Straight Answers to Controversial Questions about Islam

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Greetings, Scimitar,

I was going to ask "how did you type that so quickly?" but then I realised that you've copy and pasted most of it from somewhere else.

The Prophet (peace be on him) discouraged people from being over-inquisitive and unnecessarily curious about every question.

In that case, how can you claim that this is someone who encourages questioning? This looks like the very opposite attitude.

We find in the Hadith the following saying from the Prophet (peace be on him): 'The worst criminal among the Muslims is the one who inquired about something which had not been made unlawful, and then it was declared so, because of his inquiry.' (Bukhari, I'tisam', 3; Muslim, Fada'il', 132, 133; Abu Da'ud, 'Sunnah', 6 - Ed.)

The worst criminal? Really? Worse than a child rapist or a serial killer? That's crazy!

It is not to be read like a book - but studied like a science... worked like math... weighed against a philosphers stone and drunk til the waters run black.

This is meaningless, so I think I'll stick to reading it. :)

Peace
 
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I see two options, entertain your circular logic - or get popcorn and watch celebrity masterchef... popcorn and masterchef win.

Scimi
 
Cuz, if you wrote a book and said "come here, heaven is here" . I could do the same, proving you wrong. What you must be able to do is do something NONE except someone sent by God, can. Something that is outside physics, the human capacity.

If you make a claim, where is your proof? A book you wrote yourself? Anything that is imitatable, or anything that is comparable to creation, can never be from God.

First you have to know God exists, then you will know how to search for Him. Not the other way around. God can not contradict sound human nature, reason or logic

God said, if The Qur'an was from other than God, you'd find in it much contradiction. God also challenges mankind to write a book like The Qur'an (which is impossible, since it is from God)

So if I can find contradictions and plain wrong bits in the Koran it is to be considered as valid as all the other religious books of gibberish then?

'cos I can.

That is my point.
 
So if I can find contradictions and plain wrong bits in the Koran it is to be considered as valid as all the other religious books of gibberish then?

'cos I can.

That is my point.

Bring your proof. Make a thread, and have people refute / correct you, cause there are no contradictions in the Qur'an. The Qur'an itself challenges you. So go ahead, make a thread, and bring the verses you see contradictions in and wrongs. And the Qur'an is superior to any book on this Earth. It is incomparable.

Point is: there are no contradictions. So the challenge is: find contradictions in it! If it was from other than Allah, you would find.

So, make a thread, and bring the verses that bothers you. Pretty fair challenge, right?
And Allah :swt: knows best.
 
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Bring your proof. Make a thread, and have people refute / correct you, cause there are no contradictions in the Qur'an. The Qur'an itself challenges you. So go ahead, make a thread, and bring the verses you see contradictions in and wrongs. And the Qur'an is superior to any book on this Earth. It is incomparable.

Point is: there are no contradictions. So the challenge is: find contradictions in it! If it was from other than Allah, you would find.

So, make a thread, and bring the verses that bothers you. Pretty fair challenge, right?
And Allah :swt: knows best.

Well for contradictions I went to this site;

http://skepticsannotatedbible.com/quran/contra/by_name.html

I found, amongst others;

For the question "Was Pharaoh Drowned or saved?"
Drowned:-

17:102-3
I deem thee lost, O Pharaoh. And he wished to scare them from the land, but We drowned him and those with him, all together. 28:40 We seized him [Pharaoh] and his hosts, and abandoned them unto the sea. 43:55 So, when they angered Us, We punished them and drowned them every one.
Saved:-
10:90-92
Pharaoh ... when the (fate of) drowning overtook him, he exclaimed: I believe that there is no God save Him in Whom the Children of Israel believe ... But this day We save thee in thy body that thou mayst be a portent for those after thee.

Then there is the thing about salt water not mixing with river water. It does.
 

