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Quran code

The term Quran code (also known as Code 19) refers to the claim that the Quranic text contains a hidden mathematically complex code. Advocates think that the code represents a mathematical proof of the divine authorship of the Quran. Proponents of the Quran code claim that the code is based on statistical procedures, however, this claim has not been validated by any independent mathematical or scientific institute.

History Edit

In 1969, Rashad Khalifa, an Egyptian-American biochemist, began analyzing the separated letters of the Quran (also called Quranic initials or Muqattaʿat), and the Quran to examine certain sequences of numbers.[1] In 1973 he published the book Miracle of the Quran: Significance of the Mysterious Alphabets, in which he describes the Quranic initials through enumerations and distributions.[2]

In 1974, Khalifa claimed to have discovered a mathematical code hidden in the Quran, a code based around the number 19. He wrote the book The Computer Speaks: God's Message to the World, in which he thematizes this Quran code. He relies on Surah 74, verse 30 to prove the significance of the number: "Over it is nineteen,".[3][4]

Proponents of the code include United Submitters International (an association initiated by Rashad Khalifa) as well as some Quranists and traditional Muslims.[5]

Example Edit

Believers in Quran Code often use certain word counts, checksums and cross sums to legitimize the code.[5]

Edip Yüksel, a Turkish Quranistic author and colleague of Rashad Khalifa, makes the following claims in his book Nineteen: God's Signature in Nature and Scripture:[6]

  • The Bismillah (bismi ʾllāhi ʾr-raḥmāni ʾr-raḥīmi), the Quranic opening formula, which, with one exception, is at the beginning of every Surah of the Quran, consists of exactly 19 letters.
  • The first word of the Bismillah, Ism (name), without contraction, occurs 19 times in the Quran (19×1). [Also no plural forms, or those with pronoun endings]
  • The second word of the Bismillah, Allah (God), occurs 2698 times (19×142).
  • The third word of the Bismillah, Rahman (Gracious), occurs 57 times (19×3).
  • The fourth word of the Bismillah, Rahim (Merciful), occurs 114 times (19×6).
  • The multiplication factors of the words of the Basmala (1+142+3+6) give 152 (19×8).
  • The Quran consists of 114 chapters (19×6).
  • The total number of verses in the Quran (including all unnumbered Bismilahs) is 6346 (19×334). The cross sum of 6346 is 19.
  • The Bismillah appears 114 times (despite its absence in chapter 9, it appears twice in chapter 27); 114 is 19×6.
  • From the missing Bismillah in chapter 9 to the additional Bismillahin chapter 27, there are exactly 19 chapters.
  • The occurrence of the additional Bismillah is in Surah 27:30. Adding this chapter number and the verse number gives 57 (19×3).

The separated letters in the Quran Edit

The Quran consists of 114 Surahs, of which a total of 29 Surahs are provided with separated letters, Muqattaʿat or also called Quranic initials.[7] These are listed in the following table:

Number of the Surah Initial letter(s) Number of verses in that Surah
2 Alif–Lām–Mīm 286
3 Alif–Lām–Mīm 200
7 Alif–Lām–Mīm–Sād 206
10 Alif–Lām–Rāʾ 109
11 Alif–Lām–Rāʾ 123
12 Alif–Lām–Rāʾ 111
13 Alif–Lām–Mīm–Rāʾ 43
14 Alif–Lām–Rāʾ 52
15 Alif–Lām–Rāʾ 99
19 Kāf–Hāʾ–Yāʾ–ʿAin–Sād 99
20 Ṭāʾ–Hāʾ 98
26 Ṭāʾ–Sīn–Mīm 135
27 Ṭāʾ–Sīn 227
28 Ṭāʾ–Sīn–Mīm 88
29 Alif–Lām–Mīm 69
30 Alif–Lām–Mīm 60
31 Alif–Lām–Mīm 34
32 Alif–Lām–Mīm 30
36 Yāʾ–Sīn 83
38 Sād 88
40 Ḥāʾ–Mīm 85
41 Ḥāʾ–Mīm 54
42 Ḥāʾ–Mīm and ʿAin–Sīn–Qāf 53
43 Ḥāʾ–Mīm 89
44 Ḥāʾ–Mīm 54
45 Ḥāʾ–Mīm 37
46 Ḥāʾ–Mīm 35
50 Qāf 45
68 Nūn 52

