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Islamic attitudes towards science

Muslim scholars have developed a spectrum of viewpoints on science within the context of Islam.[1] The Quran and Islam allows much interpretation when it comes to science. Scientists of medieval Muslim civilization (e.g. Ibn al-Haytham) contributed to the new discoveries in science.[2][3][4] From the eighth to fifteenth century, Muslim mathematicians and astronomers furthered the development of almost all areas of mathematics.[5][6] At the same time, concerns have been raised about the lack of scientific literacy in parts of the modern Muslim world.[7]

Islamic scientific achievements encompassed a wide range of subject areas, especially medicine, mathematics, astronomy, agriculture as well as physics, economics, engineering and optics. [8][9][10][11][12] Aside from these contributions, some Muslim writers have stated that the Quran made prescient statements about scientific phenomena that were later confirmed by scientific research for instance as regards to the structure of the embryo, the solar system, and the development of the universe.[13][14]

Terminology

Science is often defined as the pursuit of knowledge and understanding of the natural and social world following a systematic methodology based on evidence.[15] It is a system of acquiring knowledge based on empiricism, experimentation and methodological naturalism, as well as to the organized body of knowledge human beings have gained by such research. Scientists maintain that scientific investigation needs to adhere to the scientific method, a process for evaluating empirical knowledge that explains observable events without recourse to supernatural notions.

According to Toby Huff, there is no true word for science in Arabic as commonly defined in English and other languages. In Arabic, "science" can simply mean different forms of knowledge.[16] This view has been criticized by other scholars. For example, according to Muzaffar Iqbal, Huff's framework of inquiry "is based on the synthetic model of Robert Merton who had made no use of any Islamic sources or concepts dealing with the theory of knowledge or social organization"[5] Each branch of science has its own name, but all branches of science have a common prefix, ilm. For example, physics is more literally translated from Arabic as "the science of nature", علم الطبيعة ‘ilm aṭ-ṭabī‘a; arithmetic as the "science of accounts" علم الحساب ilm al-hisab.[17] The religious study of Islam (through Islamic sciences like Quranic exegesis, hadith studies, etc.) is called العلم الديني "science of religion" (al-ilm ad-dinniy), using the same word for science as "the science of nature".[17] According to the Hans Wehr Dictionary of Arabic, while علم’ ilm is defined as "knowledge, learning, lore," etc. the word for "science" is the plural form علوم’ ulūm. (So, for example, كلية العلوم kullīyat al-‘ulūm, the Faculty of Science of the Egyptian University, is literally "the Faculty of Sciences ...")[17]

History

Classical science in the Muslim world

One of the earliest accounts of the use of science in the Islamic world is during the eighth and sixteenth centuries, known as the Islamic Golden Age.[18] It is also known as "Arabic science" because of the majority of texts that were translated from Greek into Arabic. The mass translation movement, that occurred in the ninth century allowed for the integration of science into the Islamic world. The teachings from the Greeks were now translated and their scientific knowledge was now passed on to the Arab world. Despite these conditions, not all scientists during this period were Muslim or Arab, as there were a number of notable non-Arab scientists (most notably Persians), as well as some non-Muslim scientists, who contributed to scientific studies in the Muslim world. The mass translation movement in the ninth century allowed for the integration of science into the Islamic world.

A number of modern scholars such as Fielding H. Garrison, Sultan Bashir Mahmood, Hossein Nasr consider modern science and the scientific method to have been greatly inspired by Muslim scientists who introduced a modern empirical, experimental and quantitative approach to scientific inquiry.[citation needed] Certain advances made by medieval Muslim astronomers, geographers and mathematicians were motivated by problems presented in Islamic scripture, such as Al-Khwarizmi's (c. 780–850) development of algebra in order to solve the Islamic inheritance laws,[19] and developments in astronomy, geography, spherical geometry and spherical trigonometry in order to determine the direction of the Qibla, the times of Salah prayers, and the dates of the Islamic calendar.[20] These new studies of math and science would allow for the Islamic world to get ahead of the rest of the world. ‘With these inspiration at work, Muslim mathematicians and astronomers contributed significantly to the development to just about every domain of mathematics between the eight and fifteenth centuries”[21]

The increased use of dissection in Islamic medicine during the 12th and 13th centuries was influenced by the writings of the Islamic theologian, Al-Ghazali, who encouraged the study of anatomy and use of dissections as a method of gaining knowledge of God's creation.[22] In al-Bukhari's and Muslim's collection of sahih hadith it is said: "There is no disease that God has created, except that He also has created its treatment." (Bukhari 7-71:582). This culminated in the work of Ibn al-Nafis (1213–1288), who discovered the pulmonary circulation in 1242 and used his discovery as evidence for the orthodox Islamic doctrine of bodily resurrection.[23] Ibn al-Nafis also used Islamic scripture as justification for his rejection of wine as self-medication.[24] Criticisms against alchemy and astrology were also motivated by religion, as orthodox Islamic theologians viewed the beliefs of alchemists and astrologists as being superstitious.[25]

Fakhr al-Din al-Razi (1149–1209), in dealing with his conception of physics and the physical world in his Matalib, discusses Islamic cosmology, criticizes the Aristotelian notion of the Earth's centrality within the universe, and "explores the notion of the existence of a multiverse in the context of his commentary," based on the Quranic verse, "All praise belongs to God, Lord of the Worlds." He raises the question of whether the term "worlds" in this verse refers to "multiple worlds within this single universe or cosmos, or to many other universes or a multiverse beyond this known universe." On the basis of this verse, he argues that God has created more than "a thousand thousand worlds (alfa alfi 'awalim) beyond this world such that each one of those worlds be bigger and more massive than this world as well as having the like of what this world has."[26] Ali Kuşçu's (1403–1474) support for the Earth's rotation and his rejection of Aristotelian cosmology (which advocates a stationary Earth) was motivated by religious opposition to Aristotle by orthodox Islamic theologians, such as Al-Ghazali.[27][28]

According to many historians, science in the Muslim civilization flourished during the Middle Ages, but began declining at some time around the 14th[29] to 16th[18] centuries. At least some scholars blame this on the "rise of a clerical faction which froze this same science and withered its progress."[30] Examples of conflicts with prevailing interpretations of Islam and science – or at least the fruits of science – thereafter include the demolition of Taqi al-Din's great Constantinople observatory in Galata, "comparable in its technical equipment and its specialist personnel with that of his celebrated contemporary, the Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe." But while Brahe's observatory "opened the way to a vast new development of astronomical science," Taqi al-Din's was demolished by a squad of Janissaries, "by order of the sultan, on the recommendation of the Chief Mufti," sometime after 1577 CE.[30][31]

Science and religious practice

Scientific methods have been historically applied to find solutions to the technical exigencies of Islamic religious rituals, which is a characteristic of Islam that sets it apart from other religions. These ritual considerations include a lunar calendar, definition of prayer times based on the position of the sun, and a direction of prayer set at a specific location. Scientific methods have also been applied to Islamic laws governing the distribution of inheritances and to Islamic decorative arts. Some of these problems were tackled by both medieval scientists of the Islamic world and scholars of Islamic law. Though these two groups generally used different methods, there is little evidence of serious controversy between them on these subjects, with the exception of the criticism leveled by religious scholars at the methods of astronomy due to its association with astrology.[32]

Modern science in the Muslim world

At the beginning of the nineteenth century, modern science arrived in the Muslim world, bringing with it "the transfer of various philosophical currents entangled with science" including schools of thought such as Positivism and Darwinism. This had a profound effect on the minds of Muslim scientists and intellectuals and also had a noticeable impact on some Islamic theological doctrines.[33]

While the majority of Muslim scientists tried to adapt their understanding of Islam to the findings of modern science, some rejected modern science as "corrupt foreign thought, considering it incompatible with Islamic teachings", others advocated for the wholesale replacement of religious worldviews with a scientific worldview, and some Muslim philosophers suggested separating the findings of modern science from its philosophical attachments.[34] Among the majority of Muslim thinkers, a key justification for the use of modern science was the benefits that modern knowledge clearly brought to society. Others concluded that science could ultimately be reconciled with faith. A further apologetic trend saw the emergence of theories that scientific discoveries had been predicted in the Quran and Islamic tradition, thereby internalizing science within religion.[34]

According to 2013 survey by the Pew Research Center asking Muslims in different Muslim majority countries in the Middle East and North Africa if there was a conflict between science and religion few agreed in Morocco (18%), Egypt (16%), Iraq (15%), Jordan (15%) and the Palestinian territories (14%). More agreed in Albania (57%), Turkey (40%), Lebanon (53%) and Tunisia (42%).[35]

The poll also found a variance in how Muslim population in some countries are at odds with current scientific theories about biological evolution and the origin of man.[35] Only four of the 22 countries surveyed that at least 50% of the Muslims surveyed rejected evolution (Iraq 67%, Tajikistan 55%, Indonesia 55%, Afghanistan 62%). Countries with relatively low rates of disbelief in evolution (i.e. agreeing to the statement "humans and other living things have always existed in present form") include Lebanon (21%), Albania (24%), Kazakhstan (16%).[36]

As of 2018, three Muslim scientists have won a Nobel Prize for science (Abdus Salam from Pakistan in physics, Ahmed Zewail from Egypt and Aziz Sancar from Turkey in Chemistry). According to Mustafa Akyol, the relative lack of Muslim Nobel laureates in sciences per capita can be attributed to more insular interpretations of the religion than in the golden age of Islamic discovery and development, when Islamic society and intellectuals were more open to foreign ideas.[37] Ahmed Zewail who won the 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry and is known as the father of femtochemistry said that "There is nothing fundamental in Islam against science."[38]

Counterfactual trends

Islamic scholar Abu Ammaar Yasir Qadhi has noted that important technological innovations—once "considered to be bizarre, strange, haram (religiously forbidden), bidʻah (innovation), against the tradition" in the Muslim world, were later accepted as "standard".

