czgibson
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Greetings,
Great. So we have so far a grand total of one scientist who has been prepared to back up the claims they've been paid handsomely to make by going the whole hog and becoming Muslim.
It does cast serious doubt on their claims though, doesn't it? After all, this kind of (frankly pathetic) set-up is designed with one goal in mind - to find "scientific" support for the claim that the Qur'an contains knowledge that could only have arrived there through supernatural means. If what they are saying is true, and the truth stands out clearly from error, why are scientists not poring over the Qur'an as a matter of standard research? Why do they have to be paid so much money even to look at it? Surely if it did indeed contain amazing supernatural knowledge, scientists would be fascinated by it and would study it for free, out of the passion for learning as its own reward?
I've seen that debate and, quite honestly, I wasn't impressed with the debating skills on either side. Zakir Naik did appear to do better in that debate, but he's a performer, not a serious academic. His recall is impressive, but his arguments are very weak, and if Campbell had had his wits about him he could have knocked him down without breaking a sweat.
Peace
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Actually, one of the scientists that were paid to do this study by the Saudis did revert. He's quite close to the bottom of the page, and his name is Tejatat Tejasen. Maurice Bucaille himself also said that he believes the Quran is the word of Allah, although he did not openly say he reverted.
Great. So we have so far a grand total of one scientist who has been prepared to back up the claims they've been paid handsomely to make by going the whole hog and becoming Muslim.
And even if the scientists were paid loads of money to say these things, that doesn't make what they said wrong. I admit it makes it less likely that they were being honest, but it doesn't prove that they are wrong.
It does cast serious doubt on their claims though, doesn't it? After all, this kind of (frankly pathetic) set-up is designed with one goal in mind - to find "scientific" support for the claim that the Qur'an contains knowledge that could only have arrived there through supernatural means. If what they are saying is true, and the truth stands out clearly from error, why are scientists not poring over the Qur'an as a matter of standard research? Why do they have to be paid so much money even to look at it? Surely if it did indeed contain amazing supernatural knowledge, scientists would be fascinated by it and would study it for free, out of the passion for learning as its own reward?
And from the comments I've heard, Zakir Naik completely thrashed Campbell in a debate, and refuted his book.
I've seen that debate and, quite honestly, I wasn't impressed with the debating skills on either side. Zakir Naik did appear to do better in that debate, but he's a performer, not a serious academic. His recall is impressive, but his arguments are very weak, and if Campbell had had his wits about him he could have knocked him down without breaking a sweat.
Peace