The Role of Reason in
Ijtihad
By Ayatullah
Murtadha Mutahhari
In the previous discussion, "The
Principle of Ijtihad in Islam", two trends in Islamic thought were
referred to. One of them related to the subject of the justifiability or
unjustifiability of the use of qiyas and ijtihad bi al-ra'y, a practice
that acquired prevalence among different schools of fiqh. The other was
regarding the controversy about Divine justice and reason as the
criterion of moral and legal judgements (al-husn wal-qubh al-'aqliyyan)
among the mutakallimun. These controversies actually revolved around the
central issue of the role or the "rights" of reason.
Some schools of fiqh which supported
qiyas, especially the Hanafi school, believed in the role of reason in
ijtihad, which in their interpretation took the form of qiyas and
ijtihad bi al-ra'y. But the other schools opposed to qiyas, especially
the Zahiri school, did not approve of any role for reason, neither in
the form of qiyas nor in any other form. Accordingly, the first group,
while enumerating the sources of legislation, maintained that there were
four: the Qur'an, the Sunnah, ijma' (consensus) and ijtihad (qiyas). But
the second group did not go beyond the Qur'an, the Sunnah and, at the
most, ijma'. Among the mutakallimun, the Mu'tazilah believed in the
independent role of reason, and also in Divine justice and the rational
basis of moral and legal judgements. They believed that the system of
creation is established on the foundations of justice, and that the
present system is the best possible. They also explained away the
problem of evil in the world and believed that in the next world too
punishment and reward will be according to the unalterable criteria of
justice. The knowledge of these criteria is also within the province of
reason. It is not possible that God should will anything that is not
according to these definite rational criteria.
With regard to legislation, also, they
believed that the Divine commands have been set forth according to the
criteria of justice and with due attention to a series of real benefits
and harms (that lie in obedience or disobedience to the laws). According
to the Mu'tazilite doctrine, there is a purpose and aim hidden in every
Divine Act, whether it relates to creation or legislation.
But the Asha'irah did not believe in
any of the above-mentioned doctrines. They did not acknowledge Divine
justice or the rational basis of moral and legal judgements. They did
not believe that the world is based on the principle of justice and that
the present system of creation is the best possible. Neither, according
to them, in the other world matters will be decided on the criteria of
justice, nor the system of Divine laws has been patterned to ensure a
series of benefits and to avoid harms. They did not believe in any aim
and purpose for Divine Acts either. According to their doctrine, the
belief in the principle of justice, the belief in a rational basis of
moral and legal judgements, and the belief that Divine Acts are subject
to aims and purposes, usefulness and harmfulness, contradict the
principle of tawhid and the idea of absolute freedom of God as a free
actor. No law or principle can be set forth as a criterion of His Will
thus imposing limits upon Him. God's Will is neither subordinate to any
criteria nor is it subject to anv laws or principles; on the contrary
all laws and principles are subject to and proceed from His Will.
Judgements of reason cannot be relied upon to enable us to say
definitely that such and such a thing is in accordance with justice or
not. For instance, it cannot be said for certain that those people who
obey God will be sent to heaven and those who sin to hell. His Will and
Acts cannot be restricted by any of such rules. They interpret the
following verse that says:
He will not be questioned as to that
which He doth, but they will be questioned. (21:23)
to mean that it is not right to ask
'why' and 'wherefore' about His Acts. There is no criterion or standard
applicable to Divine Acts so as to justify any question about God's
Action or forbearance. The Asha'irah have formally objected to the
statement that 'The Heavens stand on the foundations of justice', and
said that it is not so; they point out that matters like pain and
disease, the creation of Satan, social injustice and inequality, class
distinctions, domination of the corrupt over the virtuous in the world,
and the like, are things which are observable through reason, and, if
the order of the universe were based on justice, should not have
existed. As for the religious laws and precepts, they have formally
declared that they are not based on wisdom and prudence.
They say that the Shari'ah and its laws
bring together disparities and separate similarities. Many matters, in
spite of their being unlike, have the same judgement, and many other
matters in spite of their being similar and parallel have different
judgements applicable to them. They have mentioned various examples, to
mention which is not possible here. Anyhow, according to the Ash'arite
doctrine, the process of creation is not subject to the principle of
justice; rather, justice is subordinated to creation. In the same way,
the laws of the Shari'ah are also not subject to any real underlying
benefits or harms; rather, benefit and harm, good and evil, are
subservient to the provisions of the Shari'ah. That is, if we are to
speak about justice and injustice, right and wrong, beneficial and
harmful, what we should mean is that whatever God does is just, good and
beneficial, not that God does what is just, good and beneficial.