Well for contradictions I went to this site;

http://skepticsannotatedbible.com/quran/contra/by_name.html

I found, amongst others;

For the question "Was Pharaoh Drowned or saved?"
Drowned:-


Saved:-


Then there is the thing about salt water not mixing with river water. It does.

make a thread and have other answer you. I am not qualified. But there are no contradictions. I checked that website. Not to be trusted.

But go ahead, make a thread, we will answer you. One by one. :D
 
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Greetings,

I see two options, entertain your circular logic - or get popcorn and watch celebrity masterchef... popcorn and masterchef win.

Nothing circular about my logic. I doubt very much that you truly understand what that phrase means.

Given that Scimitar has attempted to answer my question with a few quotes that do little except reinforce my point, let's leave him to his popcorn and see if anybody else is able to help explain this passage from the Qur'an. I refer you to my question:

We keep hearing that the Qur'an encourages the reader to think and ask questions. So can anybody explain what the following passage is about?

"O you who have believed, do not ask about things which, if they are shown to you, will distress you. But if you ask about them while the Qur'an is being revealed, they will be shown to you. Allah has pardoned that which is past; and Allah is Forgiving and Forbearing. A people asked such [questions] before you; then they became thereby disbelievers." (5:101-102)

Peace
 
Greetings,



Nothing circular about my logic. I doubt very much that you truly understand what that phrase means.

Given that Scimitar has attempted to answer my question with a few quotes that do little except reinforce my point, let's leave him to his popcorn and see if anybody else is able to help explain this passage from the Qur'an. I refer you to my question:

We keep hearing that the Qur'an encourages the reader to think and ask questions. So can anybody explain what the following passage is about?

"O you who have believed, do not ask about things which, if they are shown to you, will distress you. But if you ask about them while the Qur'an is being revealed, they will be shown to you. Allah has pardoned that which is past; and Allah is Forgiving and Forbearing. A people asked such [questions] before you; then they became thereby disbelievers." (5:101-102)

Peace

Islam does encourage questioning and reasoning, yes, but it is also a religion of balance, as I'm sure you've heard us say many times, so excessive questioning to the point you distress yourself or others is discouraged.

For example some people would ask the Prophet (pbuh) questions which had no importance to their religion or daily affairs, and the answers to which would do more harm than good, and others would ask him questions to mock him or Islam. Asking rigid questions or questioning purely for the sake of argument is far from beneficial as you'd know, it's a waste of time and can be divisive in society. Just because it is put forward as a question doesn't necessarily mean the questioner wants to seek knowledge, they could have other intentions.

And about excessive questioning 'making you a disbeliever', then I believe this example comes from the people of the Prophet Moses (as), they began question the laws of their religion excessively, constantly hair-splitting and arguing so much they became divisive and actually strayed from the original purity of their faith. I think in pretty much any human it is a characteristic of ours to complicate things, and Islam is a relatively simple religion, so when you excessively question things already decided upon or explained well - it's not going to lead to anything good.

Obviously this doesn't apply if you are asking someone qualified a question about your religion or someone with experience about worldly things if the intention is to learn.

Allah swt knows best.
 
Islam does encourage questioning and reasoning, yes, but it is also a religion of balance, as I'm sure you've heard us say many times, so excessive questioning to the point you distress yourself or others is discouraged.

For example some people would ask the Prophet (pbuh) questions which had no importance to their religion or daily affairs, and the answers to which would do more harm than good, and others would ask him questions to mock him or Islam. Asking rigid questions or questioning purely for the sake of argument is far from beneficial as you'd know, it's a waste of time and can be divisive in society. Just because it is put forward as a question doesn't necessarily mean the questioner wants to seek knowledge, they could have other intentions.

And about excessive questioning 'making you a disbeliever', then I believe this example comes from the people of the Prophet Moses (as), they began question the laws of their religion excessively, constantly hair-splitting and arguing so much they became divisive and actually strayed from the original purity of their faith. I think in pretty much any human it is a characteristic of ours to complicate things, and Islam is a relatively simple religion, so when you excessively question things already decided upon or explained well - it's not going to lead to anything good.

