Greetings,
Regarding the OP's question: Obviously, someone who believes the Qur'an is perfect would already be a Muslim.
The tradition of belief in the perfection of the Qur'an is almost as old as Islam itself, so any rational argument is rather pointless in the face of it at this stage. People will believe what they want to believe.
It's interesting to hear of a book that large numbers of people consider to be perfect, so I've read the Qur'an several times over the years. I've seen nothing in it that could not have been the work of human hands, to be honest, and so, for that reason among many others, remain unconvinced.
Incidentally, I'm not sure about exactly how a "perfect" text could even exist.
How would its perfection be assessed? Surely a perfect text would have to be equally effective on all readers? This is clearly not the case with the Qur'an. While I'm sure that many people have read it and converted to Islam, many readers haven't.
Hamada said:
The embryological studies in the Quran are in fact are too advanced for anybody to have known 1400 yrs ago. Understanding this, many embryologists in the past decades have embraced Islam recognizing that the source of this knowledge must be divine.
Could you name ten of them?
An impartial scientist like Dr. Bucaille, who (being also a Christian) was conversant with the Biblical version of Pharaoh's story as being drowned in pursuit of Prophet Moses. He was pleasantly surprised to learn that unknown to the world till only of late 20th century, the Holy Quran made definite prediction about the preservation of the body of that same Pharaoh of Moses' time. This led Dr. Bucaille to study the Holy Quran thoroughly after learning the Arabic language and accepted Islam as the truth.
Thank you for sharing this article with us. Do you have any evidence to show that Bucaille actually did become a Muslim? (I'm not denying it happened, because I don't know, but has he ever actually said this publicly?)
Peace