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Scientific foreknowledge in sacred texts

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Scientific foreknowledge in sacred texts is the belief that certain sacred texts document an awareness of the natural world that was later discovered by technology and science. This includes the belief that the sacred text grants a higher awareness of the natural world, like those views held by some Orthodox Jews about the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh), by some Muslims regarding the Quran,[1] by certain Christians regarding the Christian Bible, and by certain Hindus regarding the Hindu scriptures. Skeptics have stated some of these attempts are examples of confirmation bias.

Scriptural literalism (specifically creationism and some forms of biblical archaeology) is a related ideology, but strictly the reverse process of aligning scientific observation with scriptural reading rather than aligning scriptural reading with scientific observation.

Bible[edit]

History and advocacy[edit]

William Harvey, the medical doctor who in the 17th century discovered the complete circulatory system, believed that this discovery was proof of Biblical foreknowledge. In his 1628 work De motu cordis, he supported this claim in On Generation by stating, "the life, therefore, resides in the blood (as we are informed in our sacred writing)," referring to Leviticus 17:11,14.[2]

David Macht, a pharmacologist and doctor of Hebrew Literature was a notable advocate of biblical health practices.[3][4] In Macht's 1953 study entitled An Experimental Pharmacological Appreciation of Leviticus XI and Deuteronomy XIV, he suggested that the Levitical clean animals were less toxic than the Levitical unclean animals:

Every word of the Hebrew Scriptures is well chosen and carries valuable knowledge and deep significance[3]

Harry Rimmer (1890–1952) was president of the "Research Science Bureau of Los Angeles" and published "Harmony of Science and Scripture" (1936) [5] which attributed much scientific foresight to the Bible, including the wave nature and spectrographic analysis of light, stating "either Job knew this, or supernatural wisdom is revealed here!"[6]

Quran[edit]

Muslims believe that the Quran is the literal word of God as revealed to the prophet Muhammad through the Archangel Gabriel.[7] Many Muslims believe that the Quran contains scientific information that would only be discovered by the world in modern times, centuries after their revelation, proving its divine origin. These are claimed to include scientific information pertaining to creation, astronomy, biology, and human reproduction.[1]

Cosmology and water for life[edit]

Have not those who disbelieve known that the heavens and the earth were of one piece, then We parted them and we made every living thing of water? Will they not then believe?

— Quran 21:30

Muslims claim that the first part of the verse is referring to the Big Bang and the second part of the verse refers to the fact that all living things are made of water since and water being a necessary component for life.[1][8][9] Thereafter, God formed the celestial bodies:[10]

Then He directed Himself to the heaven while it was smoke and said to it and to the earth, "Come [into being], willingly or by compulsion." They said, "We have come willingly."

— Quran 41:11 (Translated by Sahih International)

The notion of "separation of heaven and earth" is common in several other creation stories, some of which preceded the Quran,[11] such as[12] Egyptian mythology, Sumerian mythology, Greek mythology, Hindu mythology, Japanese mythology and Maori mythology.[13]

Expansion of the universe[edit]

The following verse is interpreted to refer to the expansion of the universe:[14]

And it is we who have built the universe with (Our creative) power; and verily, it is We who are steadily expanding it

— Quran 51:47 (Translated by Asad)

The Arabic word used to denote expansion is "لَمُوسِعُونَ" (lamūsiʿūna), which originates from the triliteral root "و س ع" (wāw sīn ʿayn) meaning "expand".[15]

Professor Alfred Kroner commented upon this verse, stating: "Thinking about many of these questions and thinking where Muhammad (pbuh) came from, he was after all a bedouin. 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."

Death of stars and end of universe[edit]

The following verses are interpreted as to refer to the collapse and death of stars including the Sun.[16]

Then when the stars become dim

When the sun is wrapped up [in darkness]. And when the stars fall, dispersing.

— Quran 81:1-2

Another verse is interpreted to refer to the Big Crunch:[16]

The Day that We roll up the heavens like a scroll rolled up for books. Even as we produced the first creation, so shall we produce a new one

— Quran 21:104

Atmosphere[edit]

Muslims also believe that the Quran 21:32 also refers to the protective properties of the atmosphere when it says, "We made the sky a preserved and protected roof yet still they turn away from Our Signs."[citation needed]

Orbits[edit]

Muslims also believe the Quran mentions the rotation and orbit of the Sun and the Moon when one of its verse states, "It is He who created the night and the day, and the sun, and the moon; each of them swim along in its rounded course."[Quran 21:33][17][better source needed]