Obviously this doesn't apply if you are asking someone qualified a question about your religion or someone with experience about worldly things if the intention is to learn.

Allah swt knows best.

I tesitfy to this. I used to question a lot, to the point I almost left Islam. Not because I didn't get my answers, but because, I kept doubting, and my questions answered, yet I was overthinking, etc.

Say shirk, I know shirk is to worship anyone or anything besides Allah. I know Tawheed is to worship Allah alone, and none else, no matter who he is. This is the message of Islam.

Yet I was overthinking it, and kept questioning, seeking more and more proof. I got the proof, yet this over-questioning rather than helping can turn someone insane.

Various people answered my question regards to Shirk, and I know. But this over compulsiveness in over-questioning, can do more harm than good.

I knew the Qur'an's defiintion of shirk was "to worship anyone or anything besides Allah" yet I kept questioning in circular logic / reasoning I knew but still got those doubts. Baseless doubts. [MENTION=38888]muslimah_B[/MENTION] helped me.. yet I still.. I know tho! :D
Allahu alam.
 
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Greetings, noraina,

Thank you for your reply.

So the situation with Islam appears to be: ask questions, but not too many. This is the attitude of someone who is opposed to free inquiry, and, if it's backed up divine authority, one of the most effective ways to discourage questioning. I know Muslims will deny it, but that's a straightforward contradiction in the Qur'an, right there.

Hopefully we can all bear this in mind the next time someone makes the absurd claim that Islam encourages questions.

Peace
 
Re: Straight Answers to the Controversial Questions about Islam

But Tim, thinking for yourself is dangerous! You may have bad thoughts or reach incorrect conclusions
Indeed you may. Didn't you say yourself earlier that:

Our senses can fail us
I am glad you acknowledge this very important fact.

So the situation with Islam appears to be: ask questions, but not too many. This is the attitude of someone who is opposed to free inquiry
And what is the attitude of Pygoscelis, is he opposed to free inquiry too? :ermm:

Don't ask questions you don't want or can't handle the honest answer to.

With all due respect, you both sound very biased and unfair in your conclusions and in the
way you speak about Islam. Why not be fair?

Peace.
 
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Greetings,



Nothing circular about my logic. I doubt very much that you truly understand what that phrase means.

Given that Scimitar has attempted to answer my question with a few quotes that do little except reinforce my point, let's leave him to his popcorn and see if anybody else is able to help explain this passage from the Qur'an. I refer you to my question:

We keep hearing that the Qur'an encourages the reader to think and ask questions. So can anybody explain what the following passage is about?

"O you who have believed, do not ask about things which, if they are shown to you, will distress you. But if you ask about them while the Qur'an is being revealed, they will be shown to you. Allah has pardoned that which is past; and Allah is Forgiving and Forbearing. A people asked such [questions] before you; then they became thereby disbelievers." (5:101-102)

Peace

Hi

In islam we are commanded to seek knowledge, to think, to contemplate, to understand and act.

{“And Allâh has brought you out from the wombs of your mothers while you know nothing. And He gave you hearing, sight, and hearts that you might give thanks (to Allâh)
[al-Nahl 16:78]*

“Read! In the Name of your Lord Who has created (all that exists).

He has created man from a clot (a piece of thick coagulated blood).

Read! And your Lord is the Most Generous.

Who has taught (the writing) by the pen.