One of the main reasons the Muslim world was held behind when Europe continued its ascent was that the printing press was banned. And there was a time when the Ottoman Sultan issued a decree that anybody caught with a printing press shall be executed for heresy, and anybody who owns a printed book shall basically be thrown into jail. And for 350 years when Europe is printing, when [René] Descartes is printing, when Galileo is printing, when [Isaac] Newton is printing, the only way you can get a copy of any book in the Arab world is to go and hand write it yourself.[39]

In the early twentieth century, Iranian Shia Ulema[who?] forbade the learning of foreign languages and dissection of human bodies in the medical school in Iran.[40] On the other hand, contrary to the current cliché concerning the opposition of the Imamate Shiite Ulama to the modern astronomy in the nineteenth century, there is no evidence showing their literal or explicit objection of the modern astronomy based on Islamic doctrines. They even became the advocates of modern astronomy by the publication of Hibat al-Dīn Shahristānī' al-Islām wa al-Hayʾa (Islam and Astronomy) in 1910. After that, Shia ulama not only were not against the modern astronomy but also they believed that the Quran and Islamic hadiths of Imams admit it.[41]

Until the 1960’s, Saudi Sunni ulema opposed any attempts at modernisation considering it as innovations (bidah). They opposed the spread of electricity, radios, TVs, internet. As recently as 2015, Sheikh Bandar al-Khaibari rejected the fact that Earth orbits the Sun, instead claiming that the Earth is "stationary and does not move.".[42]

In Afghanistan, Sunni Taliban turn secular schools into Islamic madrasas, valuing religious studies over modern science.[43]

In recent years, the lagging of the Muslim world in science is manifest in the disproportionately small amount of scientific output as measured by citations of articles published in internationally circulating science journals, annual expenditures on research and development, and numbers of research scientists and engineers.[44] Concerns has been raised that the contemporary Muslim world suffers from scientific illiteracy.[7] Skepticism of science among some Muslims is reflected in issues such as resistance in Muslim northern Nigeria to polio inoculation, which some believe is "an imaginary thing created in the West or it is a ploy to get us to submit to this evil agenda."[45] Also, in Pakistan, a small number of post-graduate physics students have been known to blame earthquakes on "sinfulness, moral laxity, deviation from the Islamic true path," while "only a couple of muffled voices supported the scientific view that earthquakes are a natural phenomenon unaffected by human activity."[7] Islamist author Muhammad Qutb (brother of and promoter of Sayyid Qutb) in his influential book Islam, the misunderstood religion, states that "science is a powerful instrument" to increase human knowledge but has become a "corrupting influence on men's thoughts and feelings" for much of the world's population, steering them away from "the Right Path". As an example, he gives scientific community's disapproval of claims of telepathy, when he claims that it is documented in hadith that Caliph Umar prevented commander Sariah from being ambushed by communicating with him telepathically.[46] Muslim scientists and scholars have subsequently developed a spectrum of viewpoints on the place of scientific learning within the context of Islam.[1]

The conflicts between these two ideas can become quite complicated. It has been argued that "Muslims must be able to maintain the traditional Islamic intellectual space for the legitimate continuation of the Islamic view of the nature of reality to which Islamic ethics corresponds, without denying the legitimacy of modern science within their own confines".[47]

While the natural sciences have not been "fully institutionalized" in predominately Islamic countries, engineering is considered an applied science that can function in conjunction with religion, and it is one of the most popular career choices of Middle Eastern students.[48]

During the twentieth century, the Islamic world was introduced to modern science. This was facilitated by the expansion of educational systems, for example, 1900 in Istanbul and 1925 Cairo opened universities. Unlike some of the discords between science and Islam in the past, the concerns for some modern students were different. This discord for Islam was naturalism and social Darwinism, which challenged some beliefs. On the other hand, there were efforts to harmonize science with Islam. An example is the nineteenth-century study of Kudsî of Baku, who made connections between his discoveries in astronomy and what he knew from the Quran. These included "the creation of the universe and the beginning of like; in the second part, with doomsday and the end of the world; and the third was the resurrection after death".[49] A passage in the Quran encourages congruency with the truth attained by modern science: "hence they should be both in agreement and concordant with the findings of modern science".[50] This passage was used more often during the time where "modern science" was full of different discoveries. However, many scientific thinkers through the Islamic word still take this passage to heart when it come to their work. There are also some strong believers that with modern viewpoints such as social Darwinism challenged all medieval world views, including that of Islam. Some didn't even want to be affiliated with modern science, and thought it was just an outside look into Islam.[50] Many followers tend to see the problems with the integration of Islam and science, and there are many that still stand by the view points of Ibn Hanbal (855). That the meaning of science is also knowledge, that of many different aspects. There is a sense of wonder, an open mind that allows for people to have both religious values and scientific thought. Along with positive outlooks on modern science is the Islamic world, there are many negative ones as well. It has become the idea for some that the practice of modern science, is that of studying Western science. A large issue that concerns those who don't believe in the study of Western science, is where the knowledge originated. For Muslims the knowledge comes from God, not from human definition of forms of knowledge. An example of this in the Islamic world is that of modern physics, which is considered to be Western instead of an international study. Islam values claim "knowledge of reality based not on reason alone, but also on revelation and inspiration".[47] The ideals of modern science contradict these views and many criticisms of modern science come from the value systems that some modern scientists uphold.

Science and the Quran

Many Muslims agree that doing science is an act of religious merit, even a collective duty of the Muslim community.[51] According to M. Shamsher Ali, there are around 750 verses in the Quran dealing with natural phenomena. According to the Encyclopedia of the Quran, many verses of the Quran ask mankind to study nature, and this has been interpreted to mean an encouragement for scientific inquiry,[52] and the investigation of the truth.[52][additional citation(s) needed] Some include, “Travel throughout the earth and see how He brings life into being” (Q29:20), “Behold in the creation of the heavens and the earth, and the alternation of night and day, there are indeed signs for men of understanding ...” (Q3:190)

Historical Islamic scientists like Al-Biruni and Al-Battani derived their inspiration from verses of the Quran. Mohammad Hashim Kamali has stated that "scientific observation, experimental knowledge and rationality" are the primary tools with which humanity can achieve the goals laid out for it in the Quran.[53] Ziauddin Sardar argues that Muslims developed the foundations of modern science, by "highlighting the repeated calls of the Quran to observe and reflect upon natural phenomenon".[54]

The physicist Abdus Salam believed there is no contradiction between Islam and the discoveries that science allows humanity to make about nature and the universe; and that the Quran and the Islamic spirit of study and rational reflection was the source of extraordinary civilizational development. Salam highlights, in particular, the work of Ibn al-Haytham and Al-Biruni as the pioneers of empiricism who introduced the experimental approach, breaking way from Aristotle's influence, and thus giving birth to modern science. Salam differentiated between metaphysics and physics, and advised against empirically probing certain matters on which "physics is silent and will remain so," such as the doctrine of "creation from nothing" which in Salam's view is outside the limits of science and thus "gives way" to religious considerations.[55]

Islam has its own world view system including beliefs about "ultimate reality, epistemology, ontology, ethics, purpose, etc." according to Mehdi Golshani.[34]

Toshihiko Izutsu writes that in Islam, nature is not seen as something separate but as an integral part of a holistic outlook on God, humanity, the world and the cosmos. These links imply a sacred aspect to Muslims' pursuit of scientific knowledge, as nature itself is viewed in the Quran as a compilation of signs pointing to the Divine.[56] It was with this understanding that the pursuit of science, especially prior to the colonization of the Muslim world, was respected in Islamic civilizations.[57]

The astrophysicist Nidhal Guessoum argues that the Quran has developed "the concept of knowledge" that encourages scientific discovery.[58] He writes:

"The Qur'an draws attention to the danger of conjecturing without evidence (And follow not that of which you have not the (certain) knowledge of... 17:36) and in several different verses asks Muslims to require proofs (Say: Bring your proof if you are truthful 2:111), both in matters of theological belief and in natural science."

