Factors in Losing Faith

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:sl:

they were intellectual and not socio-political. He left because due to his contemplation of science, philosophy, and the evidence, he gave up the Islamic conception of science, became an atheist and an evolutionist and found flaw in Islamic doctrine, such as the claim that Adam and Eve, if they existed, did not share a common ancestor with apes and chimpanzees. (It doesn’t matter if science can or cannot verify the specific existence of Adam and Eve. Contemporary evolutionary science is claiming that all humans alive today shared a common ancestor with chimps. On the Islamic doctrine, as described in the fatwa, that can’t possibly be true – there is a conflict. Salim and I are both convinced that the evidence for human speciation is just as strong as the evidence for chimp speciation – which is considerable indeed.) Now Ansar, I grant that you find these reasons flimsy and incomprehensible for someone who claims to have had a sound Islamic education – but nevertheless, that is what happened.

sorry for Interrupt

well i m afraid i don't believe u
or may be u r telling something very rare

Leaving Islam is a very far word sharvy, I never see, heard or read any knowledgeable devout Muslims ever deny the peace they got from Islam.


I personally believe as vast as people expand their knowledge as more as they thing themselves as a creator or do something which challenge the God (Naujubillaah)
But Not those who have knowledge in DEAN

I do believe ur friend Salim does not have proper understand in DEAN …

Allahu Alim (Allaah knows best)
 
sorry for Interrupt

well i m afraid i don't believe u
or may be u r telling something very rare

Leaving Islam is a very far word sharvy, I never see, heard or read any knowledgeable devout Muslims ever deny the peace they got from Islam.


I personally believe as vast as people expand their knowledge as more as they thing themselves as a creator or do something which challenge the God (Naujubillaah)
But Not those who have knowledge in DEAN

I do believe ur friend Salim does not have proper understand in DEAN …

Allahu Alim (Allaah knows best)

:sl:
Hi i_m_tipu

Since I knew him well and know him to be a completely trustworthy honerable person, for what it's worth, I believe him, and his story makes sense to my ear. But he has not publicized his apostasy or told his family and friends - he loves them and wants to maintain good relations.

Peace,

Sharvy
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Hi i_m_tipu

Since I knew him well and know him to be a completely trustworthy honerable person, for what it's worth, I believe him, and his story makes sense to my ear. But he has not publicized his apostasy or told his family and friends - he loves them and wants to maintain good relations.

Peace,

Sharvy
:sl:


hello sharvy

But he has not publicized his apostasy or told his family and friends

do answer that he do not sure 100% what's he doing.
 
hello sharvy

But he has not publicized his apostasy or told his family and friends

do answer that he do not sure 100% what's he doing.
:sl:
Hi i_m_tipu,

He was a close friend and colleague of mine years ago, but I recently got back in touch with him to verify his credentials and views, as Ansar requested of me. He never raised the apostasy issue; it was I who raised it because Ansar kept repeating that never in the history of Islam has one single "knowledgeable" Muslim ever left Islam. Well since I had considerable personal experience with Salim (not his real name), I decided to describe his case to this forum - because eeman aside, it seems to me that with 2 ijazahs and a PhD in Islamic theology from Al-Azar, that Salim is "knowledgeable". Well it turns out that by "knowledgeable" Ansar means something very complicated, including having eeman. In truth, as Woodrow pointed out there is no way to prove Salim's case one way or another - even if Salim were to publicly submit his credentials and submit to Ansar's interrogation. At best Ansar would conclude that Salim does not possess eeman - something we already know (since, after all, he is an acknowledged apostate) - and then Ansar would find that Salim doesn't count because he is not knowledgeable. There is no reason to submit Salim to these "tests"; the outcome is already known. As far as Salim himself, while he thinks that Islam, Christianity and other religions are all flawed, he does not hate religion, and simply does not make an issue of his apostasy. He especially does not want to upset friends and family back in Egypt. But I gather he is entirely comfortable with his choice to become an apostate and does not regret it.

Peace,

Sharvy
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sharvy

Just curious...

Why did he leave Egypt?

