Origines de la jurisprudence musulmane
Origins of Muhammadan Jurisprudence
Maison d'édition
Oxford At The Clarendon Press
Année de publication
1950 AH
THE REASONING OF INDIVIDUAL IRAQIANS 297
equal amount, because his [first] statement destroyed [what he later acknowledged to have received in deposit from the other]. The same applies to the first problem: it was the depositary who destroyed the deposit through his ignorance. We [Abū Yūsuf] follow this. Ibn Abī Lailā used to decide in the first case that the depositary is not responsible for anything and that the deposit . . . belongs to both claimants in equal shares.¹
Tr. I, 77: The reasoning of Abū Ḥanīfa is more penetrating than that of Ibn Abī Lailā (above, p. 273).
Tr. I, 81: Abū Ḥanīfa introduces a sound distinction, maintained by Shāfiʿī.
Tr. I, 103: Abū Ḥanīfa, by systematic reasoning, subsumes a special case under a general decision; this, it is true, leads him into a different systematic inconsistency, as Shāfiʿī points out; Sarakhsī (xvi. 129 f.), however, gives a satisfactory and probably authentic answer to this objection and, everything considered, Abū Ḥanīfa’s doctrine is more consistent than that of Shāfiʿī; it is followed by Shaibānī, but not by Abū Yūsuf and Zufar (Sarakhsī, loc. cit.).
Tr. I, 117: Abū Ḥanīfa introduces a relevant distinction.
Tr. I, 120: Abū Ḥanīfa’s argument, short and to the point, shows a considerable advance on Ibn Abī Lailā.
Tr. I, 123: Abū Ḥanīfa introduces technical legal reasoning, articulate and consistent in itself, but incompatible with broader systematic consistency, as Shāfiʿī points out.
Tr. I, 126: Abū Ḥanīfa is more methodical than Ibn Abī Lailā (above, p. 274).
Tr. I, 139: Abū Ḥanīfa is more logical and consistent than Ibn Abī Lailā (above, p. 112).
Tr. I, 140: Abū Ḥanīfa shows a high degree of technical reasoning, is sharp‑sighted and systematic, and anticipates Shāfiʿī’s doctrine; the essential argument was, it is true, attributed to Ibrāhīm Nakhaʿī, but this can hardly be authentic.¹
Tr. I, 141 f.: A sound decision, based on extensive systematic reasoning, much better than that of Ibn Abī Lailā (above, p. 274).
Tr. I, 188: Abū Ḥanīfa is more concerned than Ibn Abī Lailā with the legally relevant features of a problem.
Tr. I, 196: Abū Ḥanīfa applies shrewd technical reasoning. An early Iraqian qiyās demanded a two‑fold confession of the culprit for the ḥadd punishment for theft to be applicable.² Some Iraqians, however, held that a single confession only was required, and Abū Ḥanīfa argued in favour of this opinion which he shared, that if a two‑fold confession were necessary for the ḥadd to be applied, a
1 See above, p. 235. 2 See above, p. 107.
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