Synthetic Judgment
Religious-legal knowledge is not equivalent to practical compliance, because knowledge of rulings and conduct according to them occur on two levels that may converge or diverge.
What Emerges from the Combination of the Atoms
This page results from linking the distinction between religious-legal knowledge and action with the rupture with ijtihad as a central cause, showing that the distinction between understanding and application is not an arbitrary separation, but a condition for understanding how religious-legal discourse operates within reality. Possessing knowledge does not guarantee conduct, and conduct is not always equivalent to understanding; hence commitment cannot properly be reduced to knowledge alone. Moreover, the closure of ijtihad makes this distance more acute, because the domain that had allowed the relationship between ruling and action to be reconsidered narrows, and the letter comes to precede the meaning. In this arrangement, the critique of literalist commitment becomes part of a broader critique of the very structure of religious understanding.
Logic of the Synthesis
| Atom | Its Role in the Synthesis | What It Adds |
|---|---|---|
| the distinction between religious-legal knowledge and action | Establishing the structural difference | It affirms the non-identity between knowledge and |