(Download) "Inferences by Parallel Reasoning in Islamic Jurisprudence" by Shahid Rahman, Muhammad Iqbal & Youcef Soufi # Book PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Inferences by Parallel Reasoning in Islamic Jurisprudence
- Author : Shahid Rahman, Muhammad Iqbal & Youcef Soufi
- Release Date : January 13, 2020
- Genre: Philosophy,Books,Nonfiction,Professional & Technical,Education,Language Arts & Disciplines,Law,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 13747 KB
Description
This monograph proposes a new (dialogical) way of studying the different forms of correlational inference, known in the Islamic jurisprudence as qiyās. According to the authors’ view, qiyās represents an innovative and sophisticated form of dialectical reasoning that not only provides new epistemological insights into legal argumentation in general (including legal reasoning in Common and Civil Law) but also furnishes a fine-grained pattern for parallel reasoning which can be deployed in a wide range of problem-solving contexts and does not seem to reduce to the standard forms of analogical reasoning studied in contemporary philosophy of science and argumentation theory.
After an overview of the emergence of qiyās and of the work of al-Shīrāzī penned by Soufi Youcef, the authors discuss al-Shīrāzī’s classification of correlational inferences of the occasioning factor (qiyās al-'illa). The second part of the volume deliberates on the system of correlational inferences by indication and resemblance (qiyās al-dalāla, qiyās al-shabah). The third part develops the main theoretical background of the authors’ work, namely, the dialogical approach to Martin-Löf's Constructive Type Theory. The authors present this in a general form and independently of adaptations deployed in parts I and II. Part III also includes an appendix on the relevant notions of Constructive Type Theory, which has been extracted from an overview written by Ansten Klev. The book concludes with some brief remarks on contemporary approaches to analogy in Common and Civil Law and also to parallel reasoning in general.