This kind of thinking is not without
similarity to the trend that existed among the ancient Greek thinkers
and the Sophists two thousand and five hundred years ago about reality
and the worth of human thought and ideas. They raised the question
whether reality is something which exists and our minds and their ideas,
in order to be valid, should correspond to reality, or whether it is not
so and reality is subject to our minds. For instance, during
philosophical and scientific contemplation, we may make a statement
about something and say that such and such is the case. Now does our
statement correspond to some reality independent of our minds, which
would be true if it corresponded with that reality? Or whether, on the
contrary, truth and reality are subservient to our minds, and whatever
we perceive is the truth? And since it is possible that different
individuals should perceive something in diverse ways, truth is relative
to each one of them, being different from what it is for others?
Therefore, truth and reality are relative?
What a group of Muslim mutakallimun
have said about religion in relation to truth, goodness, justice and
benefit was said before them by the Greek Sophists about the mind in
relation to reality and truth. The arguments presented by the Sophists
for proving their claim resemble those advanced by this group of
mutakallimun. Due to this similarity it would be right to give them the
name of 'Islamic sophists'.
This group of mutakallimun believed
that they had discovered various contradictions, equal treatment of
disparities, and unequal treatment of similarities in Islamic laws. They
maintained that, on account of these contradictions, it is not possible
for any real benefits and harms to be the criteria of religious laws.
Therefore, it is the religious laws that are the criteria of good and
bad, benefit and harm.
The Sophists had also made an excuse of
the contradictions and errors of reason and perception, to hold that due
to these contradictions it is not possible for a reality which is
transcendental to the mind, and which the mind should follow, to exist.
Reality, on the other hand, is a function of the mind. The answer given
by philosophers to Greek and non-Greek sophists is also similar to the
one given by the 'Adlites (those who believed in Divine justice, 'adl)
to that group of mutakallimun, but here we shall abstain from going into
further details.
The doctrine of taswib (lit.
ratification) held by this group of mutakallimun is totally similar to
the theory of relativism. According to the theory of relativity of
truth, whatever one perceives is truth in relation to him though in
relation to others it may be error, not truth. Also according to the
theory of taswib, whatever one mujtahid may deduce is correct as far as
he himself is concerned, although it may not be so for others.
On the Crossroads:
There are many problems which are
theoretically of profound significance, but practically are not so
important. There are also many problems which are not so important
regarding their theoretical value but from the practical point of view
they are of extraordinary significance. For instance, in theology we
have the problem of Divine Attributes, which is of great importance so
far as theory is concerned but is of little practical utility. For
example, the study of and inquiry into the question whether the
Attributes of God are identical with His Essence or not can be an
important subject for theoretical study, but from the practical point of
view it is of little consequence which one of the two doctrines you
choose; it does not influence the life and behaviour of a Muslim
society. But the problem of jabr or tafwid (predestination or freedom)
is important from the theoretical point of view as much as it is
valuable for its practical aspect. Because the belief in the doctrines
of determinism and fatalism and the negation of every kind of human
freedom ruin the spirit of action and kill every kind of dynamism.
The problem of Divine justice and
belief in rational criteria of moral and legal judgements occupies the
most important position in Islamic thought due to its great influence on
the intellectual and scientific history and behaviour of Muslims. It is
a fact that those who discussed and studied this issue soon arrived at
the crossroads, where they had either to accept religious laws as based
on a reality discoverable by reason, to try as far as possible to
discover that rational basis, to acknowledge a purpose and meaning of
religion, to try to discover those purposes and objectives, and to
recognize reason as an "inner proof and an "internal prophet" and to
accept the definite judgements of reason as enjoying the approval of the
Divine Lawgiver; or to consider the aim and purpose of the Shari'ah as
entailing mere obligation and acts of absolute servility devoid of any
objective, and close all the doors on research and intellectual inquiry.
How much it matters whether we conceive
religion in terms of external forms and shapes, viewing any change in
external forms and appearances as a change of essence and content, and,
imagining some kind of inherent correspondence between those forms and
the very spirit of religion, recognize that soul in every form and
shape! And what a great difference it makes whether we consider the
universal laws of Islam, which cover a wide range of social and ethical
problems and concern all modes of human life, as based upon a series of
realities relating to spiritual health and well-being and innate human
rights, or if we deny the existence of those realities and believe, for
instance, that vices like jealousy, falsehood, and suspiciousness are
bad because they have been forbidden by the Lawgiver, and virtues like
truthfulness, honesty, and benevolence are good as they have been
commanded by Him, as if there is no difference between them in reality.
