justice), to attribute a substantive rational conception of justice to God, both in terms of His actions and His regulative instructions. Despite the Shi'i adoption of this moral rationalism, independent judgments of rational morality play little or no role in the actual inference of Shari 'a norms within mainstream contemporary Shi'i thought. Through a close examination of the notion of independent rationality as a source in modern Shi'i usul al-fiqh, the obstacles preventing this moral rationalism from impacting the understanding of Shari 'a are shown to be purely epistemic. In line with the 'emic' (insider) approach adopted, these epistemic obstacles are revisited identifying the scope for allowing a reading of Shari'a that is consistent with the fundamental moral rationalism of Shi'i thought. It is argued that judgments of rational morality, even when not definitively certain, cannot be ignored in the face of the apparent meaning of texts that are themselves also not certain. An 'Adliyya reading of Shari'a demands that the strength of independent rational evidence be reconciled against the strength of any other apparently conflicting evidence, such that independent judgments of rational morality act as a condition for the validity of precepts attributed to a just and moral God.

目次

Introduction 1 Reason as a source of Shari 'a in Shi 'i usul al-fiqh 2 The intelligibility of moral values in Shi 'i theological thought 3 The nature of morality, rationality and independent judgments of rational morality in modern Shi 'i usul al-fiqh 4 The nature of morality, rationality and independent judgments of rational morality in modern Shi 'i usul al-fiqh 5 Reassessing the obstacles to independent judgments of rational morality impacting the reading of Shari 'a

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