The Summary of Qualifying Permissible: Its Fundamental Roots and its Purpose Standards

Authors

  • Saadia Hussein Othman University of Sharjah
  • Mohammad Mahmoud Al-Emoush University of Sharjah

Keywords:

Limitation, permissibility, intentions

Abstract

The study deals with the issue of restricting the permissible and its fundamentalist roots. The study then shows the intentional controls that govern the concept of restriction of permissibility. The study used the descriptive method and the inductive method in order to define the concept of restriction of permissibility and indicate its roots in the fundamentalist heritage and analyze the legality of the concept of restriction of permissibility and its intentional controls. The study was based on direct deduction from the Qur'an and Sunnah, as well as extraction from the original purposes, such as extracting the purposes of housing, offspring, and wife from the original purpose, which is reproduction. The study concluded that the first person who alluded to the issue of restricting what is permissible was Imam Al-Shafi’i, may God have mercy on him. It also found that the term was most developed by Imam Al-Shatibi, the author of the book of approvals, where he referred to the term in several places. The study also showed that the fundamentalist scholars set intentional controls to restrict the permissible. The study recommended directing researchers to pay attention to the topic of limiting patency. It also recommended the need to conduct studies on the topic of restricting patency with contemporary applications.

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Author Biographies

Saadia Hussein Othman, University of Sharjah

Department of Jurisprudence and its Foundations, College of Sharia and Islamic Studies

Mohammad Mahmoud Al-Emoush, University of Sharjah

Department of Jurisprudence and its Foundations, College of Sharia and Islamic Studies

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Published

2020-06-01

How to Cite

Othman, S. H. ., & Al-Emoush, M. M. . (2020). The Summary of Qualifying Permissible: Its Fundamental Roots and its Purpose Standards. Dirasat: Shari’a and Law Sciences, 47(2), 1–13. Retrieved from http://dsr.ju.edu.jo/djournals/index.php/Law/article/view/2995

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