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Hi Abu

Salim took a position at a good American university teaching Islamic studies. Originally he intended the move to be temporary, but it didn't work out that way.

Regards,

Sharvy
:sl:
 
Hi Sharvy,

I've got just one point to highlight. To be knowledgable is not a pre-equisite of having the eeman (faith). Just for thought, i've read somewhere that there are a lot of Islamic Studies courses in the west which are taught by someone who is not a muslim. Yes, this man knows a lot of Islamic Theology (some of them even have a Phd.) but does that means he is a firm believer in Islam? I believe the answer to that will be a resounding NO. To be knowledgable is one thing, to have faith is another thing altogether.

Peace...
 
Hi Sharvy,

I've got just one point to highlight. To be knowledgable is not a pre-equisite of having the eeman (faith). Just for thought, i've read somewhere that there are a lot of Islamic Studies courses in the west which are taught by someone who is not a muslim. Yes, this man knows a lot of Islamic Theology (some of them even have a Phd.) but does that means he is a firm believer in Islam? I believe the answer to that will be a resounding NO. To be knowledgable is one thing, to have faith is another thing altogether.

Peace...

:sl:
Hi Syed,

I cannot see into Salim's heart. All I know is that he told me that at the time he got his degree and took his first job in the US he was a "devout" practicing Muslim who was sincerely committed to Islam. He changed his mind gradually over the next several years. Since I always found him to be an honorable, kind, trustworthy, generous spirit, with no particular agenda against Islam, I personally believe him. But it seems clear from what I have learned in this forum, that since eeman is always permanent, whatever "faith" Salim did have was not eeman. That's all I know. But note that I originally raised the case of Salim because Ansar kept repeating that no "knowledgeable" Muslim ever left Islam. It seemed to me that regardless of the issue of faith, Saim was a knowledgeable Muslim who left Islam - rare though that may be.

Peace,

Sharvy
:sl:
 
Hi Sharvy,

Again, regarding this issue i've just wanted to highlight something. Since the inception of Islam itself, there are a lot of people who will comes out and making all sorts of statement that he is a muslim. It's a norm nowadays, to see someone with a muslim name, but, unfortunately never practised Islam at all. Their actions and beliefs is actually a direct contradiction of the teachings of Islam. How could someone professed of being a muslim if their action and thinking is exactly the opposite? For instances, i knew someone who actually thinks that in order to be civilised, one have got to literally abandoned some commandments in Islam. If this is the case, how could he declared himself to be as muslim anymore?

In a sense, what brother Ansar has said is true. No true muslim will ever be tempted to become apostate after having eeman in Islam. For a true muslim believes that this life is all about trials and tribulations, it's only temporary and the life in the hereafter is for eternity. Life is but a journey. Form God we come and towards God ultimately we must return. All of us is going to be held accountable for our action in this world by God in the day of Judgement. Therefore, the ultimate aim is to live a righteous way of life, to invoke God's blesing. That's the true essence of a true muslim. That's why, a true muslim would never have converted in the first place... for whatever price it might be.

Peace...
 
Hi Sharvy,

Again, regarding this issue i've just wanted to highlight something. Since the inception of Islam itself, there are a lot of people who will comes out and making all sorts of statement that he is a muslim. It's a norm nowadays, to see someone with a muslim name, but, unfortunately never practised Islam at all. Their actions and beliefs is actually a direct contradiction of the teachings of Islam. How could someone professed of being a muslim if their action and thinking is exactly the opposite? For instances, i knew someone who actually thinks that in order to be civilised, one have got to literally abandoned some commandments in Islam. If this is the case, how could he declared himself to be as muslim anymore?

In a sense, what brother Ansar has said is true. No true muslim will ever be tempted to become apostate after having eeman in Islam. For a true muslim believes that this life is all about trials and tribulations, it's only temporary and the life in the hereafter is for eternity. Life is but a journey. Form God we come and towards God ultimately we must return. All of us is going to be held accountable for our action in this world by God in the day of Judgement. Therefore, the ultimate aim is to live a righteous way of life, to invoke God's blesing. That's the true essence of a true muslim. That's why, a true muslim would never have converted in the first place... for whatever price it might be.