He has taught man that which he knew not”
[al-‘Alaq 96:1-5]*


In Islam, knowledge comes before action; there can be no action without knowledge, as Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):*

“So know (O Muhammad) that Laa ilaaha ill-Allâh (none has the right to be worshipped but Allâh), and ask forgiveness for your sin, and also for (the sin of) believing men and believing women”
[Muhammad 47:19]*

Allaah warns every Muslim against speaking without knowledge, as He says (interpretation of the meaning):*

“And follow not (O man, i.e., say not, or do not, or witness not) that of which you have no knowledge. Verily, the hearing, and the sight, and the heart of each of those ones will be questioned (by Allâh)”
[al-Israa’ 17:36]*


Emphasizing the status of knowledge and the scholars, Allaah calls upon the scholars to bear witness to His Oneness, as He says (interpretation of the meaning):*

“Allâh bears witness that Lâ ilâha illa Huwa (none has the right to be worshipped but He), and the angels, and those having knowledge (also give this witness); (He always) maintains His creation in justice. Laa ilaaha illa Huwa (none has the right to be worshipped but He), the All‑Mighty, the All-Wise”
[Aal ‘Imraan 3:18]*


Knowledge and fear of Allaah may be attained by knowing His signs and creation. The knowledgeable are those who know that, hence Allaah praises them by saying (interpretation of the meaning):*

“It is only those who have knowledge among His slaves that fear Allâh”
[Faatir 35:28]*


The scholars occupy a noble status in Islam, and which is higher than the position of others in this world and in the Hereafter. Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):*

“Allâh will exalt in degree those of you who believe, and those who have been granted knowledge”
[al-Mujaadilah 58:11]*


Because of the importance of knowledge, Allaah commanded His Messenger to seek more of it. Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):*

“and say: ‘My Lord! Increase me in knowledge’”
[Ta-Ha 20:114]*

Allaah praises the scholars, as He says (interpretation of the meaning):*

“Say: ‘Are those who know equal to those who know not?’ It is only men of understanding who will remember (i.e. get a lesson from Allâh’s Signs and Verses)”
[al-Zumar 39:9]*


Those who have knowledge are the quickest of people to understand the truth and believe in it:*

“And that those who have been given knowledge may know that it (this Qur’aan) is the truth from your Lord, so that they may believe therein, and their hearts may submit to it with humility”

[al-Hajj 22:54 – interpretation of the meaning]*

Islam calls us to seek knowledge. The Messenger (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) made seeking knowledge an obligation upon every Muslim, and he explained that the superiority of the one who has knowledge over the one who merely worships is like the superiority of the moon over every other heavenly body. He said that the scholars are the heirs of the Prophets and that the Prophets did not leave behind dinars and dirhams (i.e., money), rather their inheritance was knowledge, so whoever acquires it has gained a great share. And he (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said that seeking knowledge is a way to Paradise. He (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “Whoever follows a path in the pursuit of knowledge, Allaah will make a path to Paradise easy for him.” (Narrated by al-Bukhaari, Kitaab al-‘Ilm, 10)*

Islam calls us to learn all kinds of beneficial knowledge. Branches of knowledge vary in status, the highest of which is knowledge of sharee’ah, then knowledge of medicine, then the other fields of knowledge.*

The best of all branches of knowledge are the sciences of sharee’ah through which man comes to know his Lord, and his Prophet and religion. This is the knowledge with which Allaah honoured His Messenger; He taught it to him so that he might teach it to mankind:*

“Indeed, Allâh conferred a great favour on the believers when He sent among them a Messenger (Muhammad) from among themselves, reciting unto them His Verses (the Qur’ân), and purifying them (from sins by their following him), and instructing them (in) the Book (the Qur’aan) and Al‑Hikmah [the wisdom and the Sunnah of the Prophet (i.e. his legal ways, statements and acts of worship)], while before that they had been in manifest error”

[Aal ‘Imraan 3:164 – interpretation of the meaning]*

The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “When Allaah wishes good for a person, He makes him understand the religion.” (Agreed upon. Narrated by al-Bukhaari, 69)*

Concerning the matter of paying attention to the Qur’aan and learning and teaching it, the Messenger (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “The best of you is the one who learns the Qur’aan and teaches it.” (Agreed upon. Narrated by al-Bukhaari, 4639)*

There is no goodness in knowledge which is not confirmed by action, or words which are not confirmed by deeds:*

“O you who believe! Why do you say that which you do not do?

