Intended Meaning

Shahrur interprets “imlaq” as financial or economic hardship, not poverty in its general sense. On this basis, he holds that the injunction forbids killing children in a state of need, and it is also used to ground the prohibition of abortion due to necessity.

The Atom’s Structure in the Atlas

  • Type of argument: legislative
  • Movement of the argument: it forbids killing children in a state of need and interprets imlaq as economic hardship.
  • Key terms: killing children, imlaq, need, prohibition.
  • Degree of centrality: central.

It links the linguistic interpretation of need with the moral ruling, making the prohibition depend on protecting life from the pressure of poverty and hardship.

Reading Aids

Grounding

  • Supporting text: “Imlaq: financial/economic hardship, never equivalent to poverty in its general sense.”

Location of the Grounding in the Book

  • Book: The Book and the Qur’an.
  • Location: within the final section of the book in the interpretation of the imlaq verse
  • Type of grounding: close witness.
  • Verification marker: وَلَا تَقْتُلُوا أَوْلَادَكُمْ مِنْ إِمْلَاقٍ
  • Reading note: This passage is suitable as evidence because it explains imlaq as a specific economic condition and connects it to the ruling on abortion.

Degree of Documentation

  • Level: structurally documented
  • Meaning of the level: the atom relies on more than one witness or on a clear composition of closely related expressions.
  • Reason for classification: the two witnesses explicitly state the prohibition and clearly explain imlaq.
  • Limits of reading: the formulation above is an analytical summary and should not be treated as a verbatim quotation unless the witness is quoted word for word.

Its Function in the Book

Its function here is declarative; it establishes a result on which what follows in the argument depends.

Editorial Note

The atom combines linguistic clarification with legal ruling.