جوري
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I have no idea what point you are trying to assert here?There's no need for that kind of flirting you two.
On the one hand we're constantly told the Arabs were illiterate and had a strong oral culture, and then you're complaining there's no record of information transmitted from other places. You can't have it both ways.
I can only conclude that you so wish to insinuate yourself in this thread, that you didn't bother acquaint yourself with the subject matter, the stance of modern science on embryology, the Quran or even the opinion of the members on board Muslim or otherwise!
Have you read Galen's work-- Did you contrast it with the what is in the Quran? and lastly did you study modern medicine specfically as relates to embryology?From what we know Galen was born in Greece, learned medicine in Egypt and wrote most of his works in Rome while physician to Emperor Marcus Aurelius. We also know that Arabs of the time were trading in Syria, a nation which was not arabic speaking at the time, and less than 200 miles from Galen's home country, yet you find it inconceivable that in the intervening half a millennium this information could not have travelled that distance
here is an excerpt from Galen
- "But for the present I need not speak of the foetus as an animal, for as a plant it got all its generation and formation from the semen, and right from the start it indicated, as plants do, that the beginning of its motion and formation was two-fold. The downward and underground growth of roots in plants corresponds in the foetus to the growth of the arteries and veins of the chorion to the uterus; and the ascending stalk in plants corresponds to the out growths from the three ruling parts in embryos. Again, just as plants have a two-fold growth from seeds, sending stalk and branches upward as far as the outer most shoots and dividing the root-growth downward, so also the embryos have much-divided outgrowths consisting in arteries and veins that extend as stalks to the whole foetus and as roots to the uterus." (Corpus Medicorum Graecorum: Galeni de Semine: Galen: On Semen (Greek text with English trans. Phillip de Lacy, Akademic Verlag, 1992) section I:9:1-10, pp. 91-95)
I don't personally see anything in the Quran assimilating the fetus to a plant!
And the first known illustrations of the fetus as far as I have learned in art history were exemplified in da vinci's journals.. he would actually steal dead bodies and was under threat of being arrested and convicted for doing so.. further, the microscope was invented around 17th century to describe 'STAGES' of evolution and differentiation of the fetus, and what it grossly looks like in its earliest forms development!
But again, I ask, what is your point? is there a point?
The description of human development in the Quran isn't so that it could be renowned or call dibs in the annals of genetics and embryology.. anymore than any of the other passing references to other sciences. I have already pretty much sublimated its resolution for the lot of you two posts ago?
I suggest you study in some details subjects that you wish to engage so we are not all wasting each other's times on recycled thoughts, hop-skipping around topics that have nothing in common save their deed of conveyance!
Read with some measure of detail the book you wish to refute, the works of he whom you'd like to assimilate the book to, and learn something of the subject matter itself as relates to modern science.. Go back and contrast it to the intention and purpose of the original book you wish to refute yet again, and come up with something a bit more meaningful and significant!
cheers