Most hateful it is with Allâh that you say that which you do not do”
[al-Saff :2-3]*

The ummah needs knowledgeable people at all times and in all places. A nation without knowledge and scholars will live in illusions and sink in darkness. If a person knows what Allaah has prescribed ..?? {where does this go?} Whoever conceals this knowledge and deprives the ummah of it, Allaah will place on him a bridle of fire on the Day of Resurrection, and he will deserve to be cursed, except for the one who repents. Allaah says (interpretation of the* meaning):*

“Verily, those who conceal the clear proofs, evidences and the guidance, which We have sent down, after We have made it clear for the people in the Book, they are the ones cursed by Allâh and cursed by the cursers.

Except those who repent and do righteous deeds, and openly declare (the truth which they concealed). These, I will accept their repentance. And I am the One Who accepts repentance, the Most Merciful”

[al-Baqarah 2:159-160]*

Knowledge brings a great reward. The one who points the way to something good is like the one who does it. When the knowledgeable person dies, his reward with Allaah does not cease when he dies, rather it continues to increase so long as people benefit from his knowledge. The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “When a man dies, all his deeds come to an end except for three – an ongoing charity, beneficial knowledge or a righteous son who will pray for him.” (Narrated by Muslim, 1631)*

If the scholar spreads his knowledge among the people, he will have a reward like that of those who follow him. The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “Whoever calls people to right guidance will have a reward like that of those who follow him, without it detracting from their reward in the slightest, and whoever calls people to misguidance will have a burden of sin like that of those who follow him, without it detracting from their burden in the slightest.” (Narrated by Muslim, 2674)*

Proper understanding of Islam is one of the best of good characteristics with which a Muslim may be honoured, as the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “When Allaah wishes good for a person, He makes him understand the religion.” (Agreed upon).*

Reading Qur’aan, learning it and teaching it, are among the best deeds, as the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “There should be no envy (hasad) except between two people, a man to whom Allaah has given (knowledge of?) the Qur’aan, so he recites it night and day, and a man to whom Allaah has given wealth, so he spends it (in good deeds) night and day.”* (narrated by Muslim, 815) }
{From islamqa, which you may use to find any other answers if you wish, this is a reliable islamic website}

So now we have established that seeking knowledge is extremely important in being a muslim, the issue of asking questions is simple.

If you want to know something with the INTENTION of taking information from the answer you recieve and accepting it when the answer is given then you can ask as much as you like. As you are asking a question to gain something from it.
But if you are asking questions to cause disunity, distress, or to insult then questions are not allowed as there is no benifit in you asking, no good can come from it.
If you are asking a question and you already know the answer but your trying to find a way for the answer to be along the lines of your desires, then no your not supossed to ask questions.

Everybody has explained to you that, knowledge and questioning are allowed and obligatory in islam within reason the reason being that the questions asked are genuine to understand something, not to mock, insult, or belittle.

Here is the verse you specifically mentioned explained by people of knowledge, i hope that you can take out 5minutes to read it and understand

https://islamqa.info/en/187398

Think of it this way, a small child asking why is the car red, you tell them they painted it red, and the child goes on and on and on asking why, these are pointless question which have nothing to offer of benifit and leads no where.

Now if a child was to ask, why do we pray 5 times a day, then why do we pray, why do we worship Allah, there is benifit in these questions as something can be learned and understood, benifit can be taken from this.

Intentions are very important.
Why are you asking this
What are you going to do with what you just asked
Will asking this benifit you or take away any doubt

How do you learn, by asking questions, THE RIGHT QUESTIONS
 
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Greetings, noraina,

Thank you for your reply.

