Man and woman word count in the Qur'an: Difference between revisions

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** The word count 25 for "man" is achieved by ignoring all dual and plural forms.
** The word count 25 for "man" is achieved by ignoring all dual and plural forms.
** All the words meaning "man" with the root (a-m-r) are ignored.
** All the words meaning "man" with the root (a-m-r) are ignored.
** This word count includes the controversial word from the verse 7:155, which is in the singular forms, but is clearly talking about seventy men (سَبْعِينَ رَجُلًا).
** This word count includes the controversial word (رَجُلًا) from the verse 7:155, which is in the singular forms, but is clearly talking about seventy men (سَبْعِينَ رَجُلًا). Wouldn't it be more logical to count it as plural?
** The number 24 doesn't signify anything and seems to be a product of coincidence. Wouldn't Allah make the number more interesting if he wanted to do a numerical miracle?
** Equality in word count does not imply equality under law. If we take the sentence "Men should have more rights than women.", the word count for both is equal, but clearly, it doesn't mean that the message of the text is that men and women are equal, or that they have the same social value.
* Miracle two: "The word man and woman are both mentioned 23 times, which is exactly the number of chromosomes."
** The word count for singular "man" can be 23 (if we don't count the controversial word in the verse 7:155, as mentioned earlier), but the word count for singular "woman" is 24.
** There are 23 pairs of human chromosomes in a cell. So there are 46 chromosomes.
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