Seems like I don't find mystics half as different from everyday people as some of you do!
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Of course. It's also possible for him to be mistaken in his interpretations.Is it possible for a man who is a natural mystic, not to be truthful?
It is because when you take one particular book and use it as the standard for all other books, no other book will measure up.Exactly, not sure why people are having difficulty understanding this?
The OP has not had an adversarial stance so why be insulting about it? You could have said everything you did without the insulting demeanor.
What, exactly, is your point? What you've posted is completely irrelevant.
He didn't. The "texts" are transcriptions, by third parties, from memory.So How did Shakespeare write his plays. he too was
We all know that Muhammad (PBUH) was an unlettered man. If he wasn't actually a prophet, then where did the Qur'an come from?
It would be better if you have actually read the Qur'an in Arabic beforehand as it cannot be fully appreciated any other way.
I think we can. I don't think we understand, but we can occasionally "pull back the veil."
But your statement confuses me. If we can't "see" God, then how can we have Prophets in the first place?
I think we're saying the same thing in different theological terminology.
IOW, if I were a theist, I'd agree with you. As a panentheist, I think you've
got the mechanics wrong, but that's not terribly important.
And all of those ideas informed his interpretation.
OK. We agree that Muhammad experienced theophany. That's my answer to your question.
Let the debate ensue! :angel2:
This is my first actual post on this forum, so pardon me for being very...straightforward.
Well, unlettered doesn't mean linguistically vacant. Muhammad knew a language and dictated the Qur'an, which is pretty easy to come up with when you spend all of two seconds thinking about it.
It's not even that great of a book, so it's not that crazy to think that some
guy in the desert came up with it over the course of part of his life.
Eh...I'm not learning a third language that may not have even been the original language the Qur'an was written until I see some reason to bother.
As for your later points on the eloquence of the Arabic version of the text...so? There is a distinct lack of texts written in Arabic when compared to many, many other languages. Few books are even translated into Arabic.
Even so, poetic or other aesthetic achievement does nothing to support divine inspiration.
Plato in the original Greek is supposed to be one of the most sublime things ever written, but it doesn't stop Plato from being wrong on so many points.
If Joseph Smith wasn't a prophet, where did the book or Mormon come from?
If L. Ron Hubbard wasn't a prophet, where did Dianetics come from?
Didn't Muhammed grow up around and was a merchant for most of his life? Coupled with his fascination for the mystical/spiritual in his free time it's not hard to see how a very socially charming personality could come up with what he did, unlettered or not
The "but they are just an uncultured peasant!" thing is used a lot in cases where people say they are supposed psychics and mediums. 100% they are always found out to be frauds by the way and use the fact that people think they are dumb to con "smarter" people. Not that I am comparing these cases to Muhammed necessarily but it's what immediately comes to mind.
As others have pointed out "unlettered" does not equal linguistically challenged. One also has to bear in mind that the Qur'an "came down" in fits and starts over a 23 year period, so it's not like this very clever man did not have a long time to get his story straight and perfect his oration style.
Heck, the current version isn't in the same order as it was originally transmitted. (It is ordered from the longest to the shortest verses.) If you read the Qur'an in its transmission order it loses a lot of its poetic appeal and is more akin to rambling. (Try it, you'll see what I mean.)
Unlike others on RF, I simply do not consider Muhammad to be a prophet or a mystic of any particular note. I will grant that he was a natural politician and military genius. The man certainly learned how to "work" a crowd.
In my opinion, this is perhaps the most negative aspect to the myth of the Qur'an's divine origin. One idea is that because of the revered status of the Qur'an, that exalted perspective could possibly stop far better writers from writing their tales in Arabic, because if they were able to outdo the Qur'an in eloquence and beauty they would be guilty of the greatest treason.
That probably wouldn't go down to well with the true believers. In this regard, the literary supremacy of the Qur'an is its own self fulfilling myth, as no Arabic writer in their right mind would even try to do it one better.
