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  1. 1. Dāwūd receptacle ʿAlī receptacle Khalaf al-Ẓāhirī (Arabic: ‫داود‬ ‫ن‬ ‫ب‬ ‫ي‬ ‫ل‬ ‫ع‬ ‫ن‬ ‫ب‬ ‫لف‬ ‫خ‬ ‫ري‬ ‫ظاه‬ ‫)ال‬ (c. 815-883/4 CE, 199-269/270 AH)[6] was a Persian[1] Muslim researcher, legal scholar, and scholar during the Islamic Brilliant Age, spent significant time in the investigation of Islamic regulation (sharīʿa) and the fields of hermeneutics, true to life assessment, and historiography of early Islam. He is broadly viewed as the pioneer behind the Ẓāhirī way of thinking (madhhab),[5][7][8][9] the fifth way of thinking in Sunnī Islam, described by its severe adherence to peculiarity and dependence on the outward (ẓāhir) importance of articulations in the Quran and ḥadīth literature;[7] the agreement (ijmāʿ) of the original of Muhammad's dearest friends (ṣaḥāba), for wellsprings of Islamic regulation (sharīʿa);[1] and dismissal of analogical allowance (qiyās) and cultural custom or information (urf), utilized by different schools of Islamic statute. He was a celebrated, if not questionable, figure during his time,[10] being alluded to in Islamic historiographical texts as "the researcher of the era."[11]

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