Printer Friendly
The Free Library
5,074,106 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Taskhir, fine-tuning, intelligent design and the scientific appreciation of nature.


The concept of taskhir in the Qur'an refers to the easily observable fact that nature, in both its cosmic and biospheric dimensions, has been constrained by Allah to render service and benefit unto humankind. In modern cosmological terms, taskhir refers to the high degree of fine-tuning of the design-parameters of the universe for the support of life on earth, and ultimately, conscious and intelligent human life. Through taskhir, the perfection of Allah's wisdom (hikmah) is manifested in the phenomenal world, and His Grace (fadl) realized for humanity. The service rendered to mankind by the Divine subjugation Subjugation
Cushan-rishathaim Aram

king to whom God sold Israelites. [O.T.: Judges 3:8]

Gibeonites

consigned to servitude in retribution for trickery. [O.T.: Joshua 9:22–27]

Ham Noah

curses him and progeny to servitude. [O.
 of nature is ultimately not only physical and material in nature, but also intellectual, moral and metaphysical in its significance: that humanity would be brought to recognize, acknowledge and glorify their Creator, and thus to realize fully the enduring transcendent meaning of their fleeting, phenomenal life on earth. Axiologically, this means that Islamic science
''This article is about the history of science in the Islamic civilisation between the 8th and 15th centuries.
For information on science in the context of Islam, see The relation between Islam and science.
 is less utilitarian than intellecto-moral, and hence, the "outer" utilitarian dimension of science is to be subsumed under, and guided by, its "inner" intellecto-moral dimension, and not vice-versa.

Keywords: taskhir, intelligent design, fine-tuning, specified complexity Specified complexity is an argument proposed by William Dembski and used by him in his works promoting intelligent design. According to Dembski, the concept is intended to formalize a property that singles out patterns that are both specified and complex. , irreducible complexity
This article covers irreducible complexity as used by those who argue for intelligent design. For information on irreducible complexity as used in Systems Theory, see Irreducible complexity (Emergence).
, al-ni'am al-afaqiyyah, al-ni'am al-anfusiyyah, goals of Islamic Science.

Introduction: The Concept of Taskhir in the Qur'an

Taskhir is the verbal noun verbal noun
n.
A noun that is derived from a verb and usually preserves the verb's syntactic features, such as transitivity or the capability of taking nominal or verbal complements.
 of "sakhkhara," which means to bring something into service, to compel something to be of service to something else, to make something subservient sub·ser·vi·ent  
adj.
1. Subordinate in capacity or function.

2. Obsequious; servile.

3. Useful as a means or an instrument; serving to promote an end.
. In the classical dictionary Mukhtar Mukhtar, meaning "chosen" in Arabic, refers to the head of a village or mahalle (urban district) in many Arab countries. The name refers to the fact that mukhtars are usually selected by some consensual or participatory method, often involving an election.  al-Sihah, "sakhkharahu taskhiran" is clarified as "kallafahu 'amalan bi la ujrah", "to charge someone with a task without remuneration"; or "kallafahu ma la yuriduhu wa qaharahu", "to charge someone/something with a task not of his/its own accord and to compel him/it to do it." Thus "anything that submits to you and obeys you, or is ready for you, has most certainly been made subservient to you." (1)

In the Qur'an, taskhir refers to Allah compelling the heavens and the earth to be of service to humankind that they may consciously appreciate His manifold blessings upon them and thereby give thanks to Him. Among the many verses of the Qur'an concerning taskhir, the following five may be noted: (2)

1. Allah is He who has created the heavens and the earth, and caused water to descend from the sky, thereby producing fruits as food for you, and made the ships to be of service unto you, that they may run upon the seas at His command, and has made of service unto you the rivers, and made the sun and the moon constant in their courses to be of service unto you, and has made of service unto you the night and the day.

2. See you not how Allah has made subservient unto you whatsoever is in the skies and whatsoever is in the earth and has loaded you with His favors both without and within? Yet of mankind is he who disputes concerning Allah without knowledge or guidance or a scripture giving light.

3. Allah is He who has made the sea to be of service unto you that the ships may run thereon by His command, and that you may seek of His bounty; and that haply hap·ly  
adv.
By chance or accident.

Adv. 1. haply - by accident; "betrayed by a word haply overheard"
by luck, by chance
 you may be thankful; and has made of service unto you whatsoever is in the heavens and whatsoever is in the earth; it is all from Him. Lo! herein are portents for people who reflect.