Spherical Earth[edit]

Muslims have cited the following Quranic verse as miraculous, "After that (Allah) spread the Earth out" (dahaha: from the verb daha)" [Quran 79:30]. This verse has been interpreted by many Muslims as foreshadowing the concept that the figure of the Earth has an ellipsoid shape. Kamel Ben Salem's explanation for this is that "the ancient exegetes had earlier explained the Arabic verb (dahaha) by (has flattened it)" but that "the origin of this verb is found in the word (Ud-hiya)", which means "egg of ostrich", thus "the Earth would look like an ostrich's egg" which is accurate with scientific data that confirms that the Earth is slightly flat at the poles very similarly to the shape of the egg of an ostrich (turned sideways).[18] Rashad Khalifa alternatively translated the verse as: "he made the earth egg-shaped."[19]

The claim that the term daha refers to an ostrich egg is disputed. The premise that the term ud-hiya is the root of the word daha is inconsistent with the fact that most Arabic words have a triconsonantal root. This premise is also not supported by the classical lexicons of the Arabic language. Lane's Arabic-English Lexicon, for example, reports that the term daha is rooted in the triconsonantal root, dal-ha-waw. The term ud-hiya, on the other hand, is only a cognate of the word daha. It is also noted in the entry for the term daha in Lane's lexicon that the word is used to signify any surface that has been spread out or flattened. Lane's lexicon also provides an example of the usage of the word with the following statement, "also, said of an ostrich, he expanded, and made wide, with his foot, or leg, the place where he was about to deposit his eggs". In a consistent manner, udhiya is defined as "The place of the laying of eggs, and of the hatching thereof, of the ostrich in the sand'.[20]

Bucailleism[edit]

One well-known proponent of this argument is Maurice Bucaille, a French physician and author of the book The Bible, The Quran and Science, whose translator into Indonesian, Muhammad Rasjidi, former Professor for Islamic Studies at McGill University and former Indonesian Minister for Religious Affairs characterizes as "a half-baked mish-mash of pseudo-science and pseudo-exegesis".[21]

Bucaille wrote in his book that "he could not find a single error in the Qur'an", and that the Quran does "not contain a single statement which is assailable from a modern scientific point of view", which led him to believe that no human author in the 7th century could have written "facts" which "today are shown to be keeping with modern scientific knowledge".[1] Scholars have criticized Bucaille, in one case writing that he "bends the meaning of the Arabic words to suit his own ideas."[22] and others writing that he "proposes new meanings for Qur'anic words to bring them into accord with modern scientific knowledge, without requiring any standard philological justification."[23]

The search for Quranic references to and prophecies of modern scientific discoveries has become a popular trend in some Muslim societies;[24] as a manifestation of the popularity of the scientific miracles belief, the Muslim World League at Mecca formed a committee named Committee on the Scientific Miracles of the Qurʾān and the Sunna to investigate the relation between Quran and science, headed by Zaghloul El-Naggar.[1]

Criticism of consistency[edit]

Taner Edis, author of An Illusion of Harmony: Science and Religion in Islam, describes this point.[25] He argues that Muslims are more likely to view the Quran as the direct word of God, and so it must be reconciled with their growing respect for science and technology. Edis suggests that Muslims often have a vested interest in finding passages whose interpretation can be stretched to describe modern understanding. He warns that reading into books like this can be misleading, since the method can be used to support any number of contradictory facts. Russel Glasser (a Skeptic from The Atheist Experience TV show with Matt Dillahunty and Jeff Dee) likewise suggests that reading into the Quran like this amounts to cherry picking and risks simply confirming the biases of the investigator.

Hindu texts[edit]

Hindu tradition sometimes holds that all knowledge is pre-existing, to be "recovered" rather than "discovered", and can be found[clarification needed] in the Vedas and other ancient texts.[26]

Central to Indian thinking through the ages is a concept of knowledge which, though known to Platonism and Gnosticism, is foreign to the modern West. Whereas for us, to put it briefly, knowledge is something to be discovered, for the Indian knowledge is to be recovered. [...] One particular preconception, related to this concept of knowledge concerning the past and its relationship to the present, is probably of central significance: that at its very origin the absolute truth stands revealed; that this truth—which is simultaneously a way of life—has been lost, but not irrecoverably; that somehow it is still available through ancient life-lines that stretch back to the original revelation; and that the present can be restored only when this original past has been recovered.

