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The
Quran on Human Embryonic Development: |
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In
the Holy Quran, God speaks about the
stages of man’s embryonic development:
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( We
created man from an extract of clay. Then
We made him as a drop in a place of settlement,
firmly fixed. Then We made the drop into
an alaqah (leech, suspended thing, and blood
clot), then We made the alaqah into a mudghah
(chewed substance)... ) (Quran,
23:12-14)
Literally,
the Arabic word alaqah has three meanings: (1)
leech, (2) suspended thing, and (3) blood clot.
In
comparing a leech to an embryo in the alaqah
stage, we find similarity between the two2
as we can see in figure 1. Also, the
embryo at this stage obtains nourishment from
the blood of the mother, similar to the leech,
which feeds on the blood of others.
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Figure
1: Drawings illustrating the
similarities in appearance between a
leech and a human embryo at the alaqah
stage. (Leech drawing from Human
Development as Described in the Quran
and Sunnah, Moore and others, p. 37,
modified from Integrated Principles of
Zoology, Hickman and others.
Embryo drawing from The Developing
Human, Moore and Persaud, 5th ed., p.
73.)
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The
second meaning of the word alaqah is
“suspended thing.” This is what we can
see in figures 2 and 3, the suspension of the
embryo, during the alaqah stage, in the womb of
the mother.
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Figure
2: We can see in this diagram the
suspension of an embryo during the
alaqah stage in the womb (uterus) of
the mother. (The Developing Human,
Moore and Persaud, 5th ed., p. 66.)
(Click on the image to enlarge it.)
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Figure
3: In this photomicrograph, we can
see the suspension of an embryo
(marked B) during the alaqah stage
(about 15 days old) in the womb of the
mother. The actual size of the
embryo is about 0.6 mm. (The
Developing Human, Moore, 3rd ed., p.
66, from Histology, Leeson and Leeson.)
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The
third meaning of the word alaqah is “blood
clot.” We find that the external
appearance of the embryo and its sacs during the
alaqah stage is similar to that of a blood clot.
This is due to the presence of relatively large
amounts of blood present in the embryo during
this stage (see figure 4). Also during
this stage, the blood in the embryo does not
circulate until the end of the third week. Thus,
the embryo at this stage is like a clot of
blood.
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Figure
4: Diagram of the primitive
cardiovascular system in an embryo
during the alaqah stage. The
external appearance of the embryo and
its sacs is similar to that of a blood
clot, due to the presence of
relatively large amounts of blood
present in the embryo. (The Developing
Human, Moore, 5th ed., p. 65.)
(Click on the image to enlarge it.)
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So
the three meanings of the word alaqah correspond
accurately to the descriptions of the embryo at
the alaqah stage.
The
next stage mentioned in the verse is the mudghah
stage. The Arabic word mudghah means
“chewed substance.” If one were to
take a piece of gum and chew it in his or her
mouth and then compare it with an embryo at the
mudghah stage, we would conclude that the embryo
at the mudghah stage acquires the appearance of
a chewed substance. This is because of the
somites at the back of the embryo that
“somewhat resemble teethmarks in a chewed
substance.” (see figures 5 and 6).
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Figure
5: Photograph of an embryo at the
mudghah stage (28 days old). The
embryo at this stage acquires the
appearance of a chewed substance,
because the somites at the back of the
embryo somewhat resemble teeth marks
in a chewed substance. The
actual size of the embryo is 4 mm.
(The Developing Human, Moore and
Persaud, 5th ed., p. 82, from
Professor Hideo Nishimura, Kyoto
University, Kyoto, Japan.)
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Figure
6: When comparing the appearance
of an embryo at the mudghah stage with
a piece of gum that has been chewed,
we find similarity between the two.
A) Drawing of an embryo at the
mudghah stage. We can see here
the somites at the back of the embryo
that look like teeth marks. (The
Developing Human, Moore and Persaud,
5th ed., p. 79.)
B) Photograph of a piece of gum
that has been chewed.
(Click on the image to enlarge it.)
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How
could Muhammad
have possibly known all this 1400 years ago,
when scientists have only recently discovered
this using advanced equipment and powerful
microscopes which did not exist at that time?
Hamm and Leeuwenhoek were the first scientists
to observe human sperm cells (spermatozoa) using
an improved microscope in 1677 (more than 1000
years after Muhammad
).
They mistakenly thought that the sperm cell
contained a miniature preformed human being that
grew when it was deposited in the female genital
tract.
Professor
Emeritus Keith L. Moore is one of the world’s
most prominent scientists in the fields of
anatomy and embryology and is the author of the
book entitled The Developing Human, which has
been translated into eight languages. This
book is a scientific reference work and was
chosen by a special committee in the United
States as the best book authored by one person.
Dr. Keith Moore is Professor Emeritus of Anatomy
and Cell Biology at the University of Toronto,
Toronto, Canada. There, he was Associate
Dean of Basic Sciences at the Faculty of
Medicine and for 8 years was the Chairman of the
Department of Anatomy. In 1984, he
received the most distinguished award presented
in the field of anatomy in Canada, the J.C.B.
Grant Award from the Canadian Association of
Anatomists. He has directed many
international associations, such as the Canadian
and American Association of Anatomists and the
Council of the Union of Biological Sciences.
In
1981, during the Seventh Medical Conference in
Dammam, Saudi Arabia, Professor Moore said:
“It has been a great pleasure for me to help
clarify statements in the Quran about human
development. It is clear to me that these
statements must have come to Muhammad from God,
because almost all of this knowledge was not
discovered until many centuries later.
This proves to me that Muhammad must have been a
messenger of God.”
Consequently,
Professor Moore was asked the following
question: “Does this mean that you believe
that the Quran is the word of God?” He
replied: “I find no difficulty in accepting
this.”
During
one conference, Professor Moore stated:
“....Because the staging of human embryos is
complex, owing to the continuous process of
change during development, it is proposed that a
new system of classification could be developed
using the terms mentioned in the Quran and
Sunnah (what Muhammad
said, did, or approved of). The proposed
system is simple, comprehensive, and conforms
with present embryological knowledge. The
intensive studies of the Quran and hadeeth
(reliably transmitted reports by the Prophet
Muhammad’s
companions of what he said, did, or approved of)
in the last four years have revealed a system
for classifying human embryos that is amazing
since it was recorded in the seventh century
A.D. Although Aristotle, the founder of
the science of embryology, realized that chick
embryos developed in stages from his studies of
hen’s eggs in the fourth century B.C., he did
not give any details about these stages.
As far as it is known from the history of
embryology, little was known about the staging
and classification of human embryos until the
twentieth century. For this reason, the
descriptions of the human embryo in the Quran
cannot be based on scientific knowledge in the
seventh century. The only reasonable
conclusion is: these descriptions were revealed
to Muhammad from God. He could not have
known such details because he was an illiterate
man with absolutely no scientific training.”