Rashad Khalifa wrote in his book, The Computer Speaks: God's Message to the World, that the separated letters of the Quran, or Quranic Initials, held the key to the Quran Code. By analyzing the Quran's 29 initialized Surahs statistically, Khalifa claimed to reveal complex mathematical patterns centered around the number 19.[8][9]

Quranic Gematria Edit

Each Arabic letter can be assigned a specific numerical value, also called gematria:[10][11]

Alif ا 1
Yā' 10 ي Ṭā' 9 ط Ḥā' 8 ح Zāy 7 ز Wāw 6 و Hā' 5 ه Dāl 4 د Jīm 3 ج Bā' 2 ب
Qāf 100 ق Sād 90 ص Fā' 80 ف ʿAin 70 ع Sīn 60 س Nūn 50 ن Mīm 40 م Lām 30 ل Kāf 20 ك
Ghain 1000 غ Zā' 900 ظ Dād 800 ض Dhāl 700 ذ Chā' 600 خ Thā' 500 ث Tā' 400 ت Shīn 300 ش Rā' 200 ر

Abdullah Arik, a Quranistic author, uses this method in his book Beyond Probability: God's Message in Mathematics to analyze the Basmala gematrically. He gives various numerological arguments relying on these values to bolster his arguments.[12]

Reception in the Western world Edit

Khalifa's research received little attention in the Western world. In 1980, Martin Gardner mentioned Khalifa's work in Scientific American.[13] In 1997, after Khalifa's death, Gardner devoted a short article to the subject while a columnist for the Skeptical Inquirer.[14]

Criticism Edit

Common critiques of numerological claims also apply to the Quran Code. Critics often invoke the concept of Stochastic processes to explain how seemingly mystical patterns could appear in any large dataset. One such critic was Bilal Philips, who argued that Rashad Khalifa's "miracle 19" theory was a hoax based on falsified data, misinterpretations of the Quran's text, and grammar inconsistencies.[15]

Additionally, since early Quran manuscripts can contain orthographic differences in certain passages, the precise number of letters in those sections can be unclear.[16][17] For example, since the frequency of the letter Alif is subject to debate, there is not an universally agreed letter count in the Alif initialized Surahs. However, to prove his theory Khalifa chose those versions of the text that included letter frequencies divisible by 19.[18] Additionally, Khalifa claimed that the initial "Nūn" in Surah 68 should be spelled as to include an additional Nūn: "Nūn Wāw Nūn" in place of the orthodox spelling, "Nūn". This allowed Khalifa to claim that there are 133 (19×7) Nūns in Surah 68, instead of 132, which is not a multiple of 19. However, Khalifa's spelling does not appear in any Quranic manuscripts.[19] He also assumed that the correct spelling or reading of the word "basṭatan", which occurs in Surah 7, verse 69, contains the Arabic letter Sīn instead of the letter Sād, which is the conventional spelling.[20][21] He based this assertion on the Samarkand Codex, an 9th century Quranic manuscript which includes a spelling with the letter Sīn in place of Sād.[22]

Khalifa also claimed that two verses in the Quran, specifically Surah 9, verses 128 and 129, were humanly added, and should not be included. He supports this claim by the hadith Sahīh al-Buchārī 7425, according to which Zaid ibn Thābitm, tasked by Abu Bakr with compiling the Quran, found only one witness to attest to the validity of verses 9:128–129, Chuzaima al-Ansari.[23] Thus, Khalifa claimed that the Quran has only 6346 verses instead of the traditional count of 6348. The omission of these verses is integral to his theory; if these two verses are taken into account, there are 2699 occurrences of the word "Allah" and 115 occurrences of the word "Rahim", neither of which are multiples of 19.