Guessoum cites Ghaleb Hasan on the definition of "proof" according the Quran being "clear and strong... convincing evidence or argument." Also, such a proof cannot rely on an argument from authority, citing verse 5:104. Lastly, both assertions and rejections require a proof, according to verse 4:174.[59] Ismail al-Faruqi and Taha Jabir Alalwani are of the view that any reawakening of the Muslim civilization must start with the Quran; however, the biggest obstacle on this route is the "centuries old heritage of tafseer (exegesis) and other classical disciplines" which inhibit a "universal, epistemiological and systematic conception" of the Quran's message.[60] The philosopher Muhammad Iqbal considered the Quran's methodology and epistemology to be empirical and rational.[61]

Guessoum also suggests scientific knowledge may influence Quranic readings, stating that "for a long time Muslims believed, on the basis on their literal understanding of some Qur’anic verses, that the gender of an unborn baby is only known to God, and the place and time of death of each one of us is likewise al-Ghaib [unknown/unseen]. Such literal under-standings, when confronted with modern scientific (medical) knowledge, led many Muslims to realize that first-degree readings of the Quran can lead to contradictions and predicaments."[62]

Islamists such as Sayyid Qutb argue that since "Islam appointed" Muslims "as representatives of God and made them responsible for learning all the sciences,"[63] science cannot but prosper in a society of true Islam. (However, since Muslim majority countries governments have failed to follow the sharia law in its completeness, true Islam has not prevailed and this explains the failure of science and many other things in the Muslim world, according to Qutb.)[63]

Others claim traditional interpretations of Islam are not compatible with the development of science. Author Rodney Stark argues that Islam's lag behind the West in scientific advancement after (roughly) 1500 AD was due to opposition by traditional ulema to efforts to formulate systematic explanation of natural phenomenon with "natural laws." He claims that they believed such laws were blasphemous because they limit "God's freedom to act" as He wishes, a principle enshired in aya 14:4: "God sendeth whom He will astray, and guideth whom He will," which (they believed) applied to all of creation not just humanity.[64]

Taner Edis wrote An Illusion of Harmony: Science and Religion in Islam.[65] Edis worries that secularism in Turkey, one of the most westernized Muslim nations, is on its way out; he points out that the population of Turkey rejects evolution by a large majority. To Edis, many Muslims appreciate technology and respect the role that science plays in its creation. As a result, he says there is a great deal of Islamic pseudoscience attempting to reconcile this respect with other respected religious beliefs. Edis maintains that the motivation to read modern scientific truths into holy books is also stronger for Muslims than Christians.[66] This is because, according to Edis, true criticism of the Quran is almost non-existent in the Muslim world. While Christianity is less prone to see its Holy Book as the direct word of God, fewer Muslims will compromise on this idea – causing them to believe that scientific truths simply must appear in the Quran. However, Edis argues that there are endless examples of scientific discoveries that could be read into the Bible or Quran if one would like to.[66] Edis qualifies that Muslim thought certainly cannot be understood by looking at the Quran alone; cultural and political factors play large roles.[66]

Miracle literature

Starting in the 1970s and 80s, the idea of presence of scientific evidence in the Quran became popularized as ijaz (miracle) literature, also called "Bucailleism", and began to be distributed through Muslim bookstores and websites, and discussed on television programs by Islamic preachers.[67][13] The movement contends that the Quran abounds with "scientific facts" that appeared centuries before their discovery by science and which "could not have been known" by people at the time.[citation needed] By asserting the presence of scientific truths stemming from the Quran, it also overlaps with Islamic creationism.

According to author Ziauddin Sardar, the ijaz movement has created a "global craze in Muslim societies", and has developed into an industry that is "widespread and well-funded".[67][13][68] Individuals connected with the movement include Abdul Majeed al-Zindani, who established the Commission on Scientific Signs in the Quran and Sunnah; Zakir Naik, the Indian televangelist; and Adnan Oktar, the Turkish creationist.[67]

Enthusiasts of the movement argue that among the miracles found in the Quran are "everything, from relativity, quantum mechanics, Big Bang theory, black holes and pulsars, genetics, embryology, modern geology, thermodynamics, even the laser and hydrogen fuel cells".[67] Zafar Ishaq Ansari terms the modern trend of claiming the identification of "scientific truths" in the Quran as the "scientific exegesis" of the holy book.[69]

An example is the verse: "So verily I swear by the stars that run and hide ..." (Q81:15–16),[70] which proponents claim demonstrates the Quran's knowledge of the existence of black holes; or: "[I swear by] the Moon in her fullness that ye shall journey on from stage to stage" (Q84:18–19) refers, according to proponents, to human flight into outer space.[67]

Embryology in the Quran

One claim that has received widespread attention and has even been the subject of a medical school textbook widely used in the Muslim world [71] is that several Quranic verses foretell the study of embryology and "provide a detailed description of the significant events in human development from the stages of gametes and conception until the full term pregnancy and delivery or even post partum."[72]

In 1983, an authority on Embryology, Keith L. Moore, had a special edition published of his widely used textbook on Embryology (The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology), co-authored by a leader of the scientific miracles movement, Abdul Majeed al-Zindani. This edition, The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology with Islamic Additions,[73] interspersed pages of "embryology-related Quranic verse and hadith" by al-Zindani into Moore's original work.[74]

At least one Muslim-born physician (Ali A. Rizvi) studying the textbook of Moore and al-Zindani found himself "confused" by "why Moore was so 'astonished by'" the Quranic references, which Rizvi found "vague", and insofar as they were specific, preceded by the observations of Aristotle and the Ayr-veda,[75] and/or easily explained by "common sense".[71][note 1]

Some of the main verses are

  • (Q39:6) God creates us "in the womb of your mothers, creation after creation, within three darknessess," or "three veils of darkness" . The "three" allegedly referring to the abdominal wall, the wall of the uterus, and the chorioamniotic membrane.[76][77]
  • Verse Q32:9 identifies the order of organ development of the embryo—ears, then eyes, then heart.[78][note 2]
  • Verses referring to "sperm drop" (an-nutfa), and to al-3alaqa (translated as "clinging clot" or "leech like structure") in (Q23:13-14); and to "sperm-drop mixture" (an-nuṭfatin amshaajin) in (Q76:2). The miraculousness of these verse is said to come from the resemblance of the human embryo to a leech, and to the claim that "sperm-drop mixture" refers to a mixture sperm and egg.[76][80]
  • (Q53:45-46) "And that He creates the two mates—the male and female—from a sperm-drop when it is emitted," allegedly refers to the fact that the sperm contributes X and Y chromosomes that determine the gender of the baby.[76][80]

However,

  • The "three darknesses" or three walls (Q39:6) could easily have been observed by cutting open of pregnant mammals, something done by human beings before the revelation of the Quran, ("dissections of human cadavers by Greek scientists have been documented as early as the third century BCE").[81][80]
  • Contrary to the claims made about Q32:9, ears do not develop before eyes, which do not develop before heart. The heart begins development "at about 20 days, and the ears and eyes begin to develop simultaneously in the fourth week". However, the verse itself doesn't mention or claim the order of how the embryo will form first in the womb. "Then He proportioned him and breathed into him from His [created] soul and made for you hearing and vision and hearts; little are you grateful."[82][78]
  • The embryo may resemble a leech (ala "clinging clot" or "leech like structure" of al-3alaqa in Q23:13-14), but it resembles many things during the eight week course of its development—none for very long.[80]
  • While it is generally agreed the Quran mentions sperm (an-nutfa in several verses), "sperm-drop mixture" (an-nuṭfatin amshaajin in Q76:2) of a mixture of sperm and egg is more problematic as nowhere does the Quran mention the Egg cell or ovum—a rather glaring omission in any description of embryo development, as it the ovum the source of more than half the genetic material of the embryo.[78]
  • With mention of male sperm but not female egg in the Quran, it seems likely Q53:45-46—"And that He creates the two mates, the male and female, from a sperm-drop when it is emitted"—is talking about the erroneous idea that all genetic material for offspring comes from the male and the mother simply provides a womb for the developing baby (as opposed to the sperm contributing the X and Y chromosomes that determine the gender of the baby). This idea originated with the ancient Greeks and was popular before modern biology developed.[80]

In 2002, Moore declined to be interviewed by the Wall Street Journal on the subject of his work on Islam, stating that "it's been ten or eleven years since I was involved in the Qur'an."[83]

Criticism

Critics argue, verses that proponents say explain modern scientific facts, about subjects such as biology, the origin and history of the Earth, and the evolution of human life, contain fallacies and are unscientific.[84][85]