This is a great way to hobble subsequent creativity.
I'm curious as to how you determined this. How did you determine which style type can be produced by mere humans and which have to be divine in origin? What do you mean by "unlettered"? Based on the replies that I have read so far, I'm asuming that you mean that he was illiterate. But I think the other replies that I have read answer your question the exact way I would if this was a conversation between us two. I don't know that Mohammed was illiterate. Even so, I don't think that he was
linguistically impaired. He may have been illiterate but my impression was that he was something of a polymath and a gifted speaker.
I have read of this argument before and I get the impression that Muslims who use this argument are very much bothered that people are not Muslims like them. The way this argument gets used gives me the impression that Muslims who are fond of this argument and use it as a weapon against unbelievers tend to think that unbelievers owe them an explanation and if an unbeliever has none, well, then that unbeliever has a moral obligation to convert.
I want to make something clear: I will never convert to any of the Abrahamic religions or "faiths". I don't owe anyone an explanation. If someone is disappointed with my reponse, well, tough.
The matter of the Quran itself is separate, but relevant: can such a text be considered as inspired by God in the first place? Further, can it stand up to the claims that it is the authentic, immutable and final revelation from the one and only God?
It is clear to me that no, it can't possibly even be seen as evidence of the existence of God. It is far too tied to its time and culture of origin, far too harsh to Atheism, and most of all, it has been misused far too often to lend it credibility in that respect. It has considerable artistic merit, but falls way short of being the ultimate book of the ultimate religion that many people want to see it as being.
Why not?I still don't see how that could have given him the ability to write the Qur'an to be honest.
Why not?
While I don't speak Arabic, it's my understanding that the language is inherently poetic, and the culture of the time had a rich poetic tradition.Even if it did inform his interpretation of God, it couldn't have given him the ability to transcribe his experience on paper in such an eloquent way.
Well, what would you want it to be tied to? the axis of the earth? perhaps NY of the year 2011?It is far too tied to its time and culture of origin
Again. it is a religious text.far too harsh to Atheism
Well, you know what the book says. 'there is no compulsion in religion'.and most of all, it has been misused far too often to lend it credibility in that respect. It has considerable artistic merit, but falls way short of being the ultimate book of the ultimate religion that many people want to see it as being.
Being a merchant/fascination with the mystical/spiritual and/or being socially charming certainly doesn't equal linguistically skilled.
The difference though is that he has been long known to be unlettered, even before experiencing his first theophany.
While I don't speak Arabic, it's my understanding that the language is inherently poetic, and the culture of the time had a rich poetic tradition.
Well, that doesn't surprise me, given the source of inspiration.Well, yes it is but even the best poets at the time were dazzled and unable to compete with the poetic and writing qualities of the Qur'an.
Well, yes it is but even the best poets at the time were dazzled and unable to compete with the poetic and writing qualities of the Qur'an.
Well, that doesn't surprise me, given the source of inspiration.
The poetry of his recitations could be explained by having an interest in spirituality all his life, you don't have to be able to read to be read spiritual texts to by others and then be influenced by them. He might not have ever put pen to paper but he could talk, and if he was very charming and social as being a merchant all his life implied, his talking could be as skilled as a good novel.
You're misunderstanding me. The supposed medium and psychics who are unlettered and uncultured are "genuine" too in that sense, but you don't need to be educated to know how to con people. In fact it is actually an asset in most cases because people believe you couldn't possibly be smart enough to dupe them.
Do you really think any poet who did match the Quran would be recorded and remembered? You can't judge the subjectivity of such a thing from the perspective of belief, which is why the Korans "challenge" is ridiculous. Anyone who would attempt to outdo it would be biased and anyone judging it would be biased too.
So? They lacked the culture of poetry and Muhammad's native genius.Other people as well claim to have had the same theophanies or similar ones to Muhammad's, but none of them came up with something akin to the Qur'an in terms of poetic quality.