The rule of exclusion of heaviness (excluding very difficult situations from legal rules) is among the most important jurisprudential rules, based on which excruciating laws are excluded. This rule has long developed from the rule of ' rejecting harm/loss', and the first scholar who has dealt with it independently was late Mulla Ahmad Naraqi. The jurisprudents have resorted to a quarter of reasons to prove the above mentioned rule, and the main reason supporting the rule is the Holy Qur'an and the Tradition (i.e. the manners and actions of the holy Prophet). The main content of the reasons supporting the rule of exclusion of heaviness is canceling a personal rule that had governed the previous reasons and including existent affairs and situational rules as a leave. The writer of this essay has mentioned the rules of ' exclusion of heaviness' in the Sunnite jurisprudence and Iran's civil law and has portrayed the function of the rule.
mihan-doost, R. (2008). Religion Never Wants Trouble for People
"A Survey of the rule of Exclusion heaviness". Jostar, 6(20), 34-54. doi: 10.22081/jet.2008.21552
MLA
reza mihan-doost. "Religion Never Wants Trouble for People
"A Survey of the rule of Exclusion heaviness"", Jostar, 6, 20, 2008, 34-54. doi: 10.22081/jet.2008.21552
HARVARD
mihan-doost, R. (2008). 'Religion Never Wants Trouble for People
"A Survey of the rule of Exclusion heaviness"', Jostar, 6(20), pp. 34-54. doi: 10.22081/jet.2008.21552
VANCOUVER
mihan-doost, R. Religion Never Wants Trouble for People
"A Survey of the rule of Exclusion heaviness". Jostar, 2008; 6(20): 34-54. doi: 10.22081/jet.2008.21552