Salaam Qadada,
Before I proceed to answering your questions I would like to make a few points of my own, so bear with me.
The Quran claims to be a book (full) of guidance and one which guides to a path which is most firm, right, straight and stable (see: 31:3; 17:9; 2:2-3; 17:9; 16:89). For a book to guide, it would follow that said book would contain all info, details and practices necessary for our guidance and which would therefore lead to that guidance. But if we are to accept the argument that all or some of the rituals and practices which are necessary for our guidance cannot be found in the Quran and can therefore only be found in other sources, is to concede to the idea that the Quran is not necessarily a book “of guidance”. Because how can it, on the one hand claim/call itself a "book of guidance/a guidance for mankind", and yet on the other hand omit things the very thing necessary for our guidance? In such instance the Quran would only contain “half guidance”.
The Quran also claims to be a fully detailed explanation (Arabic: fussilat 41:3; 11:1), the perfect guidance (Arabic: hudan 2:2), a clear convincing proof (Arabic: burhan (4:174), the ultimate scale (Arabic: mizan 42.17; 57:25), the discernment between truth and falsehood (Arabic: Furqan 25:1, 2:53), an evidence absolutely clear (Arabic: bayyina 20:133) and a clear explanation of all matters (Arabic: tibiana lekulli shayin 16:89). A scripture cannot make these fanciful claims and yet on the other-hand not provide necessary details for human guidance as part of God ordained 'religion', or claimed to be (by some) incomplete, lacking details, and in need/dependent on other/secondary sources.
A scripture cannot be 'fussilat' and then not provide necessary details for human guidance as part of God ordained 'religion'. So why wouldn't Allah, as your question seems to suggest, mention the details of the salat in the quran? What reason would Allah have not to detail it in the quran? Or are you suggesting that Allah forgot to mention such details in the quran or that He ran out of words and thus left it up to fallible men to give mention to it?
With all that said, Onto answering you questions.
You asked:
So how do you pray nearly no details is giving on how to pray
With respect to how to offer the salat while upholding the Quran alone, the following site answers that Question:
HOW CAN WE LEARN PRAYER IF WE DON'T HAVE HADITH TO TEACH US?
http://quransmessage.com/articles/prayer%20without%20hadith%20FM3.htmYou also said:
don't huNat me with a reply I am not interested in your lies.
With all due respect the above statement of yours is a contradiction from your previous statement in which you ask how to pray salat. How can you, on the one hand, ask us a question with regards to salat and yet, on the other hand, say you're not interested in our replies? And on what ground do you assert that our replies are
lies?
By chance if you are interested in our replies I have already given you mine, and I would like to now post several questions of my own which I would appreciate you answering:
1) Why would Allah, on the one hand, mention those rituals in the Quran and command us (on more than one occasion) to uphold them and yet, on the other hand, fail to mention how/in what manner they should be upheld? Why didn’t Allah, in the same breath (while commanding us to uphold those practices/rituals) also given mention/explain as to how they should be performed? Are we to assume Allah forgot or that He ran out of words?
2) What are we to think of a scripture (i.e the Quran) that repeatedly emphasizes a certain act/practice (such as salah and zakat) but never explains (as you claim) how to perform said act/practice? The conclusion drawn would be that said scripture is a terrible omission and in that case it cannot be from God.
3) If, as you falsely assume, the salat is not detailed in the Quran then what purpose does the Quran serve in our lives? Why would Allah send down a book which He has admonished us to follow and yet leave it ambiguous? For you to suggest that the rituals you’ve alluded to (salat, zakat) aren’t mentioned in the Quran, means you are, in a sense, suggesting that the Quran is not complete nor fully detailed (despite Allah saying otherwise). Please ask yourself why issues/matters which Allah highly commands us to fulfill more than once in the Quran and are so vital for our salvations and guidance would not, as you seem to suggest, be mentioned in the Quran as to how to perform them? What use does the Quran serve if, as you suggest, it fails to mention how (and in what manner) we are to perform the very rituals it so demanding-ly instructs us to uphold?
4) Would you be so kind as to tell us which hadith describes how to pray? And if the haidth teach us how to offer salat then how do you explain the many different methods of prayer from both the Sunnis and the Shiits (and the sub-sects within them)?
You also said:
Anzaal al Kitaab wa al HIKMAH - wa means a addition what's the HIKMAH which means way and sunnah always means way or method.
With respect, I disagree with you when you assert that the word
Hikmah mean something additional (such as the sunnah)? Upon you is the burden to prove soely from a Quran perspective that the word
Hikmah means sunnah.
If you are interested in what the word
Hikmah means from a Quran perspective, I advice you to read the following article:
DOES 'HIKMAH' (WISDOM) MEAN SUNNA OF THE PROPHET MUHAMMAD? (pbuh)
http://quransmessage.com/articles/hikmah%20FM3.htmAlso, with respect to the term
Hikmah please condsider 17:39, which reads as follows:
“This is part of the wisdom that your Lord reveals to you" [Quran 17:39]
The word “wisdom” in the above verse is used to refer to some thirteen ethical teachings enumerated in verses 22 to 38 (of Surat Al-'Isrā' 17:22-39).
And by the way, many of us don't outright reject the hadiths. We only reject those which are in clear contradictions of the Quran, as well as those which find absolutely no support from the Quran.
Peace.