Main Page: Difference between revisions

From WikiIslam, the online resource on Islam
Jump to navigation Jump to search
[unchecked revision][unchecked revision]
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 104: Line 104:
*[[Muhammad's Miracles]]
*[[Muhammad's Miracles]]
*[[Muhammad's Just In Time Revelations]]
*[[Muhammad's Just In Time Revelations]]
*[[Satanic Verses]]
*[[Satanic Verses (Gharaniq Incident)]]
*[[Circumstances Surrounding Muhammad's Death]]
*[[Circumstances Surrounding Muhammad's Death]]
*[[Abdullah]]
*[[Abdullah]]
Line 126: Line 126:
                   <div class="divTableRow">
                   <div class="divTableRow">
                     <div class="divTableCell">
                     <div class="divTableCell">
*[[Jizyah]]
*[[Jizyah (Tax)]]
*[[Lesser vs Greater Jihad]]
*[[Lesser vs Greater Jihad]]
*[[Invitations to Islam Prior to Violence]]
*[[Invitations to Islam Prior to Violence]]

Revision as of 04:19, 11 November 2020


Welcome to WikiIslam,
“To provide accurate and accessible information from traditional and critical perspectives on the beliefs, practices, and development of Islam”
977 articles hosted on WikiIslam
Please note: Many of the very problematic issues and views within Islam and its history are often rejected or subject to widely varying knowledge and opinions (if any) by Muslim cultures and many people who identify as Muslim today
Qur'an
Islam and Science
Prophet Muhammad
Islam and Non-Muslims
Companions of the Prophet
Islam and Women
Islamic Law
Origins of Islam


The Quran and Mountains

MarshakFaultBlock.png

The Quran has a particular conception of the nature of mountains, their formation, and the geological role they play. In recent times, many Islamic scholars have argued that this conception is both scientifically sound and an instance of miraculous scientific foreknowledge on the part of the Quran.

Critics argue that these verses contain multiple mistakes from a scientific viewpoint. They describe the creation of mountains as one stage in the creation of the Earth. One verse describes mountains as pegs, while other verses state that they were cast into the Earth in some sense to stabilise it. This is commonly interpreted today as a reference to earthquakes, though multiple lines of evidence including hadith and pre-Islamic poetry indicate rather that the Quran here means that mountains prevent the Earth as a whole from shifting. (read more)