A Mathematical Approach
All of the examples so far given
concerning the various angles from which one can approach the Quran
have undoubtedly been subjective in nature; however, there does exist
another angle, among others, which is objective and whose basis is
mathematical.
It is surprising how authentic the Quran becomes when one assembles what might be referred to as a list of good
guesses. Mathematically, it can be explained using guessing and prediction
examples. For instance, if a person has two choices (i.e., one is right, and one is
wrong), and he closes his eyes and makes a choice, then half of the time (i.e., onetime out of two) he will be right. Basically, he has a one in two chance, for he could
pick the wrong choice, or he could pick the right choice.
Now if the same person has two situations like that (i.e., he could be right or
wrong about situation number one, and he could be right or wrong about situation
number two), and he closes his eyes and guesses, then he will only be right one-fourth of the time (i.e., one time out of four).
He now has a one in four chance because now there are three ways for him to be wrong and only one way
for him to be right. In simple terms, he could make the wrong choice in situation number one
and then make the wrong choice in situation number two; or he could make the
wrong choice in situation number one and then make the right choice in situation
number two; or he could make the right choice in situation number one and then
make the wrong choice in situation number two; or he could make the right choice
in situation number one and then make the right choice in situation number two.
Of course, the (only instance in which he could be totally right is the last
scenario where he could guess correctly in both situations. The odds of his
guessing completely correctly have become greater because the number of
situations for him to guess in have increased; and the mathematical equation
representing such a scenario is ½ x ½ (i.e., one time out of two for the first situation
multiplied by one time out of two for the second situation).
Continuing on with the example, if the same person now has three situations in
which to make blind guesses, then he will only be right one-eighth of the time (i.e.,
one time out of eight or ½ x ½ x ½ ). Again, the odds of choosing the correct choice
in all three situations have decreased his chances of being completely correct to
only one time in eight. It must be understood that as the number of situations
increase, the chances of being right decrease, for the two phenomena are inversely
proportional.
Now applying this example to the situations in the Quran, if one draws up a list
of all of the subjects about which the Quran has made correct statements, it becomes
very clear that it is highly unlikely that they were all just correct blind guesses. Indeed, the subjects discussed in the Quran are numerous, and thus the odds of
someone just making lucky guesses about all of them become practically nil. If
there are a million ways for the Quran to be wrong, yet each time it is right, then it is
unlikely that someone was guessing.
The following three examples of subjects about which the Quran has made
correct statements collectively illustrate how the Quran continues to beat the odds.
The Female Bee
In the 16th chapter (Surah an-Nahl 16:68-69) the Quran mentions that the
female bee leaves its home to gather food. Now, a person might guess on that,
saying, “The bee that you see flying around - it could be male, or it could be female.
I think I will guess female.” Certainly, he has a one in two chance of being right. So
it happens that the Quran is right. But it also happens that that was not what most
people believed at the time when the Quran was revealed. Can you tell the
difference between a male and a female bee? Well, it takes a specialist to do that, but
it has been discovered that the male bee never leaves his home to gather food. However, in Shakespeare’s play, Henry the Fourth, some of the characters discuss
bees and mention that the bees are soldiers and have a king. That is what people
thought in Shakespeare’s time - that the bees that one sees flying around are male
bees and that they go home and answer to a king. However, that is not true at all. The fact is that they are females, and they answer to a queen. Yet it took modern
scientific investigations in the last 300 years to discover that this is the case.
So, back to the list of good guesses, concerning the topic of bees, the Quran had
a 50/50 chance of being right, and the odds were one in two.
The Sun
In addition to the subject of bees, the Quran also discusses the sun and the
manner in which it travels through space. Again, a person can guess on that subject. When the sun moves through space, there are two options: it can travel just as as
tone would travel if one threw it, or it can move of its own accord. The Quran states
the latter - that it moves as a result of its own motion (Surah al-Anbiya 21:33). To
do such, the Quran uses a form of the word sabaha to describe the sun’s movement
through space. In order to properly provide the reader with a comprehensive
understanding of the implications of this Arabic verb, the following example is
given.
If a man is in water and the verb sabaha is applied in reference to his movement,
it can be understood that he is swimming, moving of his own accord and not as a
result of a direct force applied to him. Thus when this verb is used in reference to
the sun’s movement through space, it in no way implies that the sun is flying
uncontrollably through space as a result of being
hurled or the like. It simply means that the sun is turning and rotating as it travels. Now, this is what the Quran affirms,
but was it an easy thing to discover?
Can any common man tell that the sun is
turning? Only in modern times was the equipment made available to project the
image of the sun onto a tabletop so that one could look at it without being blinded. And through this process it was discovered that not only are there spots on the sun
but 4 that these spots move once every 25 days. This movement is referred to as the
rotation of the sun around its axis and conclusively proves that, as the Quran stated 1400 years ago, the sun does, indeed, turn as it travels through space.
And returning once again to the subject of good guesses, the odds of guessing
correctly about both subjects - the sex of bees and the movement of the sun - are one
in four!
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