The Shahada, the first pillar of Islam, is examined through the lens of Hegelian dialectics 1 as an epistemological structure rather than a dogmatically accepted premise. Faith in Islam is argued to emerge as a logical synthesis produced by a rigorous process of negation, testing, and ontological resolution. Read dialectically, the Shahada culminates a movement from thesis (initial belief), through antithesis (systematic examination), toward synthesis (epistemic and onto- logical affirmation), situating Islamic faith within the spirit of rational inquiry. The act of testimony (asy- hadu) is therefore interpreted not as a performative utterance devoid of verification, but as a declaration grounded in personal testing and epistemic validation 3. Moreover, the linguistic structure of la ilaha illa Allah encodes a falsificatory logic analogous to Karl Popper’s principle of falsification 2, wherein universal negation (la ilaha) functions as a null hypothesis that must be exhaustively eliminated before affirmation (illa Allah) becomes intelligible. In contrast to other Abrahamic traditions in which faith begins with belief (credo) or obedience (shema), the Shahada positions testimony as the epistemic conclusion rather than the starting point of faith.
Jimmy Yuanda Mahardhika (Wed,) studied this question.