Furthermore, the version of the Quran code is questioned, as it is only used for certain aspects or Quranic initials. Surahs that are not initiated are not fully examined in this context. Since early Quran manuscripts differ orthographically in certain passages, it makes it difficult to reconstruct an "urtext" – or in another expression a "primordial text" – for the Quran, which in turn is used for letter enumerations as well as gematria.[24][25]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Musa, A. (2008-05-12). Hadith As Scripture: Discussions on the Authority of Prophetic Traditions in Islam. Springer. p. 87. ISBN 978-0-230-61197-9.
  2. ^ Melton, J. Gordon; Group, Gale (2003). Encyclopedia of American Religions. Gale. p. 971. ISBN 978-0-7876-6384-1.
  3. ^ Bangert, Kurt (2016-04-25). Muhammad: Eine historisch-kritische Studie zur Entstehung des Islams und seines Propheten (in German). Springer-Verlag. pp. 114–116. ISBN 978-3-658-12956-9.
  4. ^ Momen, Moojan (1999). The Phenomenon of Religion: A Thematic Approach. Oneworld. p. 561. ISBN 978-1-85168-161-7.
  5. ^ a b SAALEH, ABDURRAHMAAN (2016). "Sectarian Islam in America: The Case of United Submitters International-The Foundation". Islamic Studies. 55 (3/4): 235–259. ISSN 0578-8072. JSTOR 44739746.
  6. ^ Yuksel, Edip (2011). Nineteen: God's Signature in Nature and Scripture. Brainbow Press. ISBN 978-0-9796715-9-3.
  7. ^ Khwaja, Jamal (2012-11-06). Living the Qur′an in Our Times. SAGE Publications India. p. 45. ISBN 978-81-321-1724-7.
  8. ^ Geisler, Norman L.; Saleeb, Abdul (2002). Answering Islam: The Crescent in Light of the Cross. Baker Books. pp. 107, 190. ISBN 978-0-8010-6430-2.
  9. ^ Khalifa, Rashad (1981). The Computer Speaks: God's Message to the World. Renaissance Productions International. pp. 104–197. ISBN 978-0-934894-38-8.
  10. ^ Bugday, Korkut (2014-12-05). An Introduction to Literary Ottoman. Routledge. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-1-134-00655-7.
  11. ^ Taylor, Isaac (1883). The Alphabet: An Account of the Origin and Development of Letters. Kegan Paul, Trench. pp. 314–316.
  12. ^ Arik, Abdullah (2012), Beyond Probability, United Submitters International, pp. 17–36, ISBN 9781890825027
  13. ^ Gardner, Martin (1980). "Mathematical games". Scientific American. 243 (3): 20–24. Bibcode:1980SciAm.243c..20G. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0980-20. ISSN 0036-8733.
  14. ^ Gardner, Martin (September–October 1997). "The numerology of Dr. Rashad Khalifa". Skeptical Inquirer, (Column "Notes of a Fringe Watcher"). 21 (5): 16–17, 58. ISSN 0194-6730.
  15. ^ Philips 1987, p. 64
  16. ^ Brubaker, Daniel Alan (2019-05-21). Corrections in Early Qurʾān Manuscripts: Twenty Examples. Think & Tell. ISBN 978-1-949123-03-6.
  17. ^ Brockopp, Jonathan E. (2017-08-10). Muhammad's Heirs: The Rise of Muslim Scholarly Communities, 622–950. Cambridge University Press. pp. 73, 76. ISBN 978-1-108-50906-0.
  18. ^ Sardar, Ziauddin (1989). Explorations in Islamic Science. Mansell. pp. 31, 35. ISBN 978-0-7201-2004-2.
  19. ^ Sardar, Ziauddin (1989). Explorations in Islamic Science. Mansell. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-7201-2004-2.
  20. ^ Sardar, Ziauddin (1989). Explorations in Islamic Science. Mansell. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-7201-2004-2.
  21. ^ Pickthall, Marmaduke William; Asad, Muhammad (1988). Islamic Culture. Islamic Culture Board. p. 39.
  22. ^ Corpus Coranicum (2021-06-03). "Manuscripta Coranica".
  23. ^ "97 Oneness, Uniqueness of Allah (Tawheed)". Sahīh al-Buchārī (in English and Arabic). listed at sunnah.com
  24. ^ Brubaker, Daniel Alan (2019-05-21). Corrections in Early Qurʾān Manuscripts: Twenty Examples. Think & Tell. ISBN 978-1-949123-03-6.
  25. ^ Brockopp, Jonathan E. (2017-08-10). Muhammad's Heirs: The Rise of Muslim Scholarly Communities, 622–950. Cambridge University Press. pp. 73, 76. ISBN 978-1-108-50906-0.

Bibliography Edit

  • Abdullah Arik (2012), Beyond Probability: God's Message in Mathematics, ICS Press
  • Ahmed Deedat (1979), Al-Qur'an: The Ultimate Miracle, Library of Islam
  • Edip Yüksel, Nineteen: God's Signature 1
  • Edip Yüksel (2012), Running Like Zebras, Brainbow Press, ISBN 978-0982586730
  • Rashad Khalifa (1981), The Computer Speaks: God's Message to the World, Renaissance Productions International, ISBN 9780934894388
  • Stanley, Matthew (2 August 2016), A Miracle on Trial: A Critical Analysis of the Mathematical Miracle of the Quran, ISBN 978-0-9979040-2-4
  • José Argüelles (2002), Time and the Technosphere: The Law of Time in Human Affairs, Inner Traditions/Bear, ISBN 9781591438731
  • Philips, Bilal (1987). The Qur'an's Numerical Miracle: Hoax and Heresy (Paperback). Al Furqan Advertising Agency. p. 64. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  • Yvonne Haddad-Yazbeck (1994), Muslim Communities in North America, State University of New York Press, pp. 34–36, ISBN 9780791420195