So the situation with Islam appears to be: ask questions, but not too many. This is the attitude of someone who is opposed to free inquiry, and, if it's backed up divine authority, one of the most effective ways to discourage questioning. I know Muslims will deny it, but that's a straightforward contradiction in the Qur'an, right there.

Hopefully we can all bear this in mind the next time someone makes the absurd claim that Islam encourages questions.

Peace
Greetings, czgibson.

If you ask me question about how to salah, what is zakat, In Shaa Allah, I can answer. But if you ask me, what makes me believe that Allah does exist, what makes me believe that Islam is the right religion?. I am sorry, I can't answer, but you must seek the answer by yourself through journey of faith.

Question about faith is question that cannot be answered by someone else, because only Allah himself who can answer it.

Honestly, sometime I doubt about existence of Allah, sometime I doubt about Islam. But I never stop my journey of faith which I can feel that Allah guide me. I always feel a clue that drive me to the place where I can get the answer of my doubt through what I experience. And that experience always raise faith in my heart.

So, does Islam encourage questions?. I will not say yes or no. But one thing that I know. Without question, there is no answer.

:)
 
Greetings, noraina,

Thank you for your reply.

So the situation with Islam appears to be: ask questions, but not too many. This is the attitude of someone who is opposed to free inquiry, and, if it's backed up divine authority, one of the most effective ways to discourage questioning. I know Muslims will deny it, but that's a straightforward contradiction in the Qur'an, right there.

Hopefully we can all bear this in mind the next time someone makes the absurd claim that Islam encourages questions.

Peace

That is one way to look at it.

However, when I read this verse from the Qur'an, it's an example of the balance behind all Islamic concepts. By all means, questioning is good and is encouraged, but in an intellectual, beneficial sense.

And I know you'll deny this, but I see inherent wisdom in the fact that Allah swt also warns us about questioning with intentions other than gaining knowledge, for example purely for the purpose of arguing or continuing to ask when the answers are clear and yet we ourselves fail to (or refuse to) understand.

This can be compared to the power of free-will. The Qur'an guides us on how to use it and rewards those who make certain choices, I don't see it in any way as compromising or contradicting the whole concept behind free-will and my ability to make a choice. The ability to ask questions in unique to humans and a part of our free-will, we are guided how to use questioning for our own benefit, again I don't see the contradiction.

As I said, questioning is a tool and tools can be used for good or bad. This verse warns about using it for anything other than good.

Peace to you as well :)
 
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Greetings,

I'm not sure why there are so many misrepresentations of Islamic teachings being thrown around here. I suppose it's far easier to attack a position that Muslims do not even hold than to address actual points being made. And what's with all the whining about the mods are making me say this or that? That is utter rubbish. Neither does it add any more credibility to one's argument. I know the mods very well, and what they ask for is respect. Unfortunately, reading this thread and the other one about morality and obedience, I see very little by way of respect coming from those championing noble ideals about good moral conduct and free inquiry. Instead, I see responses laced with derision and ridicule. The only shutting down of human faculty and opposition to reason is bending over backwards to prove religion wrong by turning a blind eye to facts and answers.

czgibson, you should know better than to misquote Islamic texts to support preconceived opinions. As before, instead of looking at the context and taking into account the perspective, you insist on your own incorrect conclusion. On the topic of seeking knowledge, inquiry and progress of civilisations, I posted the following some time ago:

Muhammad said:
Centuries before the European Renaissance there were Muslim explorers, scientists, philosophers and physicians. During most of its history, Islamic civilization has been witness to a veritable celebration of knowledge. Every traditional Islamic city possessed public and private libraries and some cities like Cordoba and Baghdad boasted of libraries with over 400,000 books. The scholar has always been held in the highest esteem in Islamic society. The Islamic university system predates renowned schools such as The University of Oxford and Cambridge by more than three centuries.