Peace...

:sl:
Hi Syed,

I agree with you - Salim's case ultimately proves nothing which is one of the principal points I was trying to get across to Ansar. What's the point of challenging the world to show him one example of a "knowledgeable" Muslim who left Islam. Salim would be the first to agree that no practicing Muslim should abandon religion on his account. He has never deliberately encouraged anyone to abandon religion and become an atheist. His own reasons for leaving Islam were personal, complex, and unique. Perhaps he is damned and worse off, but he is making his choice with eyes wide-open.

Peace,

Sharvy
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Hi Abu

Salim took a position at a good American university teaching Islamic studies. Originally he intended the move to be temporary, but it didn't work out that way.

Regards,

Sharvy
:sl:

So they contacted him and offered him the job because of his Ph.D?
 
Hello Sharvy
This is a shallow mischaracterization of what I’ve told you.
Not really. True, you have named two ijaazahs and two scholars, but saying something like "I have an ijaazah in usool al-fiqh" is like saying "I've studied biology" - it doesn't help very much since I've pointed out that they are not all the same.

As for his reasons you just denied them being sociopolitical you didn't really give me any details. And saying they were intellectual doesn't help because Salim had the same intellect before and after he moved to America. What in his education of science would cause someone with 100% certainty to toss it all in the trash? And look at what you just wrote in your most recent post:
His own reasons for leaving Islam were personal, complex, and unique.​
That's essentially the same as the meaning of the statement I attributed to you. You're raising a null case - since you don't know his personal and complex reasons why are you using them as evidence? And you write:
Salim's case ultimately proves nothing which is one of the principal points I was trying to get across to Ansar.
I beg your pardon? Are you not the one who raised Salim's case as an example to challenge my claim, or am I speaking to a different Sharvy? Haven't I been the one all along saying that the argument over Salim was pointless and null and didn't prove anything?
he gave up the Islamic conception of science
No such thing. Islam is not interested in defining or analyzing science.
Contemporary evolutionary science is claiming that all humans alive today shared a common ancestor with chimps.
Again, you need to distinguish between what scientific evidence states and how we interpret the evidence. We need to examine the interpretations themselves to see which is stronger. I gave you the example of the arab practices and how non-muslims look at them as having been adopted by Muslims and Muslims look at them as having some remnants of the practices of prophet abraham and consequently confirmed by the Prophet pbuh.
Salim and I are both convinced that the evidence for human speciation is just as strong as the evidence for chimp speciation – which is considerable indeed.
When I mentioned speciation I was speaking about observed speciation.
There is another issue that I am interested in: if Salim comes forth and identifies himself publicly or privately to you Ansar, would you then have a religious obligation to notify his family in Egypt of his apostasy, if you are so able?
First of all, how could I notify his family? Why would he give me their contact information? Secondly, I probably would not since I can't see any benefit in it.

