What's Islam's stance on finding another planet?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Aaqib
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies Replies 50
  • Views Views 7K
I don't think it would be contrary to Islamic teachings to entertain the possibility of their being other planets or lifeforms out there.

The truth is we just don't know. Allah swt is the 'Lord of the Worlds', insaan and jinns and animals and plants may not be the only life He has created, or it might be, but the truth is while this subject is absolutely fascinating, it wouldn't help us in either our deen or iman or even in this dunya so knowing about whether extra-terrestrial life exists or not isn't necessary.

Allahu alam.
 
:sl: pretty cool I guess. There's a billion of galaxies(or was it stars..) so its kinda open to all sorts of possibilities. Before this there was Keppler 22-B(Namek anyone?) so while it's still interesting it's nothing 'new'. Mars at one point in time was also covered with Water and life seemed to flourish as well.

What I wanna know is what on Earth is down in the Baltic Sea(sea Baltic Sea Anomaly[Did you see what I did there?]) and the Loch Ness monster. They could find a planet like thousand of light-years away but 97% of the Earth's waters are still undiscovered? I'd dare say we have a lot of other things undiscovered here.

The only explanation I'd go with UFOs are Jinns showing themselves up from time to time.
 
Yes, but what about the Dajjal, if no one is on earth, who will Dajjal trial onto? (Being hypothetical here)
 
The Dajjal will have no one to pester anyone if no one is on earth as the dajjal is to be sent to earth, correct?

I've probably lost a few nails since I hit my head on a crossbar in a soccer game... I can't say that it was worth it though...
 
Is it possible there can be life on other planets? Yes. Is it likely people from earth will manage to go there and inhabit it? No.

As you mentioned, Dajjaal will be on this earth. Qiyaamah will take place on this earth. People will be resurrected on this earth.

Maybe Aaqib is thinking, "Is there life on other planets? If so, does that life include females? If so, are they good looking? If so, do they want to get married?"

I have understood. You are not married, that is why.
 
If anyone is willing to spend their resources searching and finds any, good, better than spending it on unjust bloodshed and pushing atheism and sin at the masses, and i'd be glad to know, just as i'm glad that humans got on the moon and learned about the laws of orbit set in place and got some satellites up there, now we can communicate in a halal, easy and fast way.

Regarding planets, i grew up memorizing the given names of nine (mostly named after pagan idols) in our solar system, but after reading surah Yusuf, realized that there are eleven recognized as worthy of being called planets by Allah (ahada 'ashara kawkaban) just as there are 12 recognized months in a year since the creation of the heavens and the earth.

Allah also tells us in the Quran that eavesdropping jinns are chased out of the nearest heaven by bright flames or stars, if "nearest heaven" includes the galaxies we see, then it is not impossible that the jinns are very numerous and inhabit other planets, most American elite are obsessed with astronomy and also in communicating with jinn and doing the work of shaytaan (who also happens to be jinn so yeah, it seems to add up that they have their little meet-ups with "alien" visitors and get up to date with the latest stealthily snatched "news".

There have been people communicating with them for millenia and setting up sciences of astrology etc, isaac newton was really involved in researching it - that guy was a called a geni-us, so were pythagoras and einstein.

In the Northern hemisphere’s sky, hovering above the Milky Way, there are two constellations—Cygnus the swan, her wings outstretched in full flight, and Lyra, the harp that accompanied poetry in ancient Greece, from which we take our word “lyric.”

Between these constellations sits an unusual star, invisible to the naked eye, but visible to the Kepler Space Telescope, which stared at it for more than four years, beginning in 2009.


“We’d never seen anything like this star,” says Tabetha Boyajian, a postdoc at Yale. “It was really weird. We thought it might be bad data or movement on the spacecraft, but everything checked out.”

Kepler was looking for tiny dips in the light emitted by this star. Indeed, it was looking for these dips in more than 150,000 stars, simultaneously, because these dips are often shadows cast by transiting planets. Especially when they repeat, periodically, as you’d expect if they were caused by orbiting objects.

The Kepler Space Telescope collected a great deal of light from all of those stars it watched. So much light that Kepler’s science team couldn’t process it all with algorithms. They needed the human eye, and human cognition, which remains unsurpassed in certain sorts of pattern recognition. Kepler’s astronomers decided to found Planet Hunters, a program that asked “citizen scientists” to examine light patterns emitted by the stars, from the comfort of their own homes.

In 2011, several citizen scientists flagged one particular star as “interesting” and “bizarre.” The star was emitting a light pattern that looked stranger than any of the others Kepler was watching.

The light pattern suggests there is a big mess of matter circling the star, in tight formation. That would be expected if the star were young. When our solar system first formed, four and a half billion years ago, a messy disk of dust and debris surrounded the sun, before gravity organized it into planets, and rings of rock and ice.

But this unusual star isn’t young. If it were young, it would be surrounded by dust that would give off extra infrared light. There doesn’t seem to be an excess of infrared light around this star.

