The Concurrence Between Expressions and Logic in the History of Legal Theory: Are ‘Amm Expressions Universal?

ʿĀmm [general] expressions are discussed in the linguistic sections of legal theory. In early periods, discussions on ʿāmm expressions involved their definition, presence, and signification (madlūl). After al-Ghazālī, however universals as one of the subjects of classical logic also began occurring...

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Main Author: Osman Said Evdüzen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scientific Studies Association (ILEM) 2023-05-01
Series:Nazariyat: Journal for the History of Islamic Philosophy and Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://nazariyat.org/content/5-sayilar/18-cilt-9-sayi-1/1-osmansaidevduzen/1_osman_said_evduzen_en.pdf
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description ʿĀmm [general] expressions are discussed in the linguistic sections of legal theory. In early periods, discussions on ʿāmm expressions involved their definition, presence, and signification (madlūl). After al-Ghazālī, however universals as one of the subjects of classical logic also began occurring in these discussions. This article discusses whether or not ʿāmm expressions denote universal meanings and also analyzes the theoretical explanations of usulists [legal theorists] in the post-classical era regarding the relation between universals and ʿāmm expressions. The article argued that al-Ghazālī (d. 505/1111) as the first scholar to argue ʿāmm expressions to denote universals and to attribute them to the language being assigned (wadʿ) to mental images (al-~ūra al-dhiniyya). al-Rāzī (d. 606/1210) and the later period usulists argued ʿāmm expressions to not denote universal but to instead only have universal meanings among their individuals. al-Qarāfī (d. 684/1285), al-I~fahānī (d. 688/1289), and al-Subkī (d. 771/1370) continued the same idea and considered ʿāmm expressions as universal propositions under the influence of Avicenna (d. 428/1037), whereas al-Taftāzānī (d. 792/1390) had considered them to be both whole (kull) and universal through the concept of signification (~ulūh). The usulists are shown to have written commentaries and glosses on Jam‘ al-jawāmi‘, synthesized the teachings of both different understandings, and argued ʿāmm expressions to have three different denotations: whole, universal, and universal proposition.
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spelling doaj.art-a95925fdd8d1436095bf9d0ad31e16782023-07-25T09:03:34ZengScientific Studies Association (ILEM)Nazariyat: Journal for the History of Islamic Philosophy and Sciences2547-94152023-05-019113610.12658/Nazariyat.9.1.M0161enThe Concurrence Between Expressions and Logic in the History of Legal Theory: Are ‘Amm Expressions Universal?Osman Said Evdüzen0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9386-2264İstanbul UniversityʿĀmm [general] expressions are discussed in the linguistic sections of legal theory. In early periods, discussions on ʿāmm expressions involved their definition, presence, and signification (madlūl). After al-Ghazālī, however universals as one of the subjects of classical logic also began occurring in these discussions. This article discusses whether or not ʿāmm expressions denote universal meanings and also analyzes the theoretical explanations of usulists [legal theorists] in the post-classical era regarding the relation between universals and ʿāmm expressions. The article argued that al-Ghazālī (d. 505/1111) as the first scholar to argue ʿāmm expressions to denote universals and to attribute them to the language being assigned (wadʿ) to mental images (al-~ūra al-dhiniyya). al-Rāzī (d. 606/1210) and the later period usulists argued ʿāmm expressions to not denote universal but to instead only have universal meanings among their individuals. al-Qarāfī (d. 684/1285), al-I~fahānī (d. 688/1289), and al-Subkī (d. 771/1370) continued the same idea and considered ʿāmm expressions as universal propositions under the influence of Avicenna (d. 428/1037), whereas al-Taftāzānī (d. 792/1390) had considered them to be both whole (kull) and universal through the concept of signification (~ulūh). The usulists are shown to have written commentaries and glosses on Jam‘ al-jawāmi‘, synthesized the teachings of both different understandings, and argued ʿāmm expressions to have three different denotations: whole, universal, and universal proposition.https://nazariyat.org/content/5-sayilar/18-cilt-9-sayi-1/1-osmansaidevduzen/1_osman_said_evduzen_en.pdfislamic legal theorylogicʿāmm expressionsuniversalsal-ghazālīal-rāzīal-qarāfīal-subkījam‘ al-jawāmi‘
spellingShingle Osman Said Evdüzen
The Concurrence Between Expressions and Logic in the History of Legal Theory: Are ‘Amm Expressions Universal?
Nazariyat: Journal for the History of Islamic Philosophy and Sciences
islamic legal theory
logic
ʿāmm expressions
universals
al-ghazālī
al-rāzī
al-qarāfī
al-subkī
jam‘ al-jawāmi‘
title The Concurrence Between Expressions and Logic in the History of Legal Theory: Are ‘Amm Expressions Universal?
title_full The Concurrence Between Expressions and Logic in the History of Legal Theory: Are ‘Amm Expressions Universal?
title_fullStr The Concurrence Between Expressions and Logic in the History of Legal Theory: Are ‘Amm Expressions Universal?
title_full_unstemmed The Concurrence Between Expressions and Logic in the History of Legal Theory: Are ‘Amm Expressions Universal?
title_short The Concurrence Between Expressions and Logic in the History of Legal Theory: Are ‘Amm Expressions Universal?
title_sort concurrence between expressions and logic in the history of legal theory are amm expressions universal
topic islamic legal theory
logic
ʿāmm expressions
universals
al-ghazālī
al-rāzī
al-qarāfī
al-subkī
jam‘ al-jawāmi‘
url https://nazariyat.org/content/5-sayilar/18-cilt-9-sayi-1/1-osmansaidevduzen/1_osman_said_evduzen_en.pdf
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