Usul al-Fiqh (Principles of Jurisprudence)
Islamic legal theory that defines the methods for deriving legal rules from the sacred sources.
Usul al-Fiqh (plural of asl) is Islamic legal theory — the science of the principles and methods used to derive practical legal rules (fiqh) from the Islamic sources. Imam al-Shafi'i is considered the founder of this discipline through his groundbreaking work "al-Risalah."
The four main sources in usul al-fiqh are: the Quran (Allah's speech), the Sunnah (the Prophet's words, actions, and tacit approvals), Ijma' (scholarly consensus), and Qiyas (analogical reasoning). Additionally, different schools recognize supplementary principles such as istihsan (juristic preference), maslahah mursalah (public interest), and 'urf (custom).
Regarding prayer legislation, usul al-fiqh is crucial for understanding why the schools of law can reach different conclusions. For example: is a particular prayer act obligatory or merely recommended? The answer depends on how one interprets the relevant Quranic text or hadith — and precisely this interpretive method is the domain of usul al-fiqh. Major works in the discipline include al-Ghazali's "al-Mustasfa" and al-Amidi's "al-Ihkam."
Related terms
Salat al-Ayat (Prayer of the Signs)
An obligatory prayer performed during natural phenomena such as solar and lunar eclipses.
Muezzin (Caller to Prayer)
The person who calls to prayer by reciting the adhan.
Imamat (Divine Leadership)
The doctrine of the twelve divinely appointed Imams who lead the community after the Prophet.
Rawatib (Regular Sunnah Prayers)
The voluntary prayers regularly prayed before and after the obligatory prayers.
Janamaz (Prayer Rug)
The prayer rug that the worshipper uses to mark a clean prayer area.
Shahadah (Declaration of Faith)
The first pillar of Islam: the testimony that there is no god except Allah and that Muhammad is His Messenger.