The Sad-darsanas, meaning six orthodox philosophical system of Samkhya is noted to have included both religious and scientific context. It includes the theories about scientific subjects such as human evolution, physics, biological, among others.[27][28]

The Hindu revivalism movements that emerged in British India from the later 19th century developed an idea of a "Vedic science" found in the corpus of Brahmanas, Sutras and Shastras of Indian antiquity that supposedly anticipated certain results of modern science.

In 1900, Vivekananda said:

It seems to us, and to all who care to know, that the conclusions of modern science are the very conclusions the Vedanta reached ages ago; only, in modern science they are written in the language of matter.[29]

In one lecture he claimed:

Today we find wonderful discoveries of modern science coming upon us like bolts from the blue, opening our eyes to marvels we never dreamt of. But many of these are only re-discoveries of what had been found ages ago. It was only the other day that modern science discovered that what it calls heat, magnetism, electricity, and so forth, are all convertible into one unit force. But this has been done even in the Samhita.[30][31]

Some of the authors "seeking to modernize India by recovering the supposedly pristine Vedic-Hindu roots of Indian culture" revived these notions.[32]

By postulating interconnections and similarities across Nature, they [the Vedic thinkers] were able to use logic to reach extremely subtle conclusions about diverse aspects of reality.[33]

In response to criticism to the effect that this is essentially the religious worldview prevalent in early Europe succeeded by the scientific revolution of around the 18th century, Hindutva authors answer that the distinction of science and pseudoscience (or proto-science) is Eurocentric and inapplicable to Vedic science:

Western scientific thought draws on the traditions of Greek rationalist thinking according to which only what is within the purview of the five senses is taken cognisance of. Scientific methods follow some kind of closed scientific reasoning which insulates itself against facts that its methods cannot account for. How else can they [scientists] dare dismiss Jyotisha [astrology] which sees a level of existence beyond the purview of the five senses?" (Vasudev 2001)[34]

One author suggests that the contradiction between science and religion is impossible in India:

The idea of 'contradiction' is an imported one from the West in recent times by the Western-educated, since 'Modern Science' arbitrarily imagines that it only has the true knowledge and its methods are the only methods to gain knowledge, smacking of Semitic dogmatism in religion.[35][36]

According to the survey conducted by Pew Forum in the United States, 80% of Hindus agree with the theory of evolution.[37] In India, there were minimal references to Darwinism in the 1800s. Elements of Victorian England opposed the idea of Darwinism. Hindus already had present notion of common ancestry between humans and animals.(see Dashavatara) [38] British geneticist and evolutionary biologist, J B S Haldane, opined that they are a true sequential depiction of the great unfolding of evolution.[39] Various thinkers and authors like Monier Monier-Williams, Nabinchandra Sen, C. D. Deshmukh have associated the Dashavatara with evolution.

Physicist Roger Penrose theorized that the Big Bang might be one in a cycle of such events, suggesting that the universe has had multiple existences. This is common knowledge to one familiar with Vedic philosophy and cosmology, which very clearly indicates that the universe has had many births and deaths. The Vedic texts also claim that our universe is just one of many universes, a concept in modern science known as the multiverse. The description given is that our universe is one mustard seed in a bag full of a practically uncountable number of mustard seeds.

Claimed examples of the theory of relativity are often cited in the Puranic texts of India. The following passages from the Bhagavat Purana allegedly communicates the relativity of time:

One's life endures for only one hundred years, in terms of the times in the different planets... Eternal time is certainly the controller of different dimensions, from that of the atom up to the super-divisions of the duration of Brahmā's life; but, nevertheless, it is controlled by the Supreme. Time can control only those who are body conscious, even up to the Satyaloka or the other higher planets of the universe.

One story from the Puranas parallels the twins paradox. A yogi, upon exiting the earthly realm for the higher planetary realms, was informed by the inhabitants of these higher realms that millions of years had instantly passed on Earth in the mere moments since he had entered the higher realms. They also told him that all of his relatives and everyone he had ever known was deceased.[40]

Criticism[edit]

Critics of sacred text scientific foreknowledge point out that parts of various sacred text may simply contain observations regarding aspects of the technology of the times. Scientific and engineering knowledge have been documented in early cultures that claimed no divine guidance.[41]

Another criticism points out that the process of scientific foreknowledge only works in reverse; advocates of scientific foreknowledge cannot use sacred texts to predict future scientific breakthrough. Only once a new scientific discovery occurs do proponents of scientific foreknowledge scan the text to look for a verse that can be said to have predicted the latest discovery. Thus, since the process only works in reverse and the text cannot predict new discoveries, the text cannot be said to contain scientific foreknowledge.[citation needed]