As of 2008, both Muslims and non-Muslims have disputed whether there actually are "scientific miracles" in the Quran. Muslim critics of the movement include Indian Islamic theologian Maulana Ashraf ‘Ali Thanvi, Muslim historian Syed Nomanul Haq, Muzaffar Iqbal, president of Center for Islam and Science in Alberta, Canada, and Egyptian Muslim scholar Khaled Montaser.[86]

Pakistani theoretical physicist Pervez Hoodbhoy criticizes these claims and says there is no explanation that why many modern scientific discoveries such as quantum mechanics, molecular genetics, etc. were discovered elsewhere.[87][86]

Giving the example of the roundness of the earth and the invention of the television,[note 3] a Christian site ("Evidence for God's Unchanging World") complains the "scientific facts" are too vague to be miraculous.[86]

Critics argue that while it is generally agreed the Quran contains many verses proclaiming the wonders of nature,

  • it requires "considerable mental gymnastics and distortions to find scientific facts or theories in these verses" (Ziauddin Sardar);[67]
  • that the Quran is the source of guidance in right faith (iman) and righteous action (alladhina amanu wa amilu l-salihat) but the idea that it contained "all knowledge, including scientific" knowledge has not been a mainstream view among Muslim scholarship (Zafar Ishaq Ansari);[69][need quotation to verify] and that "Science is ever-changing ... the Copernican revolution overturning polemic models of the universe to Einstein's general relativity overshadowing Newtonian mechanisms".[13] So while "Science is probabilistic in nature" the Quran deals in "absolute certainty". (Ali Talib);[90]

Nidhal Guessoum says that the central issue in the Islam-science discourse is the hierarchical positioning or place of the Quran in the scientific enterprise.[62]

Mustansir Mir argues for a proper approach to Quran with regard to science that allows multiple and multi-level interpretations.[91][92] He writes

“From a linguistic standpoint, it is quite possible for a word, phrase or statement to have more than one layer of meaning, such that one layer would make sense to one audience in one age and another layer of meaning would, without negating the first, be meaningful to another audience in a subsequent age.”

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ non-Muslim scientists have also found the case for Quranic prescient explanation about embryology lacking. Pharyngula. "Islamic embryology: overblown balderdash". science blogs. Retrieved 10 August 2020.
  2. ^ The site "Miracles of the Quran" quotes four verses:
    • It is He Who has created hearing, sight and minds for you. What little thanks you show! (Qur'an 23:78)
    • Allah brought you out of your mothers' wombs knowing nothing at all, and gave you hearing, sight and minds so that perhaps you would show thanks. (Qur'an, 16:78)
    • Say: "What do you think? If Allah took away your hearing and your sight and sealed up your hearts, what god is there, other than Allah, who could give them back to you?"� (Qur'an 6:46)
    • We created man from a mingled drop to test him, and We made him hearing and seeing. (Qur'an 76:2)
    and notes that: "The above verses refer to a number of senses given to human beings by Allah. These are always referred in a specific order in the Qur'an: hearing, sight, feeling and understanding."
    and further claims that: "The information only recently obtained about the formation of the baby's organs inside the mother's womb is in complete agreement with that revealed in the Qur’an."[79]
  3. ^ Claims of the Quran foretelling the roundness of the earth can be found at Windows of Islam.com, citing as evidence
    • verse 39:5 "He created the heavens and earth in truth. He wraps the night over the day and wraps the day over the night and has subjected the sun and the moon, each running [its course] for a specified term".[88]
    The site Miracles of the Quran.com lists "THE INVENTION OF TELEVISION" as one of the "Mathematical Miracles of the Quran", citing
    • Surat an-Naml, Q.27:40 "He who possessed knowledge of the Book said, ‘I will bring it to you before your glance returns to you.’ And when he saw it standing firmly in his presence, he said, ‘This is part of my Lord's favor to test me to see if I will give thanks or show ingratitude... "[89]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Seyyed Hossein Nasr. "Islam and Modern Science"
  2. ^ "The 'first true scientist'". January 4, 2009 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
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External links

  • Islam & Science
  • Science and the Islamic world—The quest for rapprochement by Pervez Hoodbhoy.
  • by Ziauddin Sardar (2002).
  • Can Science Dispense With Religion? 2016-05-29 at the Wayback Machine by Mehdi Golshani.
  • Islam, science and Muslims by Seyyed Hossein Nasr.
  • Islam, Muslims, and modern technology by Seyyed Hossein Nasr.
  • Center for Islam and Science
  • Explore Islamic achievements and contributions to science
  • Is There Such A Thing As Islamic Science? The Influence Of Islam On The World Of Science
  • How Islam Won, and Lost, the Lead in Science
  • Radicalism among Muslim professionals worries many