4. Have you not seen how Allah has made all that is in the earth subservient unto you? And the ships run upon the sea by His command, and He holds back the heaven from falling on the earth unless by His leave. Lo! Allah is, for mankind, full of pity, merciful mer·ci·ful  
adj.
Full of mercy; compassionate: sought merciful treatment for the captives. See Synonyms at humane.



mer
.

5. Allah is He Who has raised up the heavens without visible supports, then mounted the Throne, and compelled the sun and the moon to be of service, each runs unto an appointed term; He ordered the course; He detailed the relevations, that haply you may be certain of the meeting with your Lord.

Taskhir in al-Fakhr al-Razi's Mafatih al-Ghayb

Fakhr al-Din al-Razi Fakhr al-Din al-Razi

(born 1149, Rayy, Iran—died 1209, near Herat, Khwarezm) Islamic scholar and theologian. He traveled widely before settling in Herat (in modern Afghanistan).
 (544-606/1149-1209) was not only an accomplished mutakallim and mufassir (3) but also an eminent philosopher and scientist. As we shall see, al-Razi's holistically rational explication ex·pli·cate  
tr.v. ex·pli·cat·ed, ex·pli·cat·ing, ex·pli·cates
To make clear the meaning of; explain. See Synonyms at explain.



[Latin explic
 of taskhir is quite sophisticated, rigorous and elegant. He shows a philosophico-scientific approach to the understanding of Qur'anic verses that can have conceptual and empirical import for re-elucidating the Islamic worldview world·view  
n. In both senses also called Weltanschauung.
1. The overall perspective from which one sees and interprets the world.

2. A collection of beliefs about life and the universe held by an individual or a group.
, or ru'yat al-Islam li'l-wujud (4) in contemporary intellectual discourse. As expounded by Professor al-Attas, this worldview is "the Islamic vision of reality and truth, which is a metaphysical survey of the visible as well as the invisible worlds including the perspective of life as a whole"; or "the vision of the totality of being and existence projected by Islam". (5)

In his Mafatih al-Ghayb, al-Razi gives a metaphysical explanation of verse 2 of surah surah
 or sura

Any chapter of the Qur'an. According to Muslim belief, each of the 114 surahs, which vary in length from several lines (known as ayahs) to several pages, encompasses one or more divine revelations of Muhammad.
 al-Ra'd, in which the sun and the moon are mentioned as being "compelled to be of service" by Allah (wa sakhkhara al-shams w'l-qamar). (6) He says that the celestial bodies (al-ajram al-falakiyyah), including the sun, the moon and the stars, are like all other material bodies (al-ajsam) in their receptivity to motion (al-harakah) and rest (al-sukun). The fact that the celestial bodies are in perpetual motion Perpetual motion

The expression perpetual motion, or perpetuum mobile, arose historically in connection with the quest for a mechanism which, once set in motion, would continue to do useful work without an external source of energy or which would produce more
 when it is equally possible, from the metaphysical point of view, for them to be in perpetual rest, indicates that motion has been determined for them, and not rest. Metaphysically, the two physical states, motion and rest, are equally possible of being actualized ac·tu·al·ize  
v. ac·tu·al·ized, ac·tu·al·iz·ing, ac·tu·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To realize in action or make real: "More flexible life patterns could . . .
 in the external world, and so, there is no intrinsic reason why one physical state (motion) should have preponderance over the other (rest). The physical, actual fact that the celestial bodies are in a state of motion and not rest, even though both modes of being are equally possible for them metaphysically, is clear indication that their motion is not of their own accord, but of the determination (takhsis) of a transcendent determiner (mukhassis) who has determined for them the state of motion instead of rest.

Furthermore, each of the celestial bodies can be seen to move in a certain manner distinct from those of other celestial bodies, for each has its own particular mode of motion. Each mode of motion has its peculiar slowness (al-but') and quickness (al-sur'ah) relative to the motion of other celestial bodies. The fact that each body has its specific mode of motion out of all possible modes also indicates the existence of a transcendent determiner who has determined for each and every body its particular mode of motion according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 which it is actually moving in the physical world. Al-Razi goes on to point out the fact that the movements of these bodies have been specifically measured out (muqaddar bi maqadir makhsusah) such that their orbits in the celestial sphere celestial sphere, imaginary sphere of infinite radius with the earth at its center. It is used for describing the positions and motions of stars and other objects.  follow their respective precise spacio-temporal regularities, and this cannot happen except by perfect ordinance (tadbir kamil) and profound wisdom (hikmah balighah).