External links Edit

  • Various hypothetical mathematical considerations regarding the Quran code
  • Video presentation of certain aspects of Code 19
  • "171 examples of the mathematical System"

quran, code, term, also, known, code, refers, claim, that, quranic, text, contains, hidden, mathematically, complex, code, advocates, think, that, code, represents, mathematical, proof, divine, authorship, quran, proponents, claim, that, code, based, statistic. The term Quran code also known as Code 19 refers to the claim that the Quranic text contains a hidden mathematically complex code Advocates think that the code represents a mathematical proof of the divine authorship of the Quran Proponents of the Quran code claim that the code is based on statistical procedures however this claim has not been validated by any independent mathematical or scientific institute Contents 1 History 2 Example 3 The separated letters in the Quran 4 Quranic Gematria 5 Reception in the Western world 6 Criticism 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory EditIn 1969 Rashad Khalifa an Egyptian American biochemist began analyzing the separated letters of the Quran also called Quranic initials or Muqattaʿat and the Quran to examine certain sequences of numbers 1 In 1973 he published the book Miracle of the Quran Significance of the Mysterious Alphabets in which he describes the Quranic initials through enumerations and distributions 2 In 1974 Khalifa claimed to have discovered a mathematical code hidden in the Quran a code based around the number 19 He wrote the book The Computer Speaks God s Message to the World in which he thematizes this Quran code He relies on Surah 74 verse 30 to prove the significance of the number Over it is nineteen 3 4 Proponents of the code include United Submitters International an association initiated by Rashad Khalifa as well as some Quranists and traditional Muslims 5 Example EditBelievers in Quran Code often use certain word counts checksums and cross sums to legitimize the code 5 Edip Yuksel a Turkish Quranistic author and colleague of Rashad Khalifa makes the following claims in his book Nineteen God s Signature in Nature and Scripture 6 The Bismillah bismi ʾllahi ʾr raḥmani ʾr raḥimi the Quranic opening formula which with one exception is at the beginning of every Surah of the Quran consists of exactly 19 letters The first word of the Bismillah Ism name without contraction occurs 19 times in the Quran 19 1 Also no plural forms or those with pronoun endings The second word of the Bismillah Allah God occurs 2698 times 19 142 The third word of the Bismillah Rahman Gracious occurs 57 times 19 3 The fourth word of the Bismillah Rahim Merciful occurs 114 times 19 6 The multiplication factors of the words of the Basmala 1 142 3 6 give 152 19 8 The Quran consists of 114 chapters 19 6 The total number of verses in the Quran including all unnumbered Bismilahs is 6346 19 334 The cross sum of 6346 is 19 The Bismillah appears 114 times despite its absence in chapter 9 it appears twice in chapter 27 114 is 19 6 From the missing Bismillah in chapter 9 to the additional Bismillahin chapter 27 there are exactly 19 chapters The occurrence of the additional Bismillah is in Surah 27 30 Adding this chapter number and the verse number gives 57 19 3 The separated letters in the Quran EditThe Quran consists of 114 Surahs of which a total of 29 Surahs are provided with separated letters Muqattaʿat or also called Quranic initials 7 These are listed in the following table Number of the Surah Initial letter s Number of verses in that Surah2 Alif Lam Mim 2863 Alif Lam Mim 2007 Alif Lam Mim Sad 20610 Alif Lam Raʾ 10911 Alif Lam Raʾ 12312 Alif Lam Raʾ 11113 Alif Lam Mim Raʾ 4314 Alif Lam Raʾ 5215 Alif Lam Raʾ 9919 Kaf Haʾ Yaʾ ʿAin Sad 9920 Ṭaʾ Haʾ 9826 Ṭaʾ Sin Mim 13527 Ṭaʾ Sin 22728 Ṭaʾ Sin Mim 8829 Alif Lam Mim 6930 Alif Lam Mim 6031 Alif Lam Mim 3432 Alif Lam Mim 3036 Yaʾ Sin 8338 Sad 8840 Ḥaʾ Mim 8541 Ḥaʾ Mim 5442 Ḥaʾ Mim and ʿAin Sin Qaf 5343 Ḥaʾ Mim 8944 Ḥaʾ Mim 5445 Ḥaʾ Mim 3746 Ḥaʾ Mim 3550 