It appears to be mature.

And yet, there is this mess of objects circling it. A mess big enough to block a substantial number of photons that would have otherwise beamed into the tube of the Kepler Space Telescope. If blind nature deposited this mess around the star, it must have done so recently. Otherwise, it would be gone by now. Gravity would have consolidated it, or it would have been sucked into the star and swallowed, after a brief fiery splash.


Boyajian, the Yale Postdoc who oversees Planet Hunters, recently published a paper describing the star’s bizarre light pattern. Several of the citizen scientists are named as co-authors. The paper explores a number of scenarios that might explain the pattern—instrument defects; the shrapnel from an asteroid belt pileup; an impact of planetary scale, like the one that created our moon.

The paper finds each explanation wanting, save for one. If another star had passed through the unusual star’s system, it could have yanked a sea of comets inward. Provided there were enough of them, the comets could have made the dimming pattern.

But that would be an extraordinary coincidence, if that happened so recently, only a few millennia before humans developed the tech to loft a telescope into space. That’s a narrow band of time, cosmically speaking.

And yet, the explanation has to be rare or coincidental. After all, this light pattern doesn’t show up anywhere else, across 150,000 stars. We know that something strange is going on out there.

When I spoke to Boyajian on the phone, she explained that her recent paper only reviews “natural” scenarios. “But,” she said, there were “other scenarios” she was considering.

Jason Wright, an astronomer from Penn State University, is set to publish an alternative interpretation of the light pattern. SETI researchers have long suggested that we might be able to detect distant extraterrestrial civilizations, by looking for enormous technological artifacts orbiting other stars. Wright and his co-authors say the unusual star’s light pattern is consistent with a “swarm of megastructures,” perhaps stellar-light collectors, technology designed to catch energy from the star.

“When [Boyajian] showed me the data, I was fascinated by how crazy it looked,” Wright told me. “Aliens should always be the very last hypothesis you consider, but this looked like something you would expect an alien civilization to build.”

Boyajian is now working with Wright and Andrew Siemion, the Director of the SETI Research Center at the University of California, Berkeley. The three of them are writing up a proposal. They want to point a massive radio dish at the unusual star, to see if it emits radio waves at frequencies associated with technological activity.

If they see a sizable amount of radio waves, they’ll follow up with the Very Large Array (VLA) in New Mexico, which may be able to say whether the radio waves were emitted by a technological source, like those that waft out into the universe from Earth’s network of radio stations.

Assuming all goes well, the first observation would take place in January, with the follow-up coming next fall. If things go really well, the follow-up could happen sooner. “If we saw something exciting, we could ask the director for special allotted time on the VLA,” Wright told me. “And in that case, we’d be asking to go on right away.”

In the meantime, Boyajian, Siemion, Wright, the citizen scientists, and the rest of us, will have to content ourselves with longing looks at the sky, aimed between the swan and the lyre, where maybe, just maybe, someone is looking back, and seeing the sun dim ever so slightly, every 365 days.


http://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2015/10/the-most-interesting-star-in-our-galaxy/410023/


Here's some of the more bizarre sounding stuff, but yeah, jinns exist and so do angels, and they travel according to laws and they do visit planet earth, and if you expect to find all the information of communication and methods gathered over the millenia, expect to find a bulk of it in America, they even buy ancient scriptures and scrolls and hide them, so i wouldn't be shocked if we one day find suhuf Ibrahim hidden in some archive over there.

http://www.express.co.uk/news/scien...days-after-demanding-UFO-files-and-NASA-visit



http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/...creenshot_2016-09-06-04-30-42_zpsocgklnva.png


http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/...creenshot_2016-09-06-04-32-01_zpsolmzvu0v.png
 
Last edited:
:sl:

While we're at the topic of Astronomy(and Dajjal), according Sh Hamza Yusuf one of the founding fathers of the space age was an open devil worshipper and he met a guy in a dream called 'Belly-Old DAJJAL' and he told him "YOU are helping me.". There is a relationship between it(and Sihr?) and technology in general so many more things left needed to understand in a different way.
 
Greetings,

If life on other planets was found to exist, and it turned out that the aliens on the planet worshipped Allah and held copies of the Qur'an in its unique and unalterable Arabic text, how mightily impressed would you be?

Peace
 
Greetings,

If life on other planets was found to exist, and it turned out that the aliens on the planet worshiped Allah and held copies of the Qur'an in its unique and unalterable Arabic text, how mightily impressed would you be?

Peace

You do know Muslims worship the same God that talked to the Hebrews and Jesus pbuh? right? so its plausible that God would give other alien life forms a revelation - We already believe in Jinns and Angels so its plausible that the God of the universe would have given them guidance.
 
Greetings,

If life on other planets was found to exist, and it turned out that the aliens on the planet worshipped Allah and held copies of the Qur'an in its unique and unalterable Arabic text, how mightily impressed would you be?