Similarly, human rights also are to be acknowledged as such on account
of their being set forth by the Islamic lawgiver, or else had they been
determined in some other fashion that would have been equally right.
Justice and oppression are also defined in the light of these
commandments, and if something else had been enjoined, justice and
injustice would have been defined in quite a different way.
The Shi'ite Position:
The two above-mentioned intellectual
trends were discussed from the point of view of Sunni fiqh and kalam.
Now it is necessary to study them from the Shi'ite point of view also.
The early Shi'ite logic concerning the first of the two trends is
extremely sensitive and interesting. As for the first trend, that is,
regarding the problem of justifiability or unjustifiability of qiyas,
Shi'ah rejected qiyas on the basis of the express texts (nusus) of their
Imams. As mentioned in the former discussion, the Shi'ah disapproved of
qiyas for two reasons:
Firstly, the use of qiyas was justified
by others for the reason that the problems to be solved are unlimited,
whereas the dicta of the Shari'ah are limited; therefore they are forced
to resort to it. The Shi'ah do not accept this reason because, they say,
it is not necessary that every event and problem should have a specified
rule. General rules applicable to all situations are given in the
Shari'ah. The only thing needed is competent ijtihad, inquiry and
reflection to derive the particular from the general. Many ahadith
narrated from the Imams (A) and recorded in the collections of hadith,
like al-Kafi, etc., make the same point.
Secondly, qiyas is something which is
based upon conjecture, surmise, and superficial similarities, and is a
kind of interference made by reason in such matters which are not
intelligible. At one time we may be concerned with the course of action
in a case when reason comprehends a fact with certainty and clarity. At
other times, in cases where the matter is not comprehensible to reason,
is it justifiable to follow conjecture and surmise? There is of course a
great difference between the two kinds of situations, but evidently if
the foundations of the religion are to be laid on ra'y, qiyas, surmise
and guess-work, it will lead to its destruction. This was the position
held by the Shi'ah with regard to the first trend.
As for the second, had the Shi'ah logic
in rejecting qiyas been similar to that of its other opponents who
rejected it because they did not believe in the rational basis of the
religious laws and that they were based on facts of nature, they too
would have been forced to take a hostile stand against the doctrines of
Divine justice and the rational basis of moral and legal judgements.
However, as we have seen, the Shi'ah's reasons for rejecting qiyas were
different. Therefore, in spite of strongly disapproving qiyas, they
formally affirmed the share of reason in ijtihad. The Shi'ite fuqaha'
and the usuliyyun officially recognized reason as one of the four
sources of fiqh and the Shi'ite mutakallimun earnestly supported the
doctrine of justice, to the extent that it came to be said: "'Adl and
tawhid are 'Alawids."
It is here that the sensitiveness of
the Shi'ite stand comes to light. On the one hand they accepted the
share of reason, and on the other they discarded qiyas and ra'y as
something based upon surmise and conjecture. In fact, with utmost
discernment they followed the real path of the Qur'an, which eloquently
approves of the use of reason but disapproves of surmise and conjecture,
and considers it invalid.
The Shi'ah occupied a very delicate
position between the right and the left, and a little deviation from the
middle path was enough to expose them to the danger of qiyas on the one
side and on the other to that of servile obscurantism and stagnant
formalism.
However, during the later years, when
the pointer of the scale tilted in favour of the Asha'riah, and even the
Hanafis, who stood at the remotest point from the Ash'arite doctrine,
became inclined towards them, how long could the Shi'ah adhere to the
middle course and be able to advance at the same time without deviating
either towards the extreme of qiyas or towards that of a stagnant
formalism? It is a matter that deserves to be studied in its scientific
and historical detail. Here we can briefly point out two things:
Firstly during the course of the
intellectual history of Islam, all the sects and groups influenced one
another. The 'Adlites were influenced by the ideas of non-'Adlites and
the non-'Adlites by those of the 'Adlites. The influence of ideas was
reciprocal, and naturally the Shi'ah also couldn't remain aloof from it.