Farrell Till asserts that biblical passages with supposed foresight can be interpreted in a number of ways, and that believers "see prophecies and their fulfillments in passages so obscurely written that no one can really determine what the writers originally intended in the statements."[42] Till, a former pastor and missionary of the Church of Christ, has had public debates with well-known Bible inerrantists such as Norman Geisler[43] and Kent Hovind.[44]

Richard Dawkins said that religious proponents "cherry-pick" passages that fit a certain framework and disregard or even dismiss the vague rest, saying that those are meant to be figuratively and loosely interpreted.[citation needed]

Anthropologist Mary Douglas wrote in her book "Purity and Danger" that the biblical cleanliness passages merely represent cultural concepts of symbolic boundary integrity.[45]

A number of classical Muslim scientists and commentators did not believe in the scientific exegesis of the Qur'an; Abū Rayhān al-Bīrūnī (973-1048) assigned to the Qur'an a separate and autonomous realm of its own and held that the Qur'an "does not interfere in the business of science nor does it infringe on the realm of science." These scholars argued for the possibility of multiple scientific explanations of the natural phenomena, and refused to subordinate the Qur'an to an ever-changing science.[1]

The Late Grand Imam of Al-Azhar, Mahmud Shaltut, believed that the scientific interpretation of the Qur'an, "contradicts the essence of inimitability" and is "incorrect"[46]

