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I already presented that. Question is, how is his picture 'Koranic Cosmology'?

assuming that knowledge, intellect and actual truth from the Koran that has been known has decreased over time, the closer to the origin of the time of revelation you are the higher level of learning you have.

therefore you can conclude that in 1200 baghdad (golden era) people had infinite more knowledge that the entire muslim world of the 21st century today.

As one of the top muslims in the capital city of the muslim empire of his time, it would safe to say his knowledge is more koranic than the entire library of arabia today..
 
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assuming that knowledge, intellect and actual truth from the Koran that has been known has decreased over time, the closer to the origin of the time of revelation you are the higher level of learning you have.

Who says that? That assumption is absolutely incorrect. The Islamic scholastic tradition has painstakingly worked across centuries to preserve every Islamic teaching in its original form. Then add to that the fact that under the said Islamic scholastic traditions anything inferred from or extrapolated upon the Quran and/or Islamic teachings would have proper citation with it, i.e. an academic documentation of how and if the statement or argument is related in what way, shape and form with Islamic teachings. Add yet another fact to these that before Qazvini there is no mention of any such cosmological understanding, not during the time of the Prophet (S.A.W) nor the 600 years after. Lastly the fact that it explicitly stated that this was Qazvini's idea.

Under the same Islamic Scholastic traditions your reasoning above would be thrown out the window before even half a glance.

therefore you can conclude that in 1200 baghdad (golden era) people had infinite more knowledge that the entire muslim world of the 21st century today.

No you cannot. Islamic academic tradition does not work the same way as, say, Christianity. Please read through how Islamic knowledge has been passed down over the centuries.

As one of the top muslims in the capital city of the muslim empire of his time, it would safe to say his knowledge is more koranic than the entire library of arabia today..

Again, no, it is not at all. The man was a physician, astronomer, geographer and proto-science fiction writer. None of which grant him any scholarly authority over Islamic thought, nor did he ever claim to have any. Pretty sure there were prominent Muslim masons in Baghdad too. Should their techniques of stone laying be considered the Koranic way of laying stone?
 
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Who says that? That assumption is absolutely incorrect. The Islamic scholastic tradition has painstakingly worked across centuries to preserve every Islamic teaching in its original form. Then add to that the fact that under the said Islamic scholastic traditions anything inferred from or extrapolated upon the Quran and/or Islamic teachings would have proper citation with it, i.e. an academic documentation of how and if the statement or argument is related in what way, shape and form with Islamic teachings. Add yet another fact to these that before Qazvini there is no mention of any such cosmological understanding, not during the time of the Prophet (S.A.W) nor the 600 years after. Lastly the fact that it explicitly states that this was Qazvini's idea.

Under the same Islamic Scholastic traditions your reasoning above would be thrown out the window before even half a glance.



No you cannot. Islamic academic tradition does not work the same way as, say, Christianity. Please read through how Islamic knowledge has been passed down over the centuries.



Again, no, it is not at all. The man was a physician, astronomer, geographer and proto-science fiction writer. None of which grant him any scholarly authority over Islamic thought, nor did he ever claim to have any. Pretty sure there were prominent Muslim masons in Baghdad too. Should their techniques of stone laying be considered the Koranic way of laying stone?

We disagree. I am of the view that humans have lost all knowledge of worth and all human civilisation is at its lowest point in time (looking at billions of years timeline) human worth is next to zero
 
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We disagree. I am of the view that humans have lost all knowledge of worth and all human civilisation is at its lowest point in time (looking at billions of years timeline) human worth is next to zero

Might just be. However, I am not arguing that. I am challenging your assertions specifically in case of Islamic teachings. Which, as I mentioned above, have centuries of academic documentation to go with them.
 
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What does the technology that we posses have to do with the possibility of extraterrestrials visiting Earth?

If aliens existed we would have detected them by now, as signals in space and radiation is constantly monitored.

Humans will likely get first contact once they develop the technology and explore, as the nearest habitable planets are quite far away
 
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