RE: His throne is on water..stunning scientific theory that the Quran foretold 1400 y ago
April 2, 2016 at 11:23 pm
(March 25, 2016 at 10:32 pm)Jenny A Wrote: Then you have a logical problem. If the verse describing super fluid provides stunning proof of the divine inspiration of the Koran because the Koran predicted a scientific finding hundreds of years in advance, than it's describing a the failed hypothesis must be proof it's not being divinely inspired. The only way out of the dilemma is to admit the truth, which is that it doesn't really describe super fluid or at the very least doesn't describe it well enough to be evidence of anything.
No, it means that my interpretation was wrong, that's all.
Mohammed -the prophet- is dead. I can't ask him.
Though I can ask God, until we swim out to shore or drink from the void, nobody can be certain; Jenny.
Esquilax
Quote:So, just to clarify: you'll take any overlap between the Quran and modern knowledge as prophetic, but in those cases in which the Quran's statements are contradicted by later knowledge, there's no problem? That which agrees with the Quran is evidence, but we're just supposed to ignore the reverse? Why is that?
It's pretty long to call something that you can't see; an "overlap". Here: take the following question:
-God don't exist according to the scintific method..
thus; science disproved God !
Quote:There's nothing to answer: you've merely assumed a prediction without demonstrating that it is, based on a science article that we've already agreed is in no way confirmed as truthful. See, "these things can be contorted to match!" does not mean that the one predicted the other; it just means that poetic, figurative language can occasionally be twisted to overlap with reality. You'll actually have to demonstratethat A: the Quran is talking about this specific phenomenon, B: that the phenomenon is actually true, and C: this is a divinely inspired prediction, rather than a lucky guess. You're skipping a whole lot of steps before you can call this a prediction.
A needle in a pile of hay never rings a bell?
Between all of the failed theories in the history of man, Mohammed mentioned a theory that quantam physics elected it to be a true possibility ?
Interesting...
Redbard the Pink
I actually do.
The Jeiwish Torah, along with the Christian Bible, do have truth in them, but there is a lot of forgery that touched the books.
Check this verse from the Quran:
Sura 5
( 65 ) And if only the People of the Scripture had believed and feared Allah, We would have removed from them their misdeeds and admitted them to Gardens of Pleasure.
( 66 ) And if only they upheld [the law of] the Torah, the Gospel, and what has been revealed to them from their Lord, they would have consumed [provision] from above them and from beneath their feet. Among them are a moderate community, but many of them - evil is that which they do.
( 67 ) O Messenger, announce that which has been revealed to you from your Lord, and if you do not, then you have not conveyed His message. And Allah will protect you from the people. Indeed, Allah does not guide the disbelieving people.
( 68 ) Say, "O People of the Scripture, you are [standing] on nothing until you uphold [the law of] the Torah, the Gospel, and what has been revealed to you from your Lord." And that which has been revealed to you from your Lord will surely increase many of them in transgression and disbelief. So do not grieve over the disbelieving people.
So yeah, I do believe in some parts in both books..
robvalue
I actually hate this world rob, I agree.
But I know the fine line between fantasy and reality.
MrNoMorePropaganda
E=MC2, is a 4 character statement, MNMP, and written in a book.
Your name on your ID card is a reality, written on one line too.
Though, trying to catch any tiny fragment while drowning to survive and float, is just an evidence of desperation, not stupidity.
Your mother -as most Christians- is desperate, MNMP.
Jesus's story is not convincing. It's a heathen story. That's why just like heathens, Christians who believe in this theory cling to idols -crosses; statues of Marry-.
Quote: When I say Muhammad traveled between the seven heavens, what I mean is he traveled back and forth between Moses and Allah several times. This was Muhammad's night journey. Fifty prayers a day was too much so Moses wanted Allah to reduce that amount. And, with help of Muhammad, he succeed.
This is a Hadith, it is not a good source for information.
The Quran never mentions such thing.