Quotes from Scientists About Islam

Extracts from the video This is the Truth by Sheikh Abdul-Majeed A. al-Zindani, Director, Project of Scientific Miracles in the Qur'an and Hadith, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
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Professor Emeritus,
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Toronto.
Distinguished embryologist and the author of several medical textbooks,
including Clinically Oriented Anatomy (3rd Edition) and The Developing
Human (5th Edition, with T.V.N. Persaud).
"For the past three years, I have worked with the Embryology Committee of King cAbdulazīz University in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, helping them to interpret the many statements in the Qur'ān and Sunnah referring to human reproduction and prenatal development. At first I was astonished by the accuracy of the statements that were recorded in the 7th century AD, before the science of embryology was established. Although I was aware of the glorious history of Muslim scientists in the 10th century AD, and some of their contributions to Medicine, I knew nothing about the religious facts and beliefs contained in the Qur'ān and Sunnah."
"It has been a great pleasure for me to help clarify statements in the Qur'ān about human development. It is clear to me that these statements must have come to Muhammad from God, or Allah, because most of this knowledge was not discovered until many centuries later. This proves to me that Muhammad must have been a messenger of God, or Allah." |
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Professor
and Chairman of the Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, and
Director of the Daniel Baugh Institute, Thomas Jefferson University,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Author of over 200 publications. Former President of the Teratology Society among other accomplishments. Professor Johnson began to take an interest in the scientific signs in the Qur'ān at the 7th Saudi Medical Conference (1982), when a special committee was formed to investigate scientific signs in the Qur'ān and Hadīth. At first, Professor Johnson refused to accept the existence of such verses in the Qur'ān and Hadīth. But after a dicussuion with Sheikh Zindanī he took an interest and concentrated his research on the internal as well as external development of the fetus. "...in summary, the
Qur'ān describes not only the development of external form, but
emphasises also the internal stages, the stages inside the embryo, of
its creation and development, emphasising major events recognised by
contemporary science."
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Professor of Anatomy, and
Professor of Pediatrics and Child Health, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. Author and editor of over 20 books, and has published over 181 scientific papers. Co-author of The Developing Human (5th Edition, with Keith L. Moore). He received the J.C.B. Grant Award in 1991. Professor Peraud presented several research papers.
"It seems to me that Muhammad was
a very ordinary man, he couldn't read, didn't know how to write, in fact
he was an illiterate... |
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Professor
and Chairman of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Baylor
College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA.
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Professor and Co-ordinator of Medical Embryology in the Department of Cell Biology, School of Medicine, Georgetown University, Washington DC, USA.
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Professor of the Department of Geosciences, University of Mainz, Germany.
"Thinking where Muhammad came
from... I think it is almost impossible that he could have known about
things like the common origin of the universe, because scientists have
only found out within the last few years with very complicated and
advanced technological methods that this is the case." |
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Director of the Tokyo Observatory, Tokyo, Japan. Sheikh cAbdul-Majeed A. Zindanī presented a number of Qur'ānic verses describing the beginnings of the universe and of the heavens, and the relationship of the earth to the heavens. He expressed his astonishment, saying that the Qur'ān describes the universe as seen from the highest observation point, everything is distinct and clear. "I say, I am very much impressed by finding true astronomical facts in Qur'ān, and for us modern astronomers have been studying very small piece of the universe. We have concentrated our efforts for understanding of very small part. Because by using telescopes, we can see only very few parts of the sky without thinking about the whole universe. So by reading Qur'ān and by answering to the questions, I think I can find my future way for investigation of the universe." |
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"That is a difficult question which I have been thinking about since our discussion here. I am impressed at how remarkably some of the ancient writings seem to correspond to modern and recent Astronomy. I am not a sufficient scholar of human history to project myself completely and reliably into the circumstances that 1400 years ago would have prevailed. Certainly, I would like to leave it at that, that what we have seen is remarkable, it may or may not admit of scientific explanation, there may well have to be something beyond what we understand as ordinary human experience to account for the writings that we have seen." | |
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Professor of Marine Geology teaching at King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
"It is difficult to imagine that this type of knowledge was existing at that time, around 1400 years back. May be some of the things they have simple idea about, but to describe those things in great detail is very difficult. So this is definitely not simple human knowledge. A normal human being cannot explain this phenomenon in that much detail. So, I thought the information must have come from a supernatural source." |
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Professor of Marine Geology, Japan.
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Chairman of the
Department of Anatomy and is the former Dean of the faculty of Medicine,
University of Chiang Mai, Chiang Mai, Thailand.
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Born in
1920, former chief of the Surgical Clinic, University of Paris, has for
a long time deeply interested in the correspondences between the
teachings of the Holy Scriptures and modern secular knowledge.
He is the author of a best-seller, "The
Bible, The Qur'ān and Science" (1976). His classical studies of the
scriptural languages, including Arabic, in association with his
knowledge of hieroglyphics, have allowed him to hold a multidisciplinary
inquiry, in which his personal contribution as a medical doctor has
produced conclusive arguments. His work, "Mummies of the Pharaohs -
Modern Medical Investigations" (St. Martins Press, 1990), won a
History Prize from the Académie Franēaise and another prize from the
French National Academy of Medicine.
After a study which lasted ten years,
Dr. Maurice Bucaille addressed the French Academy of Medicine in 1976
concerning the existence in the Qur'ān of certain statements concerning
physiology and reproduction. His reason for doing that was that : |
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Bibliography
[1] al-Zindani, Abdul-Majeed A, This is the Truth (video tape). Scientific Signs of the Qur'an and Sunnah containing interviews with various scientists. Available in Arabic, English, French, Urdu and Turkish. A full English transcript of this video with illustrations is also available: Al-Rehaili, Abdullah M., This is the Truth, Muslim World League, Makkah al-Mukarrammah, 1995. Also available on the web at: This Is The Truth!
[2] Moore, Keith L. and al-Zindani, Abdul-Majeed A., The Developing Human with Islamic Additions, Third Edition, W.B. Saunders Company, Philadelphia, 1982, with Dar Al-Qiblah for Islamic Literature, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, 1983, page viiic. Limited Edition.
[3] Moore, Keith L., al-Zindani, Abdul-Majeed A., Ahmed Mustafa A, The Qur'an and Modern Science - Correlation Studies, Islamic Academy for Scientific Research, Makkah, Saudi Arabia. Reprinted by World Assembly of Muslim Youth (WAMY), USA., 1990, ISBN 0-9627236-0-6. Collection of papers presented at a symposium sponsored by the Muslim Students Association, University of Illinois, May 1990.
[4] Moore, Keith L.; Johnson, E. Marshall; Persaud, T.V.N.; Goeringer, Gerald C.; Zindani, Abdul-Majeed A.; and Ahmed Mustafa A, Human Development as Described in the Qur'an and Sunnah, Commission on Scientific Signs of the Qur'an and Sunnah, Muslim World League, Makkah Al-Mukarramah, Saudi Arabia, 1992, ISBN 0-9627236-1-4. Collection of papers that were originally presented in the First International Conference on Scientific Signs of the Qur'an and Sunnah, held in Islamabad, Pakistan, 1987, and after some modifications and development, presented in their present form in Dakar, Sengal in July 1991.