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7 - The state as an agent of wrongdoing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Michael Cook
Affiliation:
Princeton University, New Jersey
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Summary

We pass now from the rhetorical claims of rulers to forbid the wrongdoing of others to their nasty but persistent habit of engaging in it themselves. We thus enter a rather different landscape. The wrongdoing of rulers, for all that it constitutes the warp and weft of the history the scholars recorded, is from our point of view of rather little conceptual interest; we will accordingly pass over it rather quickly. On the other hand, the responses of the scholars to this cornucopia of wrongdoing display a sharper focus than the discussions we looked at in the previous chapter. What they are mostly about is the bearing of doctrines of prospective harm in a context that the scholars saw as both highly significant and unusually fraught with peril. More precisely, what is involved is a special case of the question whether or not it is virtuous to forbid wrong where danger has voided the obligation.

The misdeeds of rulers

In his account of forbidding wrong, Ghazzālī gives a detailed and helpful survey of wrongs that are commonly met with in various contexts. He deals in turn with the mosque, the market-place, the street, the bath-house and the home (when guests are entertained there). By this point, however, he has tired of enumerating wrongs, and invites his readers to continue the survey for themselves. He mentions a few places to consider, one being the offices (dawāwīn) of rulers, but that is as far as he takes us.

Type
Chapter
Information
Forbidding Wrong in Islam
An Introduction
, pp. 73 - 82
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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