Islamic jurisprudence relies on various sources to explain and implement Sharia, the body of Islamic law. The primary sources, universally accepted by all Muslims, are the Koran and Sunnah.
Hanafi School: Relies on analogical deduction and independent reasoning.
Maliki and Hanbali Schools: Generally use Hadith.
Shafi'i School: Uses Sunnah more than Hanafi and analogy more than the other two.
The Koran
Medieval Muslim jurists rejected arbitrary opinion and instead developed various secondary sources, also known as juristic principles or doctrines, to follow when the primary sources, namely the Koran and Sunnah, are silent on a particular issue.
Hindus in 1868 believed that a valid custom overrides sacred law. The Privy Council supported this in Muslim law for converts wanting to retain personal laws. However, the Orthodox rejected this, leading to the Shariat Act of 1937. Despite all schools acknowledging the four ancient sources, they do not dismiss the role of customs. The Prophet also upheld ancient Arabian customs as long as they did not conflict with Muslim law.
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