islamic, attitudes, towards, science, science, islam, redirects, here, historical, development, science, islamic, world, science, medieval, islamic, world, documentary, science, islam, documentary, muslim, scholars, have, developed, spectrum, viewpoints, scien. Science and Islam redirects here For the historical development of science in the Islamic world see Science in the medieval Islamic world For the documentary see Science and Islam documentary Muslim scholars have developed a spectrum of viewpoints on science within the context of Islam 1 The Quran and Islam allows much interpretation when it comes to science Scientists of medieval Muslim civilization e g Ibn al Haytham contributed to the new discoveries in science 2 3 4 From the eighth to fifteenth century Muslim mathematicians and astronomers furthered the development of almost all areas of mathematics 5 6 At the same time concerns have been raised about the lack of scientific literacy in parts of the modern Muslim world 7 Islamic scientific achievements encompassed a wide range of subject areas especially medicine mathematics astronomy agriculture as well as physics economics engineering and optics 8 9 10 11 12 Aside from these contributions some Muslim writers have stated that the Quran made prescient statements about scientific phenomena that were later confirmed by scientific research for instance as regards to the structure of the embryo the solar system and the development of the universe 13 14 Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 2 1 Classical science in the Muslim world 2 1 1 Science and religious practice 2 2 Modern science in the Muslim world 2 2 1 Counterfactual trends 3 Science and the Quran 3 1 Miracle literature 3 1 1 Embryology in the Quran 3 1 2 Criticism 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Citations 6 External linksTerminology EditScience is often defined as the pursuit of knowledge and understanding of the natural and social world following a systematic methodology based on evidence 15 It is a system of acquiring knowledge based on empiricism experimentation and methodological naturalism as well as to the organized body of knowledge human beings have gained by such research Scientists maintain that scientific investigation needs to adhere to the scientific method a process for evaluating empirical knowledge that explains observable events without recourse to supernatural notions According to Toby Huff there is no true word for science in Arabic as commonly defined in English and other languages In Arabic science can simply mean different forms of knowledge 16 This view has been criticized by other scholars For example according to Muzaffar Iqbal Huff s framework of inquiry is based on the synthetic model of Robert Merton who had made no use of any Islamic sources or concepts dealing with the theory of knowledge or social organization 5 Each branch of science has its own name but all branches of science have a common prefix ilm For example physics is more literally translated from Arabic as the science of nature علم الطبيعة ilm aṭ ṭabi a arithmetic as the science of accounts علم الحساب ilm al hisab 17 The religious study of Islam through Islamic sciences like Quranic exegesis hadith studies etc is called العلم الديني science of religion al ilm ad dinniy using the same word for science as the science of nature 17 According to the Hans Wehr Dictionary of Arabic while علم ilm is defined as knowledge learning lore etc the word for science is the plural form علوم ulum So for example كلية العلوم kulliyat al ulum the Faculty of Science of the Egyptian University is literally the Faculty of Sciences 17 History EditClassical science in the Muslim world Edit See also Science in medieval Islam Islamic cosmology Astronomy in medieval Islam Mathematics in medieval Islam Physics in medieval Islam and Medicine in medieval Islam Work in the observatorium of Taqi al Din One of the earliest accounts of the use of science in the Islamic world is during the eighth and sixteenth centuries known as the Islamic Golden Age 18 It is also known as Arabic science because of the majority of texts that were translated from Greek into Arabic The mass translation movement that occurred in the ninth century allowed for the integration of science into the Islamic world The teachings from the Greeks were now translated and their scientific knowledge was now passed on to the Arab world Despite these conditions not all scientists during this period were Muslim or Arab as there were a number of notable non Arab scientists most notably Persians as well as some non Muslim scientists who contributed to scientific studies in the Muslim world The mass translation movement in the ninth century allowed for the integration of science into the Islamic world A number of modern scholars such as Fielding H Garrison Sultan Bashir Mahmood Hossein Nasr consider modern science and the scientific method to have been greatly inspired by Muslim scientists who introduced a modern empirical experimental and quantitative approach to scientific inquiry citation needed Certain advances made by medieval Muslim astronomers geographers and mathematicians were motivated by problems presented in Islamic scripture such as Al Khwarizmi s c 780 850 development of algebra in order to solve the Islamic inheritance laws 19 and developments in astronomy geography spherical geometry and spherical trigonometry in order to determine the direction of the Qibla the times of Salah prayers and the dates of the Islamic calendar 20 These new studies of math and science would allow for the Islamic world to get ahead of the rest of the world With these inspiration at work Muslim mathematicians and astronomers contributed significantly to the development to just about every domain of mathematics between the eight and fifteenth centuries 21 The increased use of dissection in Islamic medicine during the 12th and 13th centuries was influenced by the writings of the Islamic theologian Al Ghazali who encouraged the study of anatomy and use of dissections as a method of gaining knowledge of God s creation 22 In al Bukhari s and Muslim s collection of sahih hadith it is said There is no disease that God has created except that He also has created its treatment Bukhari 7 71 582 This culminated in the work of Ibn al Nafis 1213 1288 who discovered the pulmonary circulation in 1242 and used his discovery as evidence for the orthodox Islamic doctrine of bodily resurrection 23 Ibn al Nafis also used Islamic scripture as justification for his rejection of wine as self medication 24 Criticisms against alchemy and astrology were also motivated by religion as orthodox Islamic theologians viewed the beliefs of alchemists and astrologists as being superstitious 25 Fakhr al Din al Razi 1149 1209 in dealing with his conception of physics and the physical world in his Matalib discusses Islamic cosmology criticizes the Aristotelian notion of the Earth s centrality within the universe and explores the notion of the existence of a multiverse in the context of his commentary based on the Quranic verse All praise belongs to God Lord of the Worlds He raises the question of whether the term worlds in this verse refers to multiple worlds within this single universe or cosmos or to many other universes or a multiverse beyond this known universe On the basis of this verse he argues that God has created more than a thousand thousand worlds alfa alfi awalim beyond this world such that each one of those worlds be bigger and more massive than this world as well as having the like of what this world has 26 Ali Kuscu s 1403 1474 support for the Earth s rotation and his rejection of Aristotelian cosmology which advocates a stationary Earth was motivated by religious opposition to Aristotle by orthodox Islamic theologians such as Al Ghazali 27 28 According to many historians science in the Muslim civilization flourished during the Middle Ages but began declining at some time around the 14th 29 to 16th 18 centuries At least some scholars blame this on the rise of a clerical faction which froze this same science and withered its progress 30 Examples of conflicts with prevailing interpretations of Islam and science or at least the fruits of science thereafter include the demolition of Taqi al Din s great Constantinople observatory in Galata comparable in its technical equipment and its specialist personnel with that of his celebrated contemporary the Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe But while Brahe s observatory opened the way to a vast new development of astronomical science Taqi al Din s was demolished by a squad of Janissaries by order of the sultan on the recommendation of the Chief Mufti sometime after 1577 CE 30 31 Science and religious practice Edit Scientific methods have been historically applied to find solutions to the technical exigencies of Islamic religious rituals which is a characteristic of Islam that sets it apart from other religions These ritual considerations include a lunar calendar definition of prayer times based on the position of the sun and a direction of prayer set at a specific location Scientific methods have also been applied to Islamic laws governing the distribution of inheritances and to Islamic decorative arts Some of these problems were tackled by both medieval scientists of the Islamic world and scholars of Islamic law Though these two groups generally used different methods there is little evidence of serious controversy between them on these subjects with the exception of the criticism leveled by religious scholars at the methods of astronomy due to its association with astrology 32 Modern science in the Muslim world Edit At the beginning of the nineteenth century modern science arrived in the Muslim world bringing with it the transfer of various philosophical currents entangled with science including schools of thought such as Positivism and Darwinism This had a profound effect on the minds of Muslim scientists and intellectuals and also had a noticeable impact on some Islamic theological doctrines 33 While the majority of Muslim scientists tried to adapt their understanding of Islam to the findings of modern science some rejected modern science as corrupt foreign thought considering it incompatible with Islamic teachings others advocated for the wholesale replacement of religious worldviews with a scientific worldview and some Muslim philosophers suggested separating the findings of modern science from its philosophical attachments 34 Among the majority of Muslim thinkers a key justification for the use of modern science was the benefits that modern knowledge clearly brought to society Others concluded that science could ultimately be reconciled with faith A further apologetic trend saw the emergence of theories that scientific discoveries had been predicted in the Quran and Islamic tradition thereby internalizing science within religion 34 According to 2013 survey by the Pew Research Center asking Muslims in different Muslim majority countries in the Middle East and North Africa if there was a conflict between science and religion few agreed in Morocco 18 Egypt 16 Iraq 15 Jordan 15 and the Palestinian territories 14 More agreed in Albania 57 Turkey 40 Lebanon 53 and Tunisia 42 35 The poll also found a variance in how Muslim population in some countries are at odds with current scientific theories about biological evolution and the origin of man 35 Only four of the 22 countries surveyed that at least 50 of the Muslims surveyed rejected evolution Iraq 67 