Qaf 4568 Nun 52Rashad Khalifa wrote in his book The Computer Speaks God s Message to the World that the separated letters of the Quran or Quranic Initials held the key to the Quran Code By analyzing the Quran s 29 initialized Surahs statistically Khalifa claimed to reveal complex mathematical patterns centered around the number 19 8 9 Quranic Gematria EditEach Arabic letter can be assigned a specific numerical value also called gematria 10 11 Alif ا 1Ya 10 ي Ṭa 9 ط Ḥa 8 ح Zay 7 ز Waw 6 و Ha 5 ه Dal 4 د Jim 3 ج Ba 2 بQaf 100 ق Sad 90 ص Fa 80 ف ʿAin 70 ع Sin 60 س Nun 50 ن Mim 40 م Lam 30 ل Kaf 20 كGhain 1000 غ Za 900 ظ Dad 800 ض Dhal 700 ذ Cha 600 خ Tha 500 ث Ta 400 ت Shin 300 ش Ra 200 رAbdullah Arik a Quranistic author uses this method in his book Beyond Probability God s Message in Mathematics to analyze the Basmala gematrically He gives various numerological arguments relying on these values to bolster his arguments 12 Reception in the Western world EditKhalifa s research received little attention in the Western world In 1980 Martin Gardner mentioned Khalifa s work in Scientific American 13 In 1997 after Khalifa s death Gardner devoted a short article to the subject while a columnist for the Skeptical Inquirer 14 Criticism EditCommon critiques of numerological claims also apply to the Quran Code Critics often invoke the concept of Stochastic processes to explain how seemingly mystical patterns could appear in any large dataset One such critic was Bilal Philips who argued that Rashad Khalifa s miracle 19 theory was a hoax based on falsified data misinterpretations of the Quran s text and grammar inconsistencies 15 Additionally since early Quran manuscripts can contain orthographic differences in certain passages the precise number of letters in those sections can be unclear 16 17 For example since the frequency of the letter Alif is subject to debate there is not an universally agreed letter count in the Alif initialized Surahs However to prove his theory Khalifa chose those versions of the text that included letter frequencies divisible by 19 18 Additionally Khalifa claimed that the initial Nun in Surah 68 should be spelled as to include an additional Nun Nun Waw Nun in place of the orthodox spelling Nun This allowed Khalifa to claim that there are 133 19 7 Nuns in Surah 68 instead of 132 which is not a multiple of 19 However Khalifa s spelling does not appear in any Quranic manuscripts 19 He also assumed that the correct spelling or reading of the word basṭatan which occurs in Surah 7 verse 69 contains the Arabic letter Sin instead of the letter Sad which is the conventional spelling 20 21 He based this assertion on the Samarkand Codex an 9th century Quranic manuscript which includes a spelling with the letter Sin in place of Sad 22 Khalifa also claimed that two verses in the Quran specifically Surah 9 verses 128 and 129 were humanly added and should not be included He supports this claim by the hadith Sahih al Buchari 7425 according to which Zaid ibn Thabitm tasked by Abu Bakr with compiling the Quran found only one witness to attest to the validity of verses 9 128 129 Chuzaima al Ansari 23 Thus Khalifa claimed that the Quran has only 6346 verses instead of the traditional count of 6348 The omission of these verses is integral to his theory if these two verses are taken into account there are 2699 occurrences of the word Allah and 115 occurrences of the word Rahim neither of which are multiples of 19 Furthermore the version of the Quran code is questioned as it is only used for certain aspects or Quranic initials Surahs that are not initiated are not fully examined in this context Since early Quran manuscripts differ orthographically in certain passages it makes it difficult to reconstruct an urtext or in another expression a primordial text for the Quran which in turn is used for letter enumerations as well as gematria 24 25 See also EditBible codeReferences Edit Musa A 2008 05 12 Hadith As Scripture Discussions on the Authority of Prophetic Traditions in Islam Springer p 87 ISBN 978 