The meaning of this verse as elaborated by al-Razi can be summarized thus: The celestial bodies are compelled by Allah to move in the way they actually do: they do not move of their own accord. They are compelled to render service to humankind by drawing their attention to their wondrous motions which are indicative of transcendent design and ordinance, thereby bringing them to recognize the existence and greatness of the Creator and to be certain of their meeting with Him. This means that when human beings contemplate the movement of the heavens, they are drawn to affirm the existence of a most wise Creator, and to believe in Him and the Last Day; for He Who has power over the heavens must most certainly have power over the Day of Judgment. (7)

Al-Razi not only explains the service of the heavens and the earth to humankind in terms of its metaphysical dimension as outlined above, but also in terms of its physical significance. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, humankind derives both spiritual and material benefits from the way in which creation has been made subservient to them. This understanding of the physical significance of cosmic subserviency to humanity is also apparent in his explanation of verses 32-33 of surah Ibrahim and verse 20 of surah Luqman. (8) The same understanding of taskhir is also obvious in al-Razi's explication of verses 12-14 of surah al-Nahl:
   And He has constrained the night and the day, and the sun and the
   moon to be of service unto you, and the stars are made subservient
   by His command. Lo! herein indeed are portents for people who have
   sense; and whatsoever He has created for you in the earth of diverse
   hues; lo! therein is indeed a portent for people who take heed; and
   He it is who has constrained the sea to be of service that you eat
   fresh meat from thence, and bring forth from thence ornaments which
   you wear. And you see the ships ploughing it that you may seek of
   His bounty, and that haply you may give thanks. (9)


Al-Razi says that the night and the day, the sun and the moon, and all the inanimate inanimate /in·an·i·mate/ (-an´im-it)
1. without life.

2. lacking in animation.


in·an·i·mate
adj.
 things (al-jamadat) are governed by Allah in a manner that serves the welfare (masalih) of human beings, even though it is not inherently necessary for them to do so, nor is it of their own volition vo·li·tion
n.
1. The act or an instance of making a conscious choice or decision.

2. A conscious choice or decision.

3. The power or faculty of choosing; the will.
. Thus, these totally passive inanimate things are compelled to act only in the particular possible manner specified for each of them, and not in any other possible manner. It is this constraint, or specification and fixation of the parameters of actual physical movement and behavior manifesting an aspect of divine governance that is referred to by the term taskhir. As evident in this verse, the temporal physical benefits of cosmic and terrestrial subservience sub·ser·vi·ent  
adj.
1. Subordinate in capacity or function.

2. Obsequious; servile.

3. Useful as a means or an instrument; serving to promote an end.
 to humanity are for drawing them to attain to the deeper everlasting spiritual benefits of showing gratitude to the Creator. (10)

Similarly, in his explication of surah Ibrahim, verses 32-34, al-Razi gives an elegant elaboration of the material benefits of taskhir for humankind in which he invites attention to the complex interconnections between the blessings that are in the cosmic horizons (al-ni'am al-afaqiyyah) and those that are in the human selves (al-ni'am al-anfusiyyah). He says:
   When you take a morsel of food into your mouth, you should
   reflect on what happened before that and what happens after it.
   As for the happenings prior to it: You should realise that your
   morsel of bread would not have been complete and wholesome
   except when this whole cosmos is already established in the best
   manner. This is because your morsel of bread is derived from
   wheat which does not grow except with the aid of the four
   seasons, the arrangement of the physical natures, and the
   appearance of the winds and the rains. Each one of these would
   not happen except through the revolutions of the celestial
   spheres, and through the specific interactions between the
   movements of the planets with respect to direction, quickness
   and slowness. Then, when the wheat is ripe, it needs to be
   milled and baked by the required tools. Such tools in turn can
   only be realized by the formation of iron in the bowels of
   mountains. These iron tools in turn would not have been
   utilized beneficially except by the use of other iron tools that
   are prior to the former, and so on until the first iron tool
   invented. So reflect on how all these are formed according to
   forms specific to each. Yet still, when all these tools are
   attained, there is need for the four elements, namely, earth,
   water, air and fire, in order for the flour to be baked into bread.
   The foregoing pertains to what is prior to the attainment of
   your morsel of food. As for that which comes afterwards, reflect
   on the arrangement of your animate living body. This pertains
   to the way in which Allah has fashioned animate bodies in such
   manner that they can benefit from the morsel. It pertains too to
   the manner in which some food may harm animals, and to the
   specific organs in which such harmful effects occur. It is not
   possible for you to know these matters even superficially except
   by knowing the sciences of anatomy and medicine in their
   totality. Thus it is quite evident from what we have said that the
   nutritive benefits of a single morsel of food cannot possibly be
   known except by knowing the totality of natural ordinances. But
   the minds of humankind fail to encompass even an atom of all
   these fields of investigation. Therefore by this overwhelming
   demonstration, the truth of the Divine word is made manifest,
   that: If you would count the bounty of Allah you cannot exhaust it.
  (11)