Tajikistan 55 Indonesia 55 Afghanistan 62 Countries with relatively low rates of disbelief in evolution i e agreeing to the statement humans and other living things have always existed in present form include Lebanon 21 Albania 24 Kazakhstan 16 36 As of 2018 three Muslim scientists have won a Nobel Prize for science Abdus Salam from Pakistan in physics Ahmed Zewail from Egypt and Aziz Sancar from Turkey in Chemistry According to Mustafa Akyol the relative lack of Muslim Nobel laureates in sciences per capita can be attributed to more insular interpretations of the religion than in the golden age of Islamic discovery and development when Islamic society and intellectuals were more open to foreign ideas 37 Ahmed Zewail who won the 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry and is known as the father of femtochemistry said that There is nothing fundamental in Islam against science 38 Counterfactual trends Edit This section may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Islamic scholar Abu Ammaar Yasir Qadhi has noted that important technological innovations once considered to be bizarre strange haram religiously forbidden bidʻah innovation against the tradition in the Muslim world were later accepted as standard One of the main reasons the Muslim world was held behind when Europe continued its ascent was that the printing press was banned And there was a time when the Ottoman Sultan issued a decree that anybody caught with a printing press shall be executed for heresy and anybody who owns a printed book shall basically be thrown into jail And for 350 years when Europe is printing when Rene Descartes is printing when Galileo is printing when Isaac Newton is printing the only way you can get a copy of any book in the Arab world is to go and hand write it yourself 39 In the early twentieth century Iranian Shia Ulema who forbade the learning of foreign languages and dissection of human bodies in the medical school in Iran 40 On the other hand contrary to the current cliche concerning the opposition of the Imamate Shiite Ulama to the modern astronomy in the nineteenth century there is no evidence showing their literal or explicit objection of the modern astronomy based on Islamic doctrines They even became the advocates of modern astronomy by the publication of Hibat al Din Shahristani al Islam wa al Hayʾa Islam and Astronomy in 1910 After that Shia ulama not only were not against the modern astronomy but also they believed that the Quran and Islamic hadiths of Imams admit it 41 Until the 1960 s Saudi Sunni ulema opposed any attempts at modernisation considering it as innovations bidah They opposed the spread of electricity radios TVs internet As recently as 2015 Sheikh Bandar al Khaibari rejected the fact that Earth orbits the Sun instead claiming that the Earth is stationary and does not move 42 In Afghanistan Sunni Taliban turn secular schools into Islamic madrasas valuing religious studies over modern science 43 In recent years the lagging of the Muslim world in science is manifest in the disproportionately small amount of scientific output as measured by citations of articles published in internationally circulating science journals annual expenditures on research and development and numbers of research scientists and engineers 44 Concerns has been raised that the contemporary Muslim world suffers from scientific illiteracy 7 Skepticism of science among some Muslims is reflected in issues such as resistance in Muslim northern Nigeria to polio inoculation which some believe is an imaginary thing created in the West or it is a ploy to get us to submit to this evil agenda 45 Also in Pakistan a small number of post graduate physics students have been known to blame earthquakes on sinfulness moral laxity deviation from the Islamic true path while only a couple of muffled voices supported the scientific view that earthquakes are a natural phenomenon unaffected by human activity 7 Islamist author Muhammad Qutb brother of and promoter of Sayyid Qutb in his influential book Islam the misunderstood religion states that science is a powerful instrument to increase human knowledge but has become a corrupting influence on men s thoughts and feelings for much of the world s population steering them away from the Right Path As an example he gives scientific community s disapproval of claims of telepathy when he claims that it is documented in hadith that Caliph Umar prevented commander Sariah from being ambushed by communicating with him telepathically 46 Muslim scientists and scholars have subsequently developed a spectrum of viewpoints on the place of scientific learning within the context of Islam 1 The conflicts between these two ideas can become quite complicated It has been argued that Muslims must be able to maintain the traditional Islamic intellectual space for the legitimate continuation of the Islamic view of the nature of reality to which Islamic ethics corresponds without denying the legitimacy of modern science within their own confines 47 While the natural sciences have not been fully institutionalized in predominately Islamic countries engineering is considered an applied science that can function in conjunction with religion and it is one of the most popular career choices of Middle Eastern students 48 During the twentieth century the Islamic world was introduced to modern science This was facilitated by the expansion of educational systems for example 1900 in Istanbul and 1925 Cairo opened universities Unlike some of the discords between science and Islam in the past the concerns for some modern students were different This discord for Islam was naturalism and social Darwinism which challenged some beliefs On the other hand there were efforts to harmonize science with Islam An example is the nineteenth century study of Kudsi of Baku who made connections between his discoveries in astronomy and what he knew from the Quran These included the creation of the universe and the beginning of like in the second part with doomsday and the end of the world and the third was the resurrection after death 49 A passage in the Quran encourages congruency with the truth attained by modern science hence they should be both in agreement and concordant with the findings of modern science 50 This passage was used more often during the time where modern science was full of different discoveries However many scientific thinkers through the Islamic word still take this passage to heart when it come to their work There are also some strong believers that with modern viewpoints such as social Darwinism challenged all medieval world views including that of Islam Some didn t even want to be affiliated with modern science and thought it was just an outside look into Islam 50 Many followers tend to see the problems with the integration of Islam and science and there are many that still stand by the view points of Ibn Hanbal 855 That the meaning of science is also knowledge that of many different aspects There is a sense of wonder an open mind that allows for people to have both religious values and scientific thought Along with positive outlooks on modern science is the Islamic world there are many negative ones as well It has become the idea for some that the practice of modern science is that of studying Western science A large issue that concerns those who don t believe in the study of Western science is where the knowledge originated For Muslims the knowledge comes from God not from human definition of forms of knowledge An example of this in the Islamic world is that of modern physics which is considered to be Western instead of an international study Islam values claim knowledge of reality based not on reason alone but also on revelation and inspiration 47 The ideals of modern science contradict these views and many criticisms of modern science come from the value systems that some modern scientists uphold Science and the Quran EditMany Muslims agree that doing science is an act of religious merit even a collective duty of the Muslim community 51 According to M Shamsher Ali there are around 750 verses in the Quran dealing with natural phenomena According to the Encyclopedia of the Quran many verses of the Quran ask mankind to study nature and this has been interpreted to mean an encouragement for scientific inquiry 52 and the investigation of the truth 52 additional citation s needed Some include Travel throughout the earth and see how He brings life into being Q29 20 Behold in the creation of the heavens and the earth and the alternation of night and day there are indeed signs for men of understanding Q3 190 Historical Islamic scientists like Al Biruni and Al Battani derived their inspiration from verses of the Quran Mohammad Hashim Kamali has stated that scientific observation experimental knowledge and rationality are the primary tools with which humanity can achieve the goals laid out for it in the Quran 53 Ziauddin Sardar argues that Muslims developed the foundations of modern science by highlighting the repeated calls of the Quran to observe and reflect upon natural phenomenon 54 The physicist Abdus Salam believed there is no contradiction between Islam and the discoveries that science allows humanity to make about nature and the universe and that the Quran and the Islamic spirit of study and rational reflection was the source of extraordinary civilizational development Salam highlights in particular the work of Ibn al Haytham and Al Biruni as the pioneers of empiricism who introduced the experimental approach breaking way from Aristotle s influence and thus giving birth to modern science Salam differentiated between metaphysics and physics and advised against empirically probing certain matters on which physics is silent and will remain so such as the doctrine of creation from nothing which in Salam s view is outside the limits of science and thus gives way to religious considerations 55 Islam has its own world view system including beliefs about ultimate reality epistemology ontology ethics purpose etc according to Mehdi Golshani 34 Toshihiko Izutsu writes that in Islam nature is not seen as something separate but as an integral part of a holistic outlook on God humanity the world and the cosmos These links imply a sacred aspect to Muslims pursuit of scientific knowledge as nature itself is viewed in the Quran as a compilation of signs pointing to the Divine 56 It was with this understanding that the pursuit of science especially prior to the colonization of the Muslim world was respected in Islamic civilizations 57 The astrophysicist Nidhal Guessoum argues that the Quran has developed the concept of knowledge that encourages scientific discovery 58 He writes The Qur an draws attention to the danger of conjecturing without evidence And follow not that of which you have not the certain knowledge of 17 36 and in several different verses asks Muslims to require proofs Say Bring your proof if you are truthful 2 111 both in matters of theological belief and in natural science Guessoum cites Ghaleb Hasan on the definition of proof according the Quran being clear and strong convincing evidence or argument Also such a proof cannot rely on an argument from authority citing verse 5 104 Lastly both assertions and rejections require a proof according to verse 4 174 59 Ismail al Faruqi and Taha Jabir Alalwani are of the view that any reawakening of the Muslim civilization must start with the Quran however the biggest obstacle on this route is the centuries old heritage of tafseer exegesis and other