If in the first revelation Muhammad peace be upon him was in isolation it doesn't mean that he received all the revelations in the same circumstances.
No - but I haven't got that far yet - perhaps you could assist by indicating where I can find information about the circumstances surrounding subsequent revelations?
...let me ask you if there were a couple of people of that time as witnesses, would have it made any difference regarding that point?
I'm not sure - I am looking into the similarities that have accompanied this type of sudden astonishing appearances of supernatural "beings" that have accompanied the opening up a new "revelation". I am thinking of Moses and the burning bush, Jesus in the wilderness, Muhammad, Baha'u'llah, Joseph Smith - all of them were completely alone - the Bab's "first revelation" seems to have been in a room with just two people including himself - they never seem to happen when more than one or two people are around to see it - and even when God's voice occurs when there is a crowd around, only one person - e.g. Moses at Sinai, Jesus when he was praying before his capture and crucifixion - hears a voice - everyone else just thinks it thundered. I'll be very happy to learn of exceptions and I am still in the early stages of investigating this aspect but it does seem that isolation is a key component.
For me an evaluation criteria would be for example studying Islam as a whole and see how it answers the questions we have and see if the Quraan does in fact qualify to be the Word of God.
Yes - I agree - but I decided to start at the beginning of the revelation and see what that tells us.
'
Begin at the
beginning, the King said, very gravely, and go on till you come to the end: then stop.' ~ Lewis Carroll
Can you explain more? I didn't really understand
This was about the Prophet being deeply disturbed at the revelation. This also seems to be a common thread in these first revelation experiences. Here are a few examples:
Muhammad was so disturbed that he contemplated suicide and when he went home to his wife he was shaking with fear. (see the Bukhari hadith quote in my previous post)
Jesus also seems to have been tempted to "throw himself down from the Temple" - although the language is not framing this as any suicidal tendency on his part, the fact is that at the beginning of his "ministry" he went through a very disturbing experience in the wilderness. (Matthew 4:1-11)
Joseph Smith was (by the various accounts) deeply troubled both before and during the experience of his first vision. He was, by his own 1942 account, in a moment of "great alarm", ready "to sink into despair and abandon myself to destruction" (
Times and Seasons, April 1, 1842)
Baha'u'llah was "engulfed in tribulations" when he received the vision of the Maiden (Summons of the Lord of Hosts,
Bahá'í Reference Library - The Summons of the Lord of Hosts, Pages 3-54)
Arjuna was "bewildered and astonished, his hair standing on end" when Krishna's "true form" was revealed to him (Bhagavad Gita 11:14)
So there are two points I am intrigued by in relation to this.
First, if the only witness to an event is, by their own account, deeply disturbed in the mind by what they have witnessed, how genuinely reliable is the account? Is the mental anguish they seem to have suffered a result of the supernatural sight they have seen - or might it be - at least to some extent the other way round? (Of course I don't know, I was not present for any of them and even if I have such an experience myself, I still could not be certain - could I?)
Second, even if we agree that the mental anguish was caused by (and not the cause of) the supernatural vision, the content of that vision and revelation has to be related within the limitations of the human faculties - IOW, what the beholder of the vision relates is not the vision itself, but his/her mental impression of that vision. And given that the majority of them also report severe mental anguish at the time, how much of the divinely revealed message is left intact in their retelling of it?