joelr
Well-Known Member
You can bring all the Greek you want. so YOU say the "Greeks" knew about all this, IT WAS NEVER SHOWN TO THE WORLD? It should be blasted all over the world from this as you claim.
No way. I simply cannot believe how wrong this is and that I actually have to explain this in writing? I have to explain the actual historicity of Islam because apologists have confused you with ridiculous arguments.
Greek science was written down by Rome but they felt it was not as important -
"The apogee of Greek science in the works of Archimedes and Euclid coincided with the rise of Roman power in the Mediterranean. The Romans were deeply impressed by Greek art, literature, philosophy, and science, and after their conquest of Greece many Greek intellectuals served as household slaves tutoring noble Roman children. The Romans were a practical people, however, and, while they contemplated the Greek intellectual achievement with awe, they also could not help but ask what good it had done the Greeks. Roman common sense was what kept Rome great; science and philosophy were either ignored or relegated to rather low status. "
The spirit of independent research was quite foreign to the Roman mind, so scientific innovation ground to a halt. The scientific legacy of Greece was condensed and corrupted into Roman encyclopaedias whose major function was entertainment rather than enlightenment. "
Christianity emerged and was also not impressed
:
"So the early Christians approached the worldly wisdom of their time with ambivalence: on the one hand, the rhetoric and the arguments of ancient philosophy were snares and delusions that might mislead the simple and the unwary; "
The Greek knowledge was preserved because Christian thinkers felt it had some value:
"Ancient learning, then, did not die with the fall of Rome and the occupation of the Western Empire by tribes of Germanic barbarians. To be sure, the lamp of learning burned very feebly, but it did not go out. Monks in monasteries faithfully copied out classics of ancient thought and early Christianity and preserved them for posterity. Monasteries continued to teach the elements of ancient learning, for little beyond the elementary survived in the Latin West. In the East the Byzantine Empire remained strong, and there the ancient traditions continued. There was little original work done in the millennium following the fall of Rome, but the ancient texts were preserved along with knowledge of the ancient Greek language. This was to be a precious reservoir of learning for the Latin West in later centuries."
Then we get to Islam. :
"The torch of ancient learning passed first to one of the invading groups that helped bring down the Eastern Empire. In the 7th century the Arabs, inspired by their new religion, burst out of the Arabian peninsula and laid the foundations of an Islamic empire that eventually rivalled that of ancient Rome. To the Arabs, ancient science was a precious treasure. The Qurʿān, the sacred book of Islam, particularly praised medicine as an art close to God. Astronomy and astrology were believed to be one way of glimpsing what God willed for humankind. Contact with Hindu mathematics and the requirements of astronomy stimulated the study of numbers and of geometry. The writings of the Hellenes were, therefore, eagerly sought and translated, and thus much of the science of antiquity passed into Islamic culture. Greek medicine, Greek astronomy and astrology, and Greek mathematics, together with the great philosophical works of Plato and, particularly, Aristotle, were assimilated in Islam by the end of the 9th century. Nor did the Arabs stop with assimilation. They criticized and they innovated. Islamic astronomy and astrology were aided by the construction of great astronomical observatories that provided accurate observations against which the Ptolemaic predictions could be checked. Numbers fascinated Islamic thinkers, and this fascination served as the motivation for the creation of algebra (from Arabic al-jabr) and the study of algebraic functions."
Islamic philosophers were not like Roman and Christian thinkers, they valued science. God did not give them secret messages, they were smart people who valued science and actually read the information.
Now besides that, your original point was that maybe this information didn't make it to Islam. Well now we know it did. But what's truly bizarre is that you accept that Greek thinkers can come up with this information using their own intellect yet still want to insist a God had to tell Islamic theologians? As if they could not possibly also come up with this science?