classical disciplines which inhibit a universal epistemiological and systematic conception of the Quran s message 60 The philosopher Muhammad Iqbal considered the Quran s methodology and epistemology to be empirical and rational 61 Guessoum also suggests scientific knowledge may influence Quranic readings stating that for a long time Muslims believed on the basis on their literal understanding of some Qur anic verses that the gender of an unborn baby is only known to God and the place and time of death of each one of us is likewise al Ghaib unknown unseen Such literal under standings when confronted with modern scientific medical knowledge led many Muslims to realize that first degree readings of the Quran can lead to contradictions and predicaments 62 Islamists such as Sayyid Qutb argue that since Islam appointed Muslims as representatives of God and made them responsible for learning all the sciences 63 science cannot but prosper in a society of true Islam However since Muslim majority countries governments have failed to follow the sharia law in its completeness true Islam has not prevailed and this explains the failure of science and many other things in the Muslim world according to Qutb 63 Others claim traditional interpretations of Islam are not compatible with the development of science Author Rodney Stark argues that Islam s lag behind the West in scientific advancement after roughly 1500 AD was due to opposition by traditional ulema to efforts to formulate systematic explanation of natural phenomenon with natural laws He claims that they believed such laws were blasphemous because they limit God s freedom to act as He wishes a principle enshired in aya 14 4 God sendeth whom He will astray and guideth whom He will which they believed applied to all of creation not just humanity 64 Taner Edis wrote An Illusion of Harmony Science and Religion in Islam 65 Edis worries that secularism in Turkey one of the most westernized Muslim nations is on its way out he points out that the population of Turkey rejects evolution by a large majority To Edis many Muslims appreciate technology and respect the role that science plays in its creation As a result he says there is a great deal of Islamic pseudoscience attempting to reconcile this respect with other respected religious beliefs Edis maintains that the motivation to read modern scientific truths into holy books is also stronger for Muslims than Christians 66 This is because according to Edis true criticism of the Quran is almost non existent in the Muslim world While Christianity is less prone to see its Holy Book as the direct word of God fewer Muslims will compromise on this idea causing them to believe that scientific truths simply must appear in the Quran However Edis argues that there are endless examples of scientific discoveries that could be read into the Bible or Quran if one would like to 66 Edis qualifies that Muslim thought certainly cannot be understood by looking at the Quran alone cultural and political factors play large roles 66 Miracle literature Edit Starting in the 1970s and 80s the idea of presence of scientific evidence in the Quran became popularized as ijaz miracle literature also called Bucailleism and began to be distributed through Muslim bookstores and websites and discussed on television programs by Islamic preachers 67 13 The movement contends that the Quran abounds with scientific facts that appeared centuries before their discovery by science and which could not have been known by people at the time citation needed By asserting the presence of scientific truths stemming from the Quran it also overlaps with Islamic creationism According to author Ziauddin Sardar the ijaz movement has created a global craze in Muslim societies and has developed into an industry that is widespread and well funded 67 13 68 Individuals connected with the movement include Abdul Majeed al Zindani who established the Commission on Scientific Signs in the Quran and Sunnah Zakir Naik the Indian televangelist and Adnan Oktar the Turkish creationist 67 Enthusiasts of the movement argue that among the miracles found in the Quran are everything from relativity quantum mechanics Big Bang theory black holes and pulsars genetics embryology modern geology thermodynamics even the laser and hydrogen fuel cells 67 Zafar Ishaq Ansari terms the modern trend of claiming the identification of scientific truths in the Quran as the scientific exegesis of the holy book 69 An example is the verse So verily I swear by the stars that run and hide Q81 15 16 70 which proponents claim demonstrates the Quran s knowledge of the existence of black holes or I swear by the Moon in her fullness that ye shall journey on from stage to stage Q84 18 19 refers according to proponents to human flight into outer space 67 Embryology in the Quran Edit One claim that has received widespread attention and has even been the subject of a medical school textbook widely used in the Muslim world 71 is that several Quranic verses foretell the study of embryology and provide a detailed description of the significant events in human development from the stages of gametes and conception until the full term pregnancy and delivery or even post partum 72 In 1983 an authority on Embryology Keith L Moore had a special edition published of his widely used textbook on Embryology The Developing Human Clinically Oriented Embryology co authored by a leader of the scientific miracles movement Abdul Majeed al Zindani This edition The Developing Human Clinically Oriented Embryology with Islamic Additions 73 interspersed pages of embryology related Quranic verse and hadith by al Zindani into Moore s original work 74 At least one Muslim born physician Ali A Rizvi studying the textbook of Moore and al Zindani found himself confused by why Moore was so astonished by the Quranic references which Rizvi found vague and insofar as they were specific preceded by the observations of Aristotle and the Ayr veda 75 and or easily explained by common sense 71 note 1 Some of the main verses are Q39 6 God creates us in the womb of your mothers creation after creation within three darknessess or three veils of darkness The three allegedly referring to the abdominal wall the wall of the uterus and the chorioamniotic membrane 76 77 Verse Q32 9 identifies the order of organ development of the embryo ears then eyes then heart 78 note 2 Verses referring to sperm drop an nutfa and to al 3alaqa translated as clinging clot or leech like structure in Q23 13 14 and to sperm drop mixture an nuṭfatin amshaajin in Q76 2 The miraculousness of these verse is said to come from the resemblance of the human embryo to a leech and to the claim that sperm drop mixture refers to a mixture sperm and egg 76 80 Q53 45 46 And that He creates the two mates the male and female from a sperm drop when it is emitted allegedly refers to the fact that the sperm contributes X and Y chromosomes that determine the gender of the baby 76 80 However The three darknesses or three walls Q39 6 could easily have been observed by cutting open of pregnant mammals something done by human beings before the revelation of the Quran dissections of human cadavers by Greek scientists have been documented as early as the third century BCE 81 80 Contrary to the claims made about Q32 9 ears do not develop before eyes which do not develop before heart The heart begins development at about 20 days and the ears and eyes begin to develop simultaneously in the fourth week However the verse itself doesn t mention or claim the order of how the embryo will form first in the womb Then He proportioned him and breathed into him from His created soul and made for you hearing and vision and hearts little are you grateful 82 78 The embryo may resemble a leech ala clinging clot or leech like structure of al 3alaqa in Q23 13 14 but it resembles many things during the eight week course of its development none for very long 80 While it is generally agreed the Quran mentions sperm an nutfa in several verses sperm drop mixture an nuṭfatin amshaajin in Q76 2 of a mixture of sperm and egg is more problematic as nowhere does the Quran mention the Egg cell or ovum a rather glaring omission in any description of embryo development as it the ovum the source of more than half the genetic material of the embryo 78 With mention of male sperm but not female egg in the Quran it seems likely Q53 45 46 And that He creates the two mates the male and female from a sperm drop when it is emitted is talking about the erroneous idea that all genetic material for offspring comes from the male and the mother simply provides a womb for the developing baby as opposed to the sperm contributing the X and Y chromosomes that determine the gender of the baby This idea originated with the ancient Greeks and was popular before modern biology developed 80 In 2002 Moore declined to be interviewed by the Wall Street Journal on the subject of his work on Islam stating that it s been ten or eleven years since I was involved in the Qur an 83 Criticism Edit Critics argue verses that proponents say explain modern scientific facts about subjects such as biology the origin and history of the Earth and the evolution of human life contain fallacies and are unscientific 84 85 As of 2008 both Muslims and non Muslims have disputed whether there actually are scientific miracles in the Quran Muslim critics of the movement include Indian Islamic theologian Maulana Ashraf Ali Thanvi Muslim historian Syed Nomanul Haq Muzaffar Iqbal president of Center for Islam and Science in Alberta Canada and Egyptian Muslim scholar Khaled Montaser 86 Pakistani theoretical physicist Pervez Hoodbhoy criticizes these claims and says there is no explanation that why many modern scientific discoveries such as quantum mechanics molecular genetics etc were discovered elsewhere 87 86 Giving the example of the roundness of the earth and the invention of the television note 3 a Christian site Evidence for God s Unchanging World complains the scientific facts are too vague to be miraculous 86 Critics argue that while it is generally agreed the Quran contains many verses proclaiming the wonders of nature it requires considerable mental gymnastics and distortions to find scientific facts or theories in these verses Ziauddin Sardar 67 that the Quran is the source of guidance in right faith iman and righteous action alladhina amanu wa amilu l salihat but the idea that it contained all knowledge including scientific knowledge has not been a mainstream view among Muslim scholarship Zafar Ishaq Ansari 69 need quotation to verify and that Science is ever changing the Copernican revolution overturning polemic models of the universe to Einstein s general relativity overshadowing Newtonian mechanisms 13 So while Science is probabilistic in nature the Quran deals in absolute certainty Ali Talib 90 Nidhal Guessoum says that the central issue in the Islam science discourse is the hierarchical positioning or place of the Quran in the scientific enterprise 62 Mustansir Mir argues for a proper approach to Quran with regard to science that allows multiple and multi level interpretations 91 92 He writes From a linguistic standpoint it is quite possible for a word phrase or statement to have more than one layer of meaning such that one layer would make sense to one audience in one age and another layer of meaning would without negating the first be meaningful to another audience in a subsequent age See also EditQuran and miracles Relationship between religion and science Religious interpretations