Secondly, if we examine the extant
works of Shi'ite scholars, we shall find the anti-qiyas sensitivity of
the early days to prevail right up to the present. It is hard to find a
single scholar among the Shi'ite fuqaha' to exhibit any pro-qiyas
tendencies, and if a very small number of scholars had such tendencies,
they belonged to the former times not to the later ages. Therefore,
there is complete certainty as to the absence of deviation towards this
extreme. However such a sensitivity regarding deviation towards the
other extreme is not so evident. Those who are in the know of it know
well that the terms 'Adlites and non-'Adlites have only ceremonial
implications in the vocabulary of the later scholars. Had the way paved
by the 'Adlites in the past been followed, it would have been the source
of the origination of many of the social sciences among Muslims - the
sciences whose fountainhead was discovered by the Europeans gradually
one thousand years after the Muslims' discovery of it.
The interest in truth and justice as
independent realities, on the part of the Europeans, gave rise to
social, political and economic philosophies and scientific and judicial
disciplines on the one hand, and on the other served as the source of
awakening of nations and infused in them the feeling of life's
worthiness.
The Muslims could not continue their
journey on the path that was discovered by them and recognize the source
and origin of human rights as being inherent in nature. They failed to
discover the primary bases of the Islamic legal system and the social
philosophy of Islam and to explain it to others and make use of that
general basis in the deduction of the laws of the Shari'ah.
In the opinion of the specialists, the
Islamic legal system is one of the most valuable legal systems of the
world. In the East greater emphasis was laid on ethics than on law,
contrary to the West, where either the case was opposite, or at least
the same emphasis was laid on the two. The distinction belongs to Islam
of paying equal attention to both ethics and law. But the Muslims, due
to various reasons and factors, gave more importance to ethics and
neglected the Islamic legal system.
Possibly, the above discussion about
the role of reason and the doctrine of justice may give rise to the
misconception that since Islamic laws are based upon the interests of
the individual and society it is good to indulge naively in speculation
and try to find some philosophy behind Islamic laws and rituals and
conjure up reasons for such acts, for instance, as tayammum (ritual
purification by sand when water cannot be obtained), ghusl (bathing),
madmadah (mouth washing) or istinshaq (drawing water into the nose
during the wudu') and to abstain from performing them as long as the
underlying rationale has not been found. I should clarify that my
purpose is not this. What I wish to say is that Islamic laws and
precepts, whether they concern civil rights, penal laws, social
relations or some other aspect, are based on a series of truths and
facts. If we acquire the knowledge of those facts through a scientific
method appropriate to their study - whose principles have been mostly
discovered in our present-day world - we will be able to understand the
meaning of and rationale behind Islamic laws, which have reached us
through revelation, in a better way. For instance, through the Holy
Qur'an as well as through the teachings of the leaders of the Din, great
aphorisms and ethical rules have reached us. These sayings and
injunctions have been always accessible to everyone. But is it possible
for everyone at present, or was it possible for those in the past, to
analyze them fully and to understand perfectly their aim and spirit
without being misled?
Unless one does have complete knowledge
of the scientific fundamentals of ethics and psychology, it is not
possible for him to grasp the spirit of those words of wisdom, which
appear to be simple at first sight. The real value and sublimity of
those heavenly sayings become clearer if anyone studies the various
ethical systems of the world with their occasionally divergent aims and
principles.
To give another example, in the Holy
Qur'an, as well as in the words of the Prophet (S) and the Infallible
Imams (A), we come across a great number of discourses regarding tawhid
and the Names and Attributes of God. Those who have spent their lives
studying tawhid and theology know that sometimes they come across
statements in the Qur'an and the Nahj al-balaghah with an underlying
ocean of meaning, whereas the same expressions and sentences led the Ahl
al-Hadith, the Hanbalis and the Zahiris to anthropomorphism and heresy.
What is the reason? This is because, since knowledge is the key to
revelation, whatever has been received through revelation, despite its
simplicity and universal utility, is an extract of reality which can be
arrived at only through science.
At the time of the last Hajj, while
encouraging the people to memorize and preserve whatever they heard from
him, and to convey to the future generations, the Prophet (S) said:
How often one conveys knowledge to
another who is more learned than himself.
The one who hears ahadith may possess
more power of understanding and analysis than the narrator himself. He
may comprehend its spirit, purpose and meaning in a better way on
account of his superior knowledge. The religion can be understood better
in the light of knowledge. The secret of greatness and miraculous
character of the holy religion of Islam lies in the immense scope of its
teachings; and if any aspect of nature is illuminated by means of
science, it not only does not make obsolete the teachings of Islam but
makes them brighter and clearer.