In his explication of verse 20 of surah Luqman, al-Razi also points out the significance of taskhir with respect to divine favours that pertain to pertain to
verb relate to, concern, refer to, regard, be part of, belong to, apply to, bear on, befit, be relevant to, be appropriate to, appertain to
 cosmic phenomena (al-ni'am al-afaqiyyah) and those pertaining per·tain  
intr.v. per·tained, per·tain·ing, per·tains
1. To have reference; relate: evidence that pertains to the accident.

2.
 to the psychological and physiological selves of a human being (al-ni'am al-anfusiyyah). (12) In short, it is through the precise yet artful art·ful  
adj.
1. Exhibiting art or skill: "The furniture is an artful blend of antiques and reproductions" Michael W. Robbins.

2.
 interplay between the design configurations of the cosmos, the biosphere biosphere, irregularly shaped envelope of the earth's air, water, and land encompassing the heights and depths at which living things exist. The biosphere is a closed and self-regulating system (see ecology), sustained by grand-scale cycles of energy and of  and the human self that Divine favors are realized for humanity, that they may be thankful to their Lord, and be certain of their meeting with Him.

This elaborate exposition of Divine design Divine Design is an Canadian interior design show produced by Fusion Television which airs on W Network in Canada and HGTV in the US. It is broadcast on Thursdays, 9pm e/p and is hosted by Candice Olson, one of Canada's top designers.  in nature in relation to the realization of Divine grace In Christianity, divine grace refers to the sovereign favour of God for humankind — especially in regard to salvation — irrespective of actions ("deeds"), earned worth, or proven goodness.

Grace is enabling power sufficient for progression.
 has earlier been undertaken by the great observer of life, culture and nature, Abu 'Uthman 'Amr b. Bahr al-Jahiz (d. 255/868) in his Kitab al-Dalabil wa al-I'tibar 'ala al-Khalq wa al-Tadbir, (13) and by al-Ghazali (d. 505/1111) in his Kitab al-Hikmah fi Makhluqati'l-Lah. (14) Though written long centuries ago in the light of the best scientific knowledge of their time, these critical reflections on the deeper significance of nature "have an amazing a·maze  
v. a·mazed, a·maz·ing, a·maz·es

v.tr.
1. To affect with great wonder; astonish. See Synonyms at surprise.

2. Obsolete To bewilder; perplex.

v.intr.
 contemporary relevance" (15) to the recent remarkable revival of the argument from design in modern science and philosophy. One of the most original, eloquent and effective revivers of the design argument is Badi'uzzaman Sa'id al-Nursi (1876/7-1960), who wrote in the light of his own critical assessment of modern scientific discoveries and their philosophical underpinnings. (16)

Taskhir in al-Nursi

In The Supreme Sign: The Observations of a Traveller Questioning the Universe Concerning His Maker, al-Nursi elaborates at length on the theme of the "universal co-operation visible throughout the cosmos; the comprehensive equilibrium and all-embracing preservation prevailing with the utmost regularity in all things" (17) from celestial bodies to the earth, and from the inanimate atomic elements to the cells of animate beings:
   Solid, inanimate and unfeeling objects, that nonetheless cooperate
   with each other in sensitive and conscious fashion, must
   of necessity be caused to rush to each other's aid by the power,
   mercy and command of a Compassionate, Wise and Glorious
   Sustainer. (18)


In his explication of the verse, And (in) the disposition of the winds (tasrif al-riyah) and of the clouds held in disciplined order (al-sahab al-musakhkhar) between the heavens and earth ... (19), al-Nursi draws attention to the fact that the lifeless and volatile elements of the winds and the clouds do not act of their own accord, but in accordance with the orders of a Powerful and Knowing Commander to serve the function of aiding "all animals to breathe and to live, all plants to pollinate pol·li·nate also pol·len·ate  
tr.v. pol·li·nat·ed also pol·len·at·ed, pol·li·nat·ing also pol·len·at·ing, pol·li·nates also pol·len·ates
To transfer pollen from an anther to the stigma of (a flower).
 and grow.... " (20)

In the "Tenth Window" of the Thirty-Three Windows: Making Known the Creator, al-Nursi expounds on the verses 32-34 of surah Ibrahim:
   Allah is He who has created the heavens and the earth, and causes
   water to descend from the sky, thereby producing fruits as food for
   you, and has made the ships to be of service unto you, that they may
   run upon the sea at His command, and has made of service unto you
   the rivers, and made the sun and the moon constant in their courses
   to be of service unto you, and has made of service unto you the
   night and the day. And He gives you of all that you ask Him. And if
   you count the bounties of Allah you cannot enumerate them.