of the Big Bang theory Ahmadiyya views on evolution Christianity and science Buddhism and science Baha i Faith and science Education in Islam Ibn Sina Academy of Medieval Medicine and Sciences Superstitions in Muslim societiesReferences EditNotes Edit non Muslim scientists have also found the case for Quranic prescient explanation about embryology lacking Pharyngula Islamic embryology overblown balderdash science blogs Retrieved 10 August 2020 The site Miracles of the Quran quotes four verses It is He Who has created hearing sight and minds for you What little thanks you show Qur an 23 78 Allah brought you out of your mothers wombs knowing nothing at all and gave you hearing sight and minds so that perhaps you would show thanks Qur an 16 78 Say What do you think If Allah took away your hearing and your sight and sealed up your hearts what god is there other than Allah who could give them back to you Qur an 6 46 We created man from a mingled drop to test him and We made him hearing and seeing Qur an 76 2 and notes that The above verses refer to a number of senses given to human beings by Allah These are always referred in a specific order in the Qur an hearing sight feeling and understanding and further claims that The information only recently obtained about the formation of the baby s organs inside the mother s womb is in complete agreement with that revealed in the Qur an 79 Claims of the Quran foretelling the roundness of the earth can be found at Windows of Islam com citing as evidence verse 39 5 He created the heavens and earth in truth He wraps the night over the day and wraps the day over the night and has subjected the sun and the moon each running its course for a specified term 88 The site Miracles of the Quran com lists THE INVENTION OF TELEVISION as one of the Mathematical Miracles of the Quran citing Surat an Naml Q 27 40 He who possessed knowledge of the Book said I will bring it to you before your glance returns to you And when he saw it standing firmly in his presence he said This is part of my Lord s favor to test me to see if I will give thanks or show ingratitude 89 Citations Edit a b Seyyed Hossein Nasr Islam and Modern Science The first true scientist January 4 2009 via news bbc co uk Haq Syed 2009 Science in Islam Oxford Dictionary of the Middle Ages ISSN 1703 7603 Retrieved 2014 10 22 Robert Briffault 1928 The Making of Humanity pp 190 202 G Allen amp Unwin Ltd a b Iqbal Muzaffar 2003 Islam and Science Aldershot UK Ashgate pp 140 51 ISBN 978 0754608004 Egyptian Muslim geologist Zaghloul El Naggar quoted in Science and Islam in Conflict Discover magazine 06 21 2007 quote Modern Europe s industrial culture did not originate in Europe but in the Islamic universities of Andalusia and of the East The principle of the experimental method was an offshoot of the Islamic concept and its explanation of the physical world its phenomena its forces and its secrets From Qutb Sayyad Milestones p 111 https archive org stream SayyidQutb Milestones 20Special 20Edition djvu txt a b c Hoodbhoy Perez 2006 Islam and Science Unhappy Bedfellows PDF Global Agenda 2 3 Retrieved 1 July 2015 Saliba George 1994 A History of Arabic Astronomy Planetary Theories During the Golden Age of Islam New York New York University Press ISBN 0 8147 8023 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2001 Freeing Astronomy from Philosophy An Aspect of Islamic Influence on Science Osiris 2nd Series vol 16 Science in Theistic Contexts Cognitive Dimensions pp 49 64 66 71 Islam by Alnoor Dhanani in Science and Religion 2002 p 88 a b Islamic Technology An Illustrated History by Ahmad Y al Hassan and Donald Hill Cambridge University Press 1986 p 282 Aydin Sayili The Observatory in Islam and its place in the General History of the Observatory Ankara 1960 pp 289 ff David A King 2003 Mathematics applied to aspects of religious ritual in Islam In I Grattan Guinness ed Companion Encyclopedia of the History and Philosophy of the Mathematical Sciences Vol 1 JHU Press p 80 ISBN 9780801873966 Mehdi Golshani Does science offer evidence of a transcendent reality and purpose June 2003 a b c Mehdi Golshani Can Science Dispense With Religion a b Chapter 7 Religion Science and Popular Culture Pew Research Center Religion and Public Life 30 April 2013 Retrieved 29 August 2020 Bilgili Alper December 2015 The British Journal for the History of Science V48 4 The British Journal for the History of Science Cambridge University Press 48 4 565 582 doi 10 1017 S0007087415000618 PMID 26337528 Why Muslims have only few Nobel Prizes Hurriyet 14 August 2013 Retrieved 21 October 2014 Dr Ahmed Zewail There is nothing fundamental in Islam against science 15 March 2017 Yasir Qadhi on video clip linked to Twitter by Abdullah Sameer Yasir Qadhi 25 August 2020 Abdullah Sameer Event occurs at 12 56 PM Retrieved 28 August 2020 Mackey The Iranians Persia Islam and the Soul of a Nation 1996 p 179 Gamini Amir Mohammad 23 August 2018 Imamate Shiite Ulama and the Modern Astronomy in Qajar Period Tarikh e Elm 16 1 65 93 doi 10 22059 jihs 2019 288941 371519 ISSN 1735 0573 Saudi cleric rejects that Earth revolves around the Sun War on Education Taliban Converting Secular Schools into Religious Seminaries Abdus Salam Ideals and Realities Selected Essays of Abdus Salam Philadelphia World Scientific 1987 p 109 Nafiu Baba Ahmed Secretary General of the Supreme Council for Sharia in Nigeria telling the BBC his opinion of polio and vaccination In northern Nigeria more than 50 of the children have never been vaccinated against polio and as of 2006 and more than half the world s polio victims live Nigeria s struggle to beat polio BBC News 31 March 20 Qutb Muhammad 2000 Islam the Misunderstood Religion Markazi Maktaba Islami pp 9 10 Retrieved 14 April 2020 a b Clayton Philip Nasr Seyyed 2006 The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Science Islam and Science Oxford New York Oxford University Press Huff Toby 2007 Science Religion and Society Islam and Science Armonk New York M E Sharpe Brooke John Ihsanoglu Ekmeleddin 2011 Science and Religion Around the World Modern Islam Oxford University press a b Brooke John Ihsanoglu Ekmeleddin 2011 Science and Religion Around the World Modern Islam Oxford New York Oxford University Press p 168 ISBN 978 0 19 532 820 2 Qur an and Science Encyclopedia of the Qur an a b Ali Shamsher Science and the Qur an PDF In Oliver Leaman ed The Qurʼan An Encyclopedia p 572 Retrieved 13 May 2018 Nidhal Guessoum 2010 10 30 Islam s Quantum Question Reconciling Muslim Tradition and Modern Science I B Tauris p 63 ISBN 978 1848855175 Nidhal Guessoum 2010 10 30 Islam s Quantum Question Reconciling Muslim Tradition and Modern Science I B Tauris p 75 ISBN 978 1848855175 Nidhal Guessoum 2010 10 30 Islam s Quantum Question Reconciling Muslim Tradition and Modern Science I B Tauris pp 132 134 ISBN 978 1848855175 Toshihiko Izutsu 1964 God and Man in the Koran Weltansckauung Tokyo A I Sabra Situating Arabic Science Locality versus Essence Nidhal Guessoum 2010 10 30 Islam s Quantum Question Reconciling Muslim Tradition and Modern Science I B Tauris p 174 ISBN 978 1848855175 Nidhal Guessoum 2010 10 30 Islam s Quantum Question Reconciling Muslim Tradition and Modern Science I B Tauris p 56 ISBN 978 1848855175 Nidhal Guessoum 2010 10 30 Islam s Quantum Question Reconciling Muslim Tradition and Modern Science I B Tauris pp 117 18 ISBN 978 1848855175 Nidhal Guessoum 2010 10 30 Islam s Quantum Question Reconciling Muslim Tradition and Modern Science I B Tauris pp 58 59 ISBN 978 1848855175 a b Guessoum Nidhal June 2008 The QUR AN SCIENCE AND THE RELATED CONTEMPORARY MUSLIM DISCOURSE Zygon 43 2 413 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9744 2008 00925 x ISSN 0591 2385 Retrieved 15 April 2019 a b Qutb Sayyid Milestones p 112 Stark Rodney The Victory of Reason Random House 2005 pp 20 21 Edis Taner 2007 An Illusion of Harmony Science And Religion in Islam Taner Edis 9781591024491 Amazon com Books ISBN 978 1591024491 a b c Reasonable Doubts Podcast CastRoller 2014 07 11 Archived from the original on 2013 05 23 Retrieved 2014 07 23 a b c d e f SARDAR ZIAUDDIN 21 August 2008 Weird science New Statesman Retrieved 11 April 2019 Cook The Koran 2000 p 29 a b Ansari Zafar Ishaq 2001 Scientific Exegesis of the Qur an التفسير العلمي للقرآن Journal of Qur anic Studies 3 1 92 doi 10 3366 jqs 2001 3 1 91 JSTOR 25728019 BLACK HOLES miracles of the quran Archived from the original on 13 July 2020 Retrieved 16 April 2019 a b Rizvi Atheist Muslim 2016 p 121 Saadat Sabiha January 2009 Human Embryology and the Holy Quran An Overview International Journal of Health Sciences 3 1 103 109 PMC 3068791 PMID 21475518 Moore Keith L 1983 The Developing Human Clinically Oriented Emryology with Islamic Additions Abul Qasim Publishing House Saudi Arabia Archived from the original on 29 January 2020 Retrieved 8 August 2020 Rizvi Atheist Muslim 2016 p 120 1 Joseph Needham revised with the assistance of Arthur Hughes A History of Embryology Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1959 p 82 a b c Moore Keith L A Scientist s Interpretation of References to Embryology in the Qur an Islam 101 Retrieved 11 August 2020 Rizvi Atheist Muslim 2016 p 121 2 a b c Rizvi Atheist Muslim 2016 p 124 THE SEQUENCE IN DEVELOPMENT OF HUMAN ORGANS Miracles of the Quran Retrieved 29 August 2020 a b c d e Rizvi Atheist Muslim 2016 p 122 von Staden H May Jun 1992 The discovery of the body human dissection and its cultural contexts in ancient Greece Yale J Biol Med 65 3 223 41 PMC 2589595 PMID 1285450 Surah As Sajdah 32 9 Surah As Sajdah 32 9 Retrieved 2020 08 30 Golden Daniel 23 January 2002 Western Scholars Play Key Role In Touting Science of the Quran Wall Street Journal Retrieved 27 January 2013 Cook The Koran 2000 p 30 see also Ruthven Malise 2002 A Fury For God London Granta p 126 a b c Beyond Bucailleism Science Scriptures and Faith Evidence for God s Unchanging World 21 July 2014 Retrieved 9 August 2020 Hoodbhoy Pervez 2005 When Science Teaching Becomes A Subversive Activity In Koertge Noretta ed Scientific Values and Civic Virtues Get access Arrow Oxford University Press pp 215 219 doi 10 1093 0195172256 003 0014 ISBN 0195172256 Scientific Miracles of the Quran 19 Roundness of the Earth Windows of Islam Event occurs at 0 55s Retrieved 9 August 2020 Mathematical miracles of the Quran Miracles of the Quran com Retrieved 10 August 2020 TALIB ALI 9 April 2018 Deconstructing the Scientific Miracles in the Quran Argument Transversing Tradition Retrieved 16 April 2019 Scientific exegesis of the Qur an a viable project Religious perspectives on the science of Human Origins Dr Mustansir Mir Ph D PDF External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Qur an on science Islam amp Science Science and the Islamic world The quest for rapprochement by Pervez Hoodbhoy Islamic Science by Ziauddin Sardar 2002 Can Science Dispense With Religion Archived 2016 05 29 at the Wayback Machine by Mehdi Golshani Islam science and Muslims by Seyyed Hossein Nasr Islam Muslims and modern technology by Seyyed Hossein Nasr Center for Islam and Science Explore Islamic achievements and contributions to science Is There Such A Thing As Islamic Science The Influence Of Islam On The World Of Science How Islam Won and Lost the Lead in Science Radicalism among Muslim professionals worries many Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Islamic attitudes towards science amp oldid 1154706945, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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