See also[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Ahmad Dallal, Science and the Qur'an, Encyclopedia of the Qur'an
  2. Ferngren, Larson, Amundsen (Editors). "Encyclopedia of the History of Science and Religion in the Western Tradition", Garland Publishing Inc,US (29 June 2000), p. 470. ISBN 0-8153-1656-9 Search this book on .
  3. 3.0 3.1 An Experimental Pharmacological Appreciation of Leviticus XI and Deuteronomy XIV Archived 2007-06-30 at Archive-It, Bulletin of the History of Medicine - David Macht
  4. Ask the Rabbi - 199
  5. Dr. Harry Rimmer
  6. Harmony of Science and Scripture, Harry Rimmer (1936)(p131-132)
  7. "The Qurʾan - Introduction - Oxford Islamic Studies Online". www.oxfordislamicstudies.com. Retrieved 2018-08-25.
  8. "Science in The Qur'an" Evidence That Islam is True Archived November 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  9. "Islam Creation Story". www2.nau.edu. Retrieved 2018-08-25. The Qur'an describes that Allah "made from water every living thing" (21:30). Another verse describes how "Allah has created every animal from water. Of them are some that creep on their bellies, some that walk on two legs, and some that walk on four. Allah creates what He wills, for truly Allah has power over all things" (24:45).
  10. "Islam Creation Story". www2.nau.edu. Retrieved 2018-08-25. The Qur'an says that "the heavens and the earth were joined together as one unit, before We clove them asunder" (21:30). Following this big explosion, Allah "turned to the sky, and it had been (as) smoke. He said to it and to the earth: 'Come together, willingly or unwillingly.' They said: 'We come (together) in willing obedience'" (41:11). Thus the elements and what was to become the planets and stars began to cool, come together, and form into shape, following the natural laws that Allah established in the universe.
    The Qur'an further states that Allah created the sun, the moon, and the planets, each with their own individual courses or orbits. "It is He Who created the night and the day, and the sun and the moon; all (the celestial bodies) swim along, each in its rounded course" (21:33).
  11. "Separation of Heaven and Earth". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 20 June 2015.
  12. Leeming, David Adams (2010). Creation Myths of the World: Parts I-II. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1598841742. Search this book on
  13. Grey, George; Bird, W W (1956). Polynesian mythology and ancient traditional history of the Māori as told by their priests and chiefs. Whitcombe and Tombs. OCLC 154569963. Search this book on
  14. "The Origin of the Quran" (PDF). Ohio University. Archived (PDF) from the original on 25 August 2018. Retrieved 25 August 2018.
  15. "The Quranic Arabic Corpus - Word by Word Grammar, Syntax and Morphology of the Holy Quran". corpus.quran.com. Retrieved 2018-08-25.
  16. 16.0 16.1 Elsaie, Adel. "USISLAM.ORG - Search The Truth about Allah, Islam, Christianity, Judaism". www.usislam.org. Retrieved 2018-08-25.
  17. "The Scientific Miracles of the Qur'an" Mission Islam
  18. Kamel Ben Salem (2007). "The Evolution of the Universe: A New Vision" (PDF). European Journal of Science and Theology. Retrieved 2010-03-19.
  19. Rashad Khalifa (2001). Quran: the final testament. p. 497. ISBN 1-881893-05-7. Search this book on
  20. Lane, Edward William; "An Arabic-English Lexicon"; Librairie Du Liban, 1968. Vol. 3, page 857 [1]
  21. Roff, William R. (1987). Islam and the political economy of meaning: comparative studies of Muslim discourse. Routledge. p. 279. ISBN 978-0-7099-4248-1. Search this book on
  22. Negus, Michael Robert (2005). Islam and Science. God, humanity, and the cosmos, Edition: 2, illustrated, revised, by Christopher Southgate, John Hedley Brooke, Celia Deane-Drummond. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 332. ISBN 978-0-567-03016-0. Search this book on
  23. Wood, Kurt A. (June 1993). "The Scientific Exegesis of The Qur'an: A Case Study in Relating Science and Scripture". PSCF. American Scientific Affiliation. 45: 90–95.
  24. "Muslim call to adopt Mecca time". BBC. 2008-04-21. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  25. https://www.amazon.com/Illusion-Harmony-Science-Religion-Islam/dp/1591024498?tag=everybodywikien-20
  26. van Buitenen, J. A. B (1966). "The Archaism of the Bhāgavata Purāṇa". In Milton Singer. Krishna: Myths, Rites, and Attitudes. pp. 23–40. Search this book on Reprinted in S.S Shashi, ed. (1996). Encyclopedia Indica. Anmol Publications PVT. LTD. pp. 28–45. ISBN 978-81-7041-859-7. Search this book on
  27. Klaus K. Klostermaier. A Survey of Hinduism: Third Edition. Suny. p. 473. Search this book on
  28. James W. Haag, Gregory R. Peterson, Michael L. Spezio. The Routledge Companion to Religion and Science. Routledge. p. 446.CS1 maint: Multiple names: authors list (link) Search this book on
  29. Aspects of the Vedanta. Havard University. G.A. Natesan and Company. p. 137. Search this book on
  30. Garrett G. Fagan. Archaeological Fantasies: How Pseudoarchaeology Misrepresents the Past and Misleads the Public. Psychology Press. p. 316. Search this book on
  31. lecture on The Vedanta delivered at Lahore on 12 November 1897; 1970, vol. 3, pp. 398f.
  32. by Nanda (2003:4)
  33. Feuerstein, Kak and Frawley in their 1995 In Search of the Cradle of Civilization (p. 197)
  34. Vasudev, Gayatri Devi. 2001. Vedic astrology and pseudo-scientific criticism, The Organiser (an English-language publication of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh), reprinted in The Astrological Magazine, cited after Sokal (2006:38)
  35. Mukhyananda, Swami. 1997. Vedanta in the Context of Modern Science: A (Comparative Study. Mumbai [Bombay]: Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan.
  36. Alan Sokal. Beyond the Hoax: Science, Philosophy and Culture. Oxford University Press. p. 397. Search this book on
  37. Religious Groups: Opinions of Evolution, Pew Forum (conducted in 2007, released in 2008)
  38. Gosling, David (June 2011). "Darwin and the Hindu Tradition: Does What Goes Around Come Around?". Zygon. 46 (2): 345–347–348–353. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9744.2010.01177.x. Retrieved 2014-01-24.
  39. "Cover Story: Haldane: Life Of A Prodigious Mind". Science Reporter. Council of Scientific & Industrial Research. 29: 46. 1992.
  40. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/gadadhara-pandit-dasa/hinduism-science-spirituality-intersect_b_967628.html
  41. Parkins, Michael D,(Preceptor, J. Szekrenyes), Pharmocological Practices of Ancient Egypt, Proceedings of the 10th Annual History of Medicine Days, Faculty of the University of Calgary, edited by WA Whitelaw Archived April 7, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  42. Farrell Till, The Skeptical Review 1990, What About Scientific Foreknowledge in the Bible? p2-5
  43. Farrell Till debate with Norman Geisler
  44. Bartelt, Karen (January–February 1994). "On the Till-Hovind Debate". The Skeptical Review online. Retrieved 2015-05-20.
  45. Diane M. Sharon, 1998, Parashah Commentary Archived 2006-09-02 at the Wayback Machine
  46. Al-Qaradawi, Yusuf. "Debate Between Contemporary Advocates & Opponents". Onislam.net. Retrieved 1 September 2013.

References[edit]

External links[edit]


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