: The Imam asserts that Allah elevates believers through faith ( Iman ), regardless of whether people consider them "base," and lowers others through disbelief ( Kufr ), regardless of their worldly esteem.
The text is evaluated against established historical data from the 7th and 8th centuries. Investigators check if the language, titles used, and political situations mentioned align with the specific decade the event supposedly took place. 3. Comparative Evaluation Rijal Al Kashi Report 176 -2021-
The science of Rijal —the biographical evaluation of hadith narrators—serves as the backbone of Islamic jurisprudence, particularly within the Shia tradition. Among the earliest and most seminal works in this field is Ikhtiyar Ma'rifat al-Rijal , commonly known as Rijal al-Kashi , attributed to the 4th-century scholar Muhammad ibn Umar al-Kashi. Report 176, as categorized in the 2021 English translation series, stands as a quintessential example of the rigorous methodology employed by early Imami scholars to vet the transmission of religious knowledge. This report not only highlights the critical distinction between reliable and unreliable narrators but also illuminates the sectarian tensions and theological concerns that shaped the early Shia community. : The Imam asserts that Allah elevates believers
While a specific "Report 176 -2021-" doesn't appear in standard academic databases under that exact title, it aligns with modern systematic reviews of Rijal al-Kashi, which is one of the four foundational books of Shi'ite biographical evaluation . Overview of Rijal al-Kashi Report 176, as categorized in the 2021 English
"Rijal Al Kashi" refers to Rijal al-Kashif (or similar transliterations), a scholarly work on Rijal (the science of biographical evaluation of hadith narrators) written by the Shia scholar Muhammad ibn Hasan al-Hurr al-Amili . The number "176" likely refers to a specific entry number for a narrator in the text. The year 2021 suggests this is a modern research report or analysis released in that year.