Who is the "we" here: some scientists, most scientists, a consensus?
The entire scientific community. Everyone is looking for an answer.
Isn't it a fact that scientists do reach consensus on some issues (though there may be still be stray defectors), thereby justifying a general claim to "know" something to be true?
There was a general consensus on the corpuscular theory. There was a general consensus on homosexuality being a psychological disorder. And there have been hundreds of other examples like these as well.
Also, if the scientific "we" can conclude that Newton was wrong, that same "we" has concluded that Aristotle and Ptolemy were wrong, but has also concluded that Galileo was right about the motion of the earth. We are not still searching "for a better answer" than this.
Because this is now observable. If we had a time machine then the existence of Adam and Eve would be observable too. We don't.
So if 100 years ago, I asked an educated person why they are sure the earth spins, on your view what should their answer have been?
His answer should have been to cithe scientific theories and describe what the scientific community believed at that point. It seems you are still under the false impression that I reject science or belittle the views of the scientific community, and that's not true at all. I am all for productivity and research in science, but I also emphasize that laymen should understand scientific methodology.
There is much confusion over the word "theory" which is used different ways by different people.
Yes there is, but I have never made such mistakes so this is a strawman.
Theories are systems of explanations which are strongly supported by factual observations and which explain whole sets of facts and experimental results.
Yes; they are the most parsimonious explanation in accordance with experimental evidence.
While many working scientists do in fact use the word "prove" and "proof", most contemporary philosophers of science avoid this language.
Not my argument again.
So while you or science cannot "prove" you had a headache last week. You and other sources (e.g. a hidden video camera) can certainly provide people with evidence that would make it, all things considered, reasonable to believe that you in fact really did have a headache last week.
Exactly! Yet we do not have a hidden video camera to provide evidence that I had a headache last week, nor do we have a hidden video camera to provide evidence that Adam and Eve existed millions of years ago. This is precisely the point. If one makes an assertion about such a period of time, that assertion can neither be verified nor falsified by scientific evidence, since we have none from that time.
That issue aside, evolutionary science can bring plenty of evidence to bear that that doctrine is probably mistaken.
This is the fallacy I have been mentioning. What evidence makes it less likely that Adam and Eve existed? Nothing of this nature exists. You're speaking about probability here but the truth of the matter is that we have no way of assesing on the basis of scientific evidence the probability of such an assertion.
No I mean much more than "so far there is no scientific evidence that contradicts" the evolution of humans. Your Fibonacci analogy is flawed. Suppose I have a barrel that I know contains a million marbles that are either red or black – but cannot know the color before I choose a marble. Suppose I turn the barrel multiple times before and after each pick completely randomizing the pick of each marble. Mathematically if the first 100 marbles I pick are black, the odds go up the next marble I pick will be black. If I pick 1000 straight black marbles, the odds are much stronger that the next marble I pick will be black – and it becomes more probable (not certain) that all the marbles in the barrel are black. And supposed I picked 990,000 straight black marbles.
The flaws in such an example should be obvious:
1. The reason why it is foolish to suggest that the next marble would be red is because it is massively improbable for a red marble not to show up in the first 990 000 outcomes if there are any red marbles in the barrel. but what does that correspond to when we come back to the case of Adam and Eve?? That if they existed there is almost 100% probability that we should have discovered their bones or something by now? That's just nonsense. People who claim that Adam and Eve existed are not clinging to a remote probability that out of a 'barrel' of scientific evidence we have nearly exhausted there must be a single piece establishing the existed of Adam and Eve - on the contrary we're making an assertion about a time period for which we have no scientific evidence.
2. The other problem with your analogy is that, as I alluded to in the first point, you are hinting that there is a finite quantity of ALL scientific evidence which we have almost exhausted. If there are a billion marble in the barrel then we haven't even scratched the surface of a single one. It's like if someone asserts that there was a unique golden fish somewhere in the world a million years ago, and a fisherman says, "I go fishing everyday and I haven't come across anything like that".
3. There is also the implict notion in your analogy that scientists never cling to remote probabilities. That's also incorrect. Just consider the project of the University of California, called Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI); they attempt to analyze the radio telescope data coming in from space to detect signals from extraterrestrial life forms. The probability of detecting such signals out of the massive, vast universe of signals is next to nothing, and yet they engage in this project. How about a more familiar example? Evolutionists agree that the mathematical probabilities involved in abiogenesis are also next to nothing, yet most assert that it happened.
4. Lastly, you've provided me with an example of probability whereas it doesn't apply at all to the case of belief in Adam and Eve. Is there any conceivable way for us to assess the probability of their existence? No, there is not. There are an infinite number of possibilities, we have no way of knowing what is the reality solely on the basis of scientific evidence. In this regard especially, my example was a dozen times more accurate as there is no way for us to asses the probability of whether the sequence we have been presented with is the fibonacci sequence or an arithmetic sequence or perhaps any of a number of more complex sequences or series. Here's another: {1, 2, 3, 3.75, 4.21875, 4.482421875...}. This is a much better analogy because for each piece of evidence (numerical term) there are an infinite number of possibilties as opposed to two (red and black) and there are a number of possible patterns, in science we would incline towards the most parsimonious of them.​
The slim extract of the Fibonacci sequence you gave me was an extremely weak inductive sample and any extrapolation of the sequence would be highly risky.
Would it make a difference if you knew 1000 terms of a sequence and yet there were still dozens of possibilties? Consider this example:
If I say that the expression n^2 +n + 41 generates a prime number when n is the set of positive integers, you could start testing the formula out and you woud find out that it works flawlessly.. until you get to 41, at which point it fails. One might be inclined to think that if an expression works for forty terms it is most probable that it will continue to work, but that's not applicable here since this isn't an issue of probability.