Peace

It's entirely possible, we just don't know if Allah swt has created other alien lifeforms or not, and it may be He gave them revelations and guided them to Islam. Who knows? Allah swt doesn't tell us everything, just what *we* need to know to guide us and fulfil our religion, and there is no harm is exploring and discovering things in the world and universe around us for ourselves - it only increases our faith in Him and a thirst for knowledge, of all kinds.
 
If life on other planets was found to exist, and it turned out that the aliens on the planet worshipped Allah and held copies of the Qur'an in its unique and unalterable Arabic text, how mightily impressed would you be?
They would see that time progresses. With time progressing by addition (day by day, hour by our, minute by minute), it would be a stretch to believe that time is infinite. An infinite entity does not progress, because adding anything to infinite just yields the same value: infinite. Hence time is finite. If time is finite, there is a beginning of times. If everything that happens has a cause that precedes it, and you work your way back to the beginning of times, you will obviously find the very first cause, which is clearly the principle of causality to everything that exists.

In other words, the concept of a first cause that is the universal principle of causality, is the same all over the universe. Hence, you can expect their beliefs to be pretty much equivalent to what the majority of people believe here on earth, since these beliefs naturally emanate from the characteristics of the universe.
 
Greetings,

If life on other planets was found to exist, and it turned out that the aliens on the planet worshipped Allah and held copies of the Qur'an in its unique and unalterable Arabic text, how mightily impressed would you be?

Peace
Greetings,

I would not surprised if aliens in other planets embrace religion that similar as Islam because there is logical explanation (according to religious view), that Allah sent His messengers to other planets too. But I would be very surprised if those aliens spoke Arabic and had holy book that written in Arabic, because it would not be happen without interaction between earth human and aliens before.

Language is human made civilization product. Arabic language too. If Allah communicate with prophet Muhammad in Arabic and Qur'an revealed in Arabic, it's because prophet Muhammad spoke Arabic.

Peace to you too.
 
What is your evidence to back up this statement?
Assalamualaikum shaykh.

I didn't say Allah sent the messengers who we know on earth to other planets too. But IF aliens in other planets worshiped Allah and embraced religion that similar as Allah's religion, then the logical explanation is Allah sent the messengers who we didn't know to the aliens. Those messenger were not human like us, but aliens like them.

If Allah created intelligent creatures that have ability to think and build civilization, and have free will, would Allah let them live without guidance?.
 
Assalamualaikum shaykh.

I didn't say Allah sent the messengers who we know on earth to other planets too. But IF aliens in other planets worshiped Allah and embraced religion that similar as Allah's religion, then the logical explanation is Allah sent the messengers who we didn't know to the aliens. Those messenger were not human like us, but aliens like them.

If Allah created intelligent creatures that have ability to think and build civilization, and have free will, would Allah let them live without guidance?.
وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله وبركاته

Respected brother ardianto,

The senior `Ulamaa have explained that Rasoolullaah صلى الله عليه وسلم has been described by Allaah Ta`aalaa in the Qur'aan as "Rahmatul-lil-`Aalameen" (a Mercy for All the Worlds). `Aalameen refers to every single world and every single realm. Hence, if there were to be intelligent life on other planets, the `Ulamaa have said that they would have to believe in Rasoolullaah صلى الله عليه وسلم and follow his Sharee`ah, because there can be no Nabi after him. Rasoolullaah صلى الله عليه وسلم is "Khaatam-ul-Ambiyaa wal-Mursaleen" (The Seal of the Prophets and Messengers). No Nabi or Rasool can come after him.


Allaah Ta`aalaa has told us of only three intelligent species:


  1. Man
  2. Malaa'ikah (Angels)
  3. Jinn

Allaah Ta`aalaa says in the Qur'aan:

وما خلقت الجن والإنس إلا ليعبدون

"I have not created Jinn and Ins (mankind) except so that they may worship Me."

No alien life forms from other planets have been mentioned in this Aayah. If we were to say that intelligent life exists on other planets, would that mean they need their own Qur'aan? That can't happen, because the Qur'aan is the Kalaam of Allaah Ta`aalaa, Ghayr Makhlooq (Uncreated). The Qur'aan is the final Wahi (Revelation) from Allaah Ta`aalaa.

So at most, it is possible that life can exist on other planets, but not intelligent life like human beings and Jinn.
 
Last edited:
If there were to be life on other planets they would probably be making Du`aa that Allaah Ta`aalaa never allows America to set foot there. How long would it take the American government to try and "colonise" them? Call the inhabitants backwards, enforce their American constitution on the inhabitants, ruin the natural land by building skyscrapers which block out the sun, steal all the oil if there is any. And if any of the unfortunate inhabitants put up a bit of a resistance, they'll be called "terrorists" and aerial bombed. Drone strikes on the ones leading the resistance. Next thing you know America has taken the place for themselves and the natives are unwanted and kicked out.

It's better all-round if America and Britain never set foot on any other planets. They have a habit of "colonising" people, especially if they're brown.
 

Similar Threads

Back
Top