How come they didn't accept it? They could translate parts of the Bible, yet leave this out? Galen dissected animals, mainly dogs and he had NO KNOWLEDGE about the development of the Fetus INSIDE. He had to dissect and find out things involving the human but did not know how it was done. Everyone knew they punished the women for not bringing the sex of the baby...the kings did this for many decades.
Advanced embryology in the Quran has been debunked. Even if they did come up with it, what's so weird about humans. doing science and learning? Was Galen getting messages from Zeus? (hint: no one is getting any help from deities)
"In fact the account of the different stages in embryology as described by the Qur'an is virtually identical to that taught by Galen, writing in Turkey around 150 A.D, who taught that the embryo developed in four stages.[3] The first is an unformed white conceptus like semen, the second a bloody vascularised foetus, the third when other features are mapped out but not fully formed, and the fourth when all the organs are well formed and joints freely moveable. Either the author of the Qur'an knew this when writing the Qur'an,
Much of the embryology in the Qur'an and Hadith can be traced directly back to the ancient Greeks. For example there is a hadith in which Muhammad says 'If a male's fluid prevails upon the female's substance, the child will be a male by Allah's decree, and when the substance of the female prevails upon the substance contributed by the male, a female child is formed.'[4] Muslims claim that this refers to X and Y chromosomes which determine the sex of an infant. A far more likely suggestion is that this is simply a reflection of the incorrect belief of Hippocrates that both men and women produce both male and female sperm, and the resulting sex of the child is determined by which sex's sperm overwhelms the other in strength or quantity.[5]
It is one thing for the ancient Greeks to be teaching all this, but how do we know that the material was familiar to the Arabs of Muhammad's day? Ali at-Tabari's 'Paradise of Wisdom',[6] written in about 850 AD, says that he was following the rules set down by Hippocrates and Aristotle when he wrote his treatise. The intelligentsia of Muhammad's time were very familiar both with Greek and Indian medicine. Indeed, a major work on the history of embryology which is cited in the references in The Developing Human devotes over 60 pages to ancient Greek embryology and less than one page to Arabic embryology, concluding that the Qur'an is merely 'a seventh-century echo of Aristotle'.[7] It is hardly surprising that the Islamic version of Prof Moore's book is not listed on the British Library catalogue and cannot be found in medical school libraries either in Britain or the US.
In conclusion then, there is not a single statement contained in the Qur'an relating to modern embryology that is not either scientifically incorrect or which was well known through direct observation by the ancient Greek physicians many centuries before the Qur'an was written. Far from proving the alleged divine credentials of the Qur'an, its embryological statements actually provide evidence for its human origins.
Embryology and the Qur'an
Women were treated like dogs and not even worth the effort in the Greek world. The Greeks also believed in Zues and other imaginary gods in their belief.
Women didn't have many rights. They still did good science and philosophy, what is your point? Yes the Greeks had myths. The Quran believes in Moses, Noah and another God of fiction - Yahweh. So what?
Embryology in the Quran IS IN DEPTH. No other book of God has that. You cannot compare.
Except we see that it isn't. Even if it was, don't you think humans can do science? Have you heard about humans doing science? Are you saying the writers of the Quran were completely incapable of doing the same science all other humans do?
Every mention of embryology is covered here and can be compared to Greek science. That is a fact. I would think at this point you would want to tell your associates that there is no need for false apologetics to promote your religion. The fact that they are easily debunked looks really bad.Mohammad could not have known these facts about Human Development in the 7th century, over 1400 years ago, because most of them were not discovered until the 20th century.
Really? Another video? I debunked an entire video, not one example was truthful, I had to sit through 1 dozen lies and now you have another video? Are you saying THIS TIME he's not lying? Do you think it's maybe time for YOU to do the work? Which part of embryology mentioned in the Quran was not found in Greek science?
I don't think there is anything. But if there was, why couldn't the ISLAMIC SCIENTISTS have done some science? Why is that so much of a stretch to imagine they did some experiments and then when the Quran was written they put it in there?