I will reply in a few posts otherwise the pages get two long.
I think you are drifting from the points and questions I asked. So I will restate them and hope once I get your answer we can move on. Dr Al Azami said he had received the 'most accurate Qu'ran'. Perhaps he is pointing out what Arthur Jeffery said in 1937 "It is an extraordinary thing that we still have no critical text of the Qur`an for common use'. However,
1. Logically, this must imply there are ones that are not as accurate which seems to puncture the notion that there has been faultless transmission from the Angel to the page.
2. Secondly, I asked what was used, what manuscripts or manuscripts were used to get this most accurate Qu'ran - Dr Al Azami does not say but it would I think be of interesting to know.
3. Thirdly, where is the source manuscript from which printers construct their copies? One assumes they do no pop into the street and buy a Qu'ran and used that or ask someone to come in an recite it?
I cannot see what is unscientific about these questions? Using your analogy suppose I go and pick up a copy of the Daily Telegraph from 10 different shops and they are all the same would that mean every other Telegraph must also be the same (they are not all printed at the same place) and even if they were would it mean that its editorial is unquestionably the truth?
There is no such thing as the Koran. There is no, and there never has been a, textus receptus ne varietur of the Holy Book of the Muslims. We have two kinds of evidence for this claim. One which comes from Muslims themselves. Many Classical Muslim scholars-Koranic commentators, collectors of hadith, lexica and Qirä’ät books, for example - have acknowledged not only that many verses revealed to Muhammad have been lost, and hence the Koran that we possess is incomplete, but also that the Koran assembled, whether by Abü Bakr, ‘Umar, ‘Alï or ‘Uthmän, is capable of being read in different ways, in other words that variants exist. There are a number of hadiths that recount “the loss, withdrawal, or forgetting of this or that ‘verse’ said to have been revealed to the Prophet but not figuring”[2] in the Koran as it now exists. The other comes from extant Koranic manuscripts, inscriptions and coins.
It is general is impossible to read 'all' the information but in this case I have carefully read the whole book so no cherry picking was involved and made notes but one cannot cover every point in a single post. It may be cherry picking to highlight some things but given the purpose of the book it does seem to be a pertinent to speak of 'accuracy' and that is why I used it. But again I say if you want to go further then we need another thread don't you think?
No, according to you, what he actually said was, "...[thanks to] the people behind the Madina Mushaf for printing the most accurate Qu'ranic text in the world'. This is very different to saying, 'I have the most accurate Qur'an in the world'. I cannot believe how unscientific you are being with regards to this issue. Let's take a look at your argument. You believe that based upon the above sentence, "there must be millions of texts out, going back 1,400 years there that are not accurate."
I think you are drifting from the points and questions I asked. So I will restate them and hope once I get your answer we can move on. Dr Al Azami said he had received the 'most accurate Qu'ran'. Perhaps he is pointing out what Arthur Jeffery said in 1937 "It is an extraordinary thing that we still have no critical text of the Qur`an for common use'. However,
1. Logically, this must imply there are ones that are not as accurate which seems to puncture the notion that there has been faultless transmission from the Angel to the page.
2. Secondly, I asked what was used, what manuscripts or manuscripts were used to get this most accurate Qu'ran - Dr Al Azami does not say but it would I think be of interesting to know.
3. Thirdly, where is the source manuscript from which printers construct their copies? One assumes they do no pop into the street and buy a Qu'ran and used that or ask someone to come in an recite it?
I cannot see what is unscientific about these questions? Using your analogy suppose I go and pick up a copy of the Daily Telegraph from 10 different shops and they are all the same would that mean every other Telegraph must also be the same (they are not all printed at the same place) and even if they were would it mean that its editorial is unquestionably the truth?
Perhaps I can point you to a book called "Which Koran?" by Ibn Warraq (Feb. 2008) a summary of its content:Go any country and pick up a copy of the Qur'an and find it to be the exact same as anywhere else. How would all this be possible if so many different versions existed?
There is no such thing as the Koran. There is no, and there never has been a, textus receptus ne varietur of the Holy Book of the Muslims. We have two kinds of evidence for this claim. One which comes from Muslims themselves. Many Classical Muslim scholars-Koranic commentators, collectors of hadith, lexica and Qirä’ät books, for example - have acknowledged not only that many verses revealed to Muhammad have been lost, and hence the Koran that we possess is incomplete, but also that the Koran assembled, whether by Abü Bakr, ‘Umar, ‘Alï or ‘Uthmän, is capable of being read in different ways, in other words that variants exist. There are a number of hadiths that recount “the loss, withdrawal, or forgetting of this or that ‘verse’ said to have been revealed to the Prophet but not figuring”[2] in the Koran as it now exists. The other comes from extant Koranic manuscripts, inscriptions and coins.
When performing any research, it makes sense to read all the information and not "cherry pick" (to use your own term) the data which supports your particular stance. So I said you should read the rest of the book to seek clarification on this issue, yet you argued against this saying, "the preface cannot be regarded as unimportant in this case because the author sets out his principles and motivation there."
It is general is impossible to read 'all' the information but in this case I have carefully read the whole book so no cherry picking was involved and made notes but one cannot cover every point in a single post. It may be cherry picking to highlight some things but given the purpose of the book it does seem to be a pertinent to speak of 'accuracy' and that is why I used it. But again I say if you want to go further then we need another thread don't you think?
Here YOU seem to be totally unscientific - if Azami believed there were no different versions then it is hard to see what evidence he can use since there would be nothing to find and nothing to defend. In any case he assumes there are versions and then deals with them - can you see the point that you are unscientific but Azami was not though that does not of itself validate his claims but at least he understood the issues but you I think do not?And simply from a common sense perspective, how could somebody writing a book to defend the Qur'an believe that there are different versions of the Qur'an as there are with the Bible?