In the realm of the spiritual, in
relation to the mystic path, those who have been successful in grasping
the hidden meaning of the discourses relating to this topic, have been
those who have had familiarity with that realm. Ibn Abi al-Hadid says
that the gist of what all mystics have said can be seen in the few
sentences of the sermon of the Imam 'Ali (A) commencing with the words:
[...]
In short, knowledge is the key to
religion. The scope of Islamic teachings and laws covers all modes and
aspects of human life, and, definitely, the more we come to know about a
sphere of human life and scientific principles related to it, the
greater the benefit we shall be able to draw from the bounty of Divine
revelation. If merely the knowledge of Arabic language were sufficient
for the understanding of the religion, a simple Arab would have been
able to draw as much amount of benefit from its teachings as a
philosopher (hakim-e ilahi).
The bases of human rights, also, are
not an exception to this general rule. Like ethics and theology, the
rights are also based upon a series of natural truths. The more we are
acquainted with those fundamental truths and principles, the better can
we understand the aim and purpose of the religion. If we know those
principles and fundamentals, perhaps we shall recognize many of the
verses of the Qur'an and traditions as relating to ahkam which hitherto
have not been counted as having any legal significance. However, for the
time being, it is not possible to go into further details.
Thus, our aim is not that we should
philosophize or speculate about the rationale of Islamic laws and
precepts. We aim to point out that since the teachings of Islam cover
all spheres of human life, and since, on the basis of our belief in the
doctrine of Divine justice, we know that these teachings are not
extravagant and baseless, but are based upon truth and natural realities
and are constituted on the basis of those realities, so if we come to
know closely those realities - which have been systematically studied in
the course of several centuries and their study has taken the form of
scientific disciplines - we shall be better able to comprehend the
meanings and purposes of the language of revelation (wahy), as we have
seen in the study of ethics and theology.
In Islam, there are laws associated
with economy, society, government and politics. Now all of them are
considered to be subject to a series of unalterable and fixed laws.
Therefore, how can anyone without the knowledge of those laws claim to
have comprehended perfectly the viewpoint and purpose of Islam regarding
matters relating to them and present them before the world as the most
sublime of social teachings? If an ordinary person without knowing
anything about hikmat-e ilahi can comprehend the verses and traditions
related to tawhid and other topics of theology as well as a philosopher
who has worked diligently and understands well the basics of philosophy,
then any person ignorant of the sciences can also comprehend and
understand the viewpoint of Islam concerning various social problems to
the extent of a social scientist.
Islam, according to the express text of
the Qur'an, is the religion of nature. On the other hand we observe that
a group of scientists and scholars have claimed that some of the human
rights are natural and inborn, hence permanent and fixed, general and
universal, and are prior to all other positive rights. Is it not
necessary to investigate this problem, to see whether this is true? If
it is, it is evident that Islam acknowledges them formally.
Is it true that things like the freedom
of the individual, equality, the right to private property and
ownership, the freedom of belief, the freedom of expression and the like
are rooted in the human nature and are laws prescribed by nature itself,
and that their acknowledgement constitutes the basic condition for the
development of all human societies and wholesome human relations?
Do human rights precede social
existence? Does the individual possess them prior to his social
existence, and does social existence mean that every individual
participates in society with the capital of his prior and essential
rights, thus establishing a kind of association with the help of other
individuals? Or the rights of an individual in society are posterior to
society and that social existence is the source and origin of the
individual's rights? Or does the individual in himself have no rights
whatsoever; whatever he has are duties and responsibilities alone, and
rights belong to society, as some have said?
What is the basis for determining
rights? Is it the interests of the individual or those of society? To
what extent is it necessary to protect the rights of the individual? Is
the limit for the protection of the rights of the individual the point
where such protection interferes with the right of other individuals, or
occasionally this limit is set when the individual's rights conflict
with the interests of society? These, and hundreds of such questions,
have to be answered, and incidentally we have received guidelines and
teachings in Islam regarding all of them. If those guidelines were
compiled and given a scientific form, it would elucidate the great value
of Islamic teachings and open many of the present dead-ends.
Therefore, by emphasis on the share of
reason we neither mean to support the practice of qiyas and ra'y, which
was innovated in the olden days, nor the practice of speculation, which
has become customary in our age. The aim is to stress the scientific
study of problems which are covered in the great scope of the teachings
of Islam, whose resourcefulness and problem-solving potential has been
recurringly proved to us in the course of the last fourteen centuries.
This is the only lasting miraculous aspect of this monotheistic faith.
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