Have a look at the following link, a website which contains more than 1000 peer-reviewed articles regarding the Golden Age of Muslim civilisation and contributions of Muslims to every field of intellectual discovery:
http://www.muslimheritage.com/

A civilisation hostile to inquiry and basic curiosity does not contribute to the modern world in terms of science, medicine, technology and culture. And yet, you will find an overwhelming contribution from Islam and Muslims throughout history:

Science
The impact of Al-Battani on European Astronomy
From Alchemy to Chemistry
Contribution of Al-Khwarizmi to Mathematics and Geography
Botany, Herbals and Healing In Islamic Science and Medicine
Gleanings from the Islamic Contribution in Agriculture
Ibn Khaldun: Studies on His Contribution in Economy


Medicine
Medical Sciences in the Islamic Civilization
Insights into Neurologic Localization by Al-Razi (Rhazes), a Medieval Islamic Physician
The role of Ibn Sina (Avicenna)’s Medical Poem in the transmission of medical knowledge to medieval Europe
Anaesthesia 1000 Years Ago (II)
A Medical Classic: Al-Razi’s Treatise on Smallpox and Measles
Paediatric Urology 1000 Years Ago

Technology
Top Seven Ingenious Clocks from Muslim Civilisation that Defied the Middle Ages
Taqi al-Din ibn Ma‘ruf and the Science of Optics: The Nature of Light and the Mechanism of Vision
The Six-Cylinder Water Pump of Taqi al-Din: Its Mathematics, Operation and Virtual Design
Manuscripts and printing in the spread of Muslim science
A Review of Early Muslim Control Engineering
An 800 Years Old Ancestor: Today’s Science of Robotics and Al-Jazari

Culture
Architectural Links between East and West in Early Modern Times
Abdel-Wahed El-Wakil or the Triumph of the Islamic Architectural Style
Beauty and Aesthetics in Islam
The Islamic Art in the Louvre Museum in Paris
Arab Influences on Spanish Language and Culture
The Coffee Route from Yemen to London 10th-17th Centuries
The Influence of Islamic Culinary Art on Europe


It is time we move on from repeating nonsensical statements to having a meaningful discussion. If that is not possible, there is no point in having a discussion.
 
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No question that Muslim lands contributed greatly historically to science, especially during the Christian dark ages. But that appears to have changed a few centuries ago. The cynical question wouldn't be what have you done, but what have you done lately :)
 
Greetings, czgibson.

If you ask me question about how to salah, what is zakat, In Shaa Allah, I can answer. But if you ask me, what makes me believe that Allah does exist, what makes me believe that Islam is the right religion?. I am sorry, I can't answer, but you must seek the answer by yourself through journey of faith.

Question about faith is question that cannot be answered by someone else, because only Allah himself who can answer it.

Honestly, sometime I doubt about existence of Allah, sometime I doubt about Islam. But I never stop my journey of faith which I can feel that Allah guide me. I always feel a clue that drive me to the place where I can get the answer of my doubt through what I experience. And that experience always raise faith in my heart.

So, does Islam encourage questions?. I will not say yes or no. But one thing that I know. Without question, there is no answer.

:)

This is, I think, a good reason or at least explaination of why people are Islamic. It is not about critical thinking. It is not about individualistic divergence from the norm. It is all about a pathway to a group coherant way of life where the rules are known.

Originally Posted by Tim_the_Plumber
Well for contradictions I went to this site;

http://skepticsannotatedbible.com/qu...a/by_name.html

I found, amongst others;

For the question "Was Pharaoh Drowned or saved?"
Drowned:-


Saved:-


Then there is the thing about salt water not mixing with river water. It does.
make a thread and have other answer you. I am not qualified. But there are no contradictions. I checked that website. Not to be trusted.

But go ahead, make a thread, we will answer you. One by one. :D
I am resistant to making such a thread because it is exactly putting Islam in the dock of a scientifically structured court.

Clearly there are contradictions in the Koran. But I think that that is not the point of why Islam persists.
 

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