0 230 61197 9 Melton J Gordon Group Gale 2003 Encyclopedia of American Religions Gale p 971 ISBN 978 0 7876 6384 1 Bangert Kurt 2016 04 25 Muhammad Eine historisch kritische Studie zur Entstehung des Islams und seines Propheten in German Springer Verlag pp 114 116 ISBN 978 3 658 12956 9 Momen Moojan 1999 The Phenomenon of Religion A Thematic Approach Oneworld p 561 ISBN 978 1 85168 161 7 a b SAALEH ABDURRAHMAAN 2016 Sectarian Islam in America The Case of United Submitters International The Foundation Islamic Studies 55 3 4 235 259 ISSN 0578 8072 JSTOR 44739746 Yuksel Edip 2011 Nineteen God s Signature in Nature and Scripture Brainbow Press ISBN 978 0 9796715 9 3 Khwaja Jamal 2012 11 06 Living the Qur an in Our Times SAGE Publications India p 45 ISBN 978 81 321 1724 7 Geisler Norman L Saleeb Abdul 2002 Answering Islam The Crescent in Light of the Cross Baker Books pp 107 190 ISBN 978 0 8010 6430 2 Khalifa Rashad 1981 The Computer Speaks God s Message to the World Renaissance Productions International pp 104 197 ISBN 978 0 934894 38 8 Bugday Korkut 2014 12 05 An Introduction to Literary Ottoman Routledge pp 1 2 ISBN 978 1 134 00655 7 Taylor Isaac 1883 The Alphabet An Account of the Origin and Development of Letters Kegan Paul Trench pp 314 316 Arik Abdullah 2012 Beyond Probability United Submitters International pp 17 36 ISBN 9781890825027 Gardner Martin 1980 Mathematical games Scientific American 243 3 20 24 Bibcode 1980SciAm 243c 20G doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0980 20 ISSN 0036 8733 Gardner Martin September October 1997 The numerology of Dr Rashad Khalifa Skeptical Inquirer Column Notes of a Fringe Watcher 21 5 16 17 58 ISSN 0194 6730 Philips 1987 p 64 Brubaker Daniel Alan 2019 05 21 Corrections in Early Qurʾan Manuscripts Twenty Examples Think amp Tell ISBN 978 1 949123 03 6 Brockopp Jonathan E 2017 08 10 Muhammad s Heirs The Rise of Muslim Scholarly Communities 622 950 Cambridge University Press pp 73 76 ISBN 978 1 108 50906 0 Sardar Ziauddin 1989 Explorations in Islamic Science Mansell pp 31 35 ISBN 978 0 7201 2004 2 Sardar Ziauddin 1989 Explorations in Islamic Science Mansell p 41 ISBN 978 0 7201 2004 2 Sardar Ziauddin 1989 Explorations in Islamic Science Mansell p 41 ISBN 978 0 7201 2004 2 Pickthall Marmaduke William Asad Muhammad 1988 Islamic Culture Islamic Culture Board p 39 Corpus Coranicum 2021 06 03 Manuscripta Coranica 97 Oneness Uniqueness of Allah Tawheed Sahih al Buchari in English and Arabic listed at sunnah com Brubaker Daniel Alan 2019 05 21 Corrections in Early Qurʾan Manuscripts Twenty Examples Think amp Tell ISBN 978 1 949123 03 6 Brockopp Jonathan E 2017 08 10 Muhammad s Heirs The Rise of Muslim Scholarly Communities 622 950 Cambridge University Press pp 73 76 ISBN 978 1 108 50906 0 Bibliography EditAbdullah Arik 2012 Beyond Probability God s Message in Mathematics ICS Press Ahmed Deedat 1979 Al Qur an The Ultimate Miracle Library of Islam Edip Yuksel Nineteen God s Signature 1 Edip Yuksel 2012 Running Like Zebras Brainbow Press ISBN 978 0982586730 Rashad Khalifa 1981 The Computer Speaks God s Message to the World Renaissance Productions International ISBN 9780934894388 Stanley Matthew 2 August 2016 A Miracle on Trial A Critical Analysis of the Mathematical Miracle of the Quran ISBN 978 0 9979040 2 4 Jose Arguelles 2002 Time and the Technosphere The Law of Time in Human Affairs Inner Traditions Bear ISBN 9781591438731 Philips Bilal 1987 The Qur an s Numerical Miracle Hoax and Heresy Paperback Al Furqan Advertising Agency p 64 Retrieved 24 December 2021 Yvonne Haddad Yazbeck 1994 Muslim Communities in North America State University of New York Press pp 34 36 ISBN 9780791420195External links EditVarious hypothetical mathematical considerations regarding the Quran code Video presentation of certain aspects of Code 19 171 examples of the mathematical System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quran code amp oldid 1177430147, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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