And that is why the example I gave with the fibonacci sequence was a suitable example. And consider that compared to the ocean of scientific evidence awaiting us, we have barely scratched the surface - comparable to knowing three terms out of a sequence.
In the case of evolution, the evidence goes well beyond merely claiming, "there is no evidence to contradict" human evolution. If one compares the genetic profile of humans and other primates – especially the random genetic flaws passed down from the ancestors of our respective species - one develops a very clear picture of human evolution that INDEPENDENTLY corroborates the rather considerable fossil data. The evidence renders the case for human evolution highly probable.
Do genetic simmilarities mean that it is any more probable that creation is false? No they do not. What then is the position on the theory of evolution? Consider another example; Suppose we know that the following ordered pairs are generated by a function: (1,1), (9,1), (13,1), (17,1), (29,1), (41,1), (101,1). One may make a fair conclusion that the function in question is simply f(x)=1. We would find numerous more points to support this and it would seem to work very well, but the reality of the matter might be that the function is f(x)=sin(90x) [degrees]. Just like the first function, the theory of evolution can be very helpful to explain many aspects of biology and allow us to analyse others with greater precision. It should be taken for what it is - a scientific tool, not a statement in the interest of truth. Scientists know now that classical physics is flawed and contradicts experimental evidence - but it is still used everywhere and still taught in the education system. We trust it enough for the construction of all modern architecture, the design of all new innovative technologies, the latest plans for space exploration, and so on. Why? because on the macroscopic level it works. It is a scientific tool. Currently scientists are racing to discover a 'grand unifying theory' which will put all these tools together in a coherent fashion.
Of course there is good and bad science. The flat-earthers and psychics practice bad science all the time, making fundamental errors in experimental design and statistical inference.
I would refer to that as misapplication and misunderstanding of science, but if that is what you meant, then we agree.
I sincerely believe you are mistaken, and I think the discussion above shows that unfortunately you have flawed understanding of science and scientific evidence.
Ditto.

In your subsequent posts you've repeated things that I feel I have answered before and in this post.

Peace
 
So they contacted him and offered him the job because of his Ph.D?
:sl:
Abu, I really don't know the details of that. Maybe the American university was looking for a entry-level Islamic scholar and contacted someone at Al Azar who then recommended Salim - that would be a typical scenario. I'm happy to ask him if you really want to know.

Peace,

Sharvy
:sl:
 
"There is another issue that I am interested in: if Salim comes forth and identifies himself publicly or privately to you Ansar, would you then have a religious obligation to notify his family in Egypt of his apostasy, if you are so able?" Sharvy

First of all, how could I notify his family? Why would he give me their contact information? Secondly, I probably would not since I can't see any benefit in it.

:sl:
Dear Ansar

I notice you used the word "probably" - so there the chance that depending on how your discussion with Salim went, that you might feel obligated to protect Salim's family from his apostasy if you could. And isn't there a real possibility that in checking on Salim's credentials at Al-Azar and making certain people there aware of his apostasy, that they might know the family and feel obligated to contact them - to protect them?

Sincerely,

Sharvy
:sl:
 
Ansar Wins the Challenge!

Hello Sharvy

“Salim's case ultimately proves nothing which is one of the principal points I was trying to get across to Ansar.” Sharvy

I beg your pardon? Are you not the one who raised Salim's case as an example to challenge my claim, or am I speaking to a different Sharvy? Haven't I been the one all along saying that the argument over Salim was pointless and null and didn't prove anything?

:sl:
Dear Ansar,

You win the challenge! I concede that it is absolutely true that no “knowledgeable” Muslim has ever in the history of Islam left Islam and become an apostate. [Of course it is also true that any apostate, by definition does not possess eeman and by your definition of “knowledgeable” cannot possibly count as knowledgeable.]

