raʾy

Islam

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Assorted References

  • ijtihād
    • In ijtihād

      …mainly in the form of raʾy (personal judgment) and qiyās (analogical reasoning), and those who did so were termed mujtahids. But with the crystallization of legal schools (madhhabs) under the ʿAbbāsids (reigned 750–1258), jurists of the majority Sunni branch of Islam came to

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    • Abu Darweesh Mosque
      In Islam: Sources of Islamic doctrinal and social views

      …form of individual opinion (raʾy), there was a wealth of conflicting and chaotic opinions. In the 2nd century ah ijtihād was replaced by qiyās (reasoning by strict analogy), a formal procedure of deduction based on the texts of the Qurʾān and the Hadith. The transformation of ijmāʿ into a…

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  • qiyas
    • In qiyas

      It is also related to raʾy, personal thought and opinion, a forerunner of qiyas criticized by traditional authorities as too arbitrary.

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  • tafsīr
    • In tafsīr

      …on the basis of pure personal speculation, known as tafsīr bil-raʾy, and such interpretation, though generally disapproved, has persisted down to the present time. Others explained or embellished Qurʾānic passages using stories drawn from Christian—and especially from Jewish—sources (Isrāʾīliyyāt). To counter the arbitrariness of such interpretation, in the fourth Islamic…

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    • Abū Hạnīfiyah
      • In Ḥanafī school

        …reliance on systematic reasoning (raʾy) in the absence of precedent. The school currently predominates in Central Asia, India, Pakistan, Turkey, and the countries of the former Ottoman Empire.

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    • Ḥanbalī school of law
      • In Ḥanbalī school

        …of speculative legal reasoning (raʾy) and analogy (qiyās) and rejected their use to overrule hadiths or to contravene early precedent. Between the 11th and 13th centuries, Iraqi Ḥanbalīs experienced a period of intellectual efflorescence and social prominence, counting philosophers and caliphal viziers among their number. By contrast, the Levantine…

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    • Ẓāhirīyah
      • In Ẓāhirīyah

        …(qiyas) and pure reason (raʾy) as sources of jurisprudence and looked askance at consensus (ijmāʾ). Theologically, the school formed the extreme rejection of anthropomorphism (tashbih), attributing to God only those essential elements and qualities set forth clearly in the Qurʾān.

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