Peace,

Sharvy
:sl:
 
Hello Sharvy

“So if 100 years ago, I asked an educated person why they are sure the earth spins, on your view what should their answer have been?” Sharvy

His answer should have been to cite scientific theories and describe what the scientific community believed at that point.

:sl:
Dear Ansar,

Ok, then by that reasoning, an educated person in 2006 should be sure that humans and chimps evolved from a common ancestor – because that’s exactly what “the scientific community” believes today. Right?

Peace,

Sharvy
:sl:
 
:sl:
Abu, I really don't know the details of that. Maybe the American university was looking for a entry-level Islamic scholar and contacted someone at Al Azar who then recommended Salim - that would be a typical scenario. I'm happy to ask him if you really want to know.

Peace,

Sharvy
:sl:

Well, this is kinda off topic, so if you do get around to ask him (and you don't have to) then you can PM me the answer.
 
:sl:

Originally Posted by Ansar Al-'Adl
Hello Sharvy

“So if 100 years ago, I asked an educated person why they are sure the earth spins, on your view what should their answer have been?” (Sharvy)

His answer should have been to cite scientific theories and describe what the scientific community believed at that point. (Ansar)


Dear Ansar,

Ok, then by that reasoning, an educated person in 2006 should be sure that humans and chimps evolved from a common ancestor – because that’s exactly what “the scientific community” believes today. Right?

Peace,

Sharvy
:sl:

:sl:
Hello Ansar,

Has the infidel got your tongue?

Peace,

Sharvy
:sl:

[Sorry, couldn't resist. For those of you less familiar with English, this jest is a derivation of a common expression one says to a person who you expect to speak, but for some reason doesn't: "Has the cat got your tongue?"]
 
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Well, this is kinda off topic, so if you do get around to ask him (and you don't have to) then you can PM me the answer.

:sl:
Hi Abu -

Unfortunately I do not have the requisite standing to send you a private message (one needs 50 posts), so I will publicly post what Salim told me:


Salim says that a former Al-Azar colleague was teaching at an Islamic studies program connected to a mosque in a big US city. He was returning to Egypt and the mosque needed a replacement. Salim's English was already very good (he comes from a well-to-do Cairo family) but he wanted to improve it and see the US. He only intended to stay a year or two, but in addition to teaching at the mosque, he started taking classes at a nearby university. He then saw a posting for an assistant professor, non tenure-track position in an Arabic-Islamic studies program at that same university. He was encouraged to apply and was accepted. Keep in mind that this all happened many years ago.

Peace,
Sharvy
:sl:
 
Hello Sharvy,
Has the infidel got your tongue?
No, but I have dozens of threads like this one to respond to daily in additions to the large number of private messages I recieve, plus the time I can spend on the forum is obviously limited, so I do request some patience from those awaiting a response from me.

In addition, since you responded to only one or two sentences from my post, I wasn't sure if you were going to go back and respond to all my arguments, so I decided to respond to some of the other threads first.
I notice you used the word "probably" - so there the chance that depending on how your discussion with Salim went, that you might feel obligated to protect Salim's family from his apostasy if you could.
I would have said definitely instead of probably but I am in no position to make a statement of absolute certainty on a future event, but I can say that it is massively unlikely that I would contact anyone if I could since I don't see any benefit in that.
And isn't there a real possibility that in checking on Salim's credentials at Al-Azar
I wouldn't care to check- his education would be evident from conversation. I would just be interested in dialoguing with him.
You win the challenge! I concede that it is absolutely true that no “knowledgeable” Muslim has ever in the history of Islam left Islam and become an apostate.
Although that's not quite what I've been saying.
His answer should have been to cite scientific theories and describe what the scientific community believed at that point.
Ok, then by that reasoning, an educated person in 2006 should be sure that humans and chimps evolved from a common ancestor – because that’s exactly what “the scientific community” believes today. Right?
1. I've explained in my previous post why the analogy isn't complete
2. I never said anything about what the person should believe; I said they should point out the views amongst the scientific community and describe where they are still looking for answers.

Regards
 
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