He says:
   The mutual assistance and solidarity of beings in the universe
   and the fact that they respond to one another show that all
   creatures are trained by a single Instructor. For through an
   all-embracing law of mutual assistance, the sun cooks the
   necessities for the lives of living beings on the earth, and the
   moon acts as a calendar, and light, air, water and sustenance
   hasten to the assistance of living beings, and plants hasten to
   the assistance of animals, and animals hasten to the assistance
   of human beings, and the members of the body hasten to assist
   one another, and particles of food even hasten to the assistance
   of the cells of the body. (21)


This central theme of universal, perfect order, balance and equilibrium, and precise measure observable in the cosmos and the biosphere is emphasized and reiterated as "material proof of divine unity Noun 1. Divine Unity - an Islamic terrorist cell that originated in Jordan but operates in Germany; goal is to attack Europe and Russia with chemical weapons
Al Tawhid, al-Tawhid
" (22) in al-Nursi's exposition of numerous Qur'anic verses in many of his treatises in the Risale-i Nur Collection, (23) such as the The Supreme Sign, Nature: Cause or Effect, (24) The Key to Belief, (25) The Tongues of Reality, Thirty-Three Windows, Man and the Universe (26) and others.

The aim of his emphasis on observed phenomenal order is to draw the attention of both the discursive reason and the intuitive intellect to the impossibility of blind chance, futile fortuitousness for·tu·i·tous  
adj.
1. Happening by accident or chance. See Synonyms at accidental.

2. Usage Problem
a. Happening by a fortunate accident or chance.

b. Lucky or fortunate.
 and care-less causality causality, in philosophy, the relationship between cause and effect. A distinction is often made between a cause that produces something new (e.g., a moth from a caterpillar) and one that produces a change in an existing substance (e.g.  having any share in this "purposeful arrangement" (27) and regularity, and thereby to the recognition, acknowledgement and adoration adoration,
n a prayer of worship and praise.
 of the only direct, immediate and effective Cause, namely, the Most Wise Creator Who "is present with all things and does all things in all things." (28)

Taskhir, Fine-Tuning, Irreducible Complexity and Intelligent Design

In their exposition of taskhir as an aspect of divine governance, al-Razi and al-Nursi repeatedly invite our attention to the complex, integral order quite self-evident in observed natural processes in order to press home the point that the universe is in reality an organic, not aggregate, whole. Al-Nursi, especially, argues that since all things are interconnected into an integral whole, whatever it is that is responsible for a part of the whole must of necessity be equally responsible for the whole itself; and whatever it is that is responsible for the whole must of necessity be equally responsible for even its tiniest part. For just as the watchmaker is responsible for the finished, integral system of the watch as an accurate time-keeping instrument, so is he equally responsible for all its various components and their purposeful dynamic arrangement. This means that the one who created the atom must also be the same one who created the cosmos, (29) and that when attributed to the Single Maker, all beings become as easy as a single being. (30) This truth is alluded to in many Qur'anic verses such as: Your creation and resurrection are naught save as a single soul (31); The matter of the Hour is but as the twinkling twinkling, in astronomy: see seeing.  of the eye or closer still (32); There is not a thing but hymns His praise (33) ; and Our commandment com·mand·ment  
n.
1. A command; an edict.

2. Bible One of the Ten Commandments.


commandment
Noun

a divine command, esp.
 is a single act, as a twinkling of the eye. (34) Both al-Razi and al-Nursi are essentially arguing for transcendent intelligent design by means of scientific and philosophical inference from the central feature of design--that is, purposeful arrangement and dynamically coordinated systemic interactions--quite self-evident in all observable natural phenomena.

Design, as a noun, has been defined by the American biochemist Michael Behe Michael J. Behe (born January 18, 1952, in Altoona, Pennsylvania) is an American biochemist and intelligent design advocate. Behe is professor of biochemistry at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania and a senior fellow of the Discovery Institute's Center for Science and Culture.  as "the ordering of a number of separate interacting components in such a way as to accomplish a function beyond the capacity of the individual components" (35); or more briefly and comprehensively, as the arrangement of parts resulting in an integral functional and/or structural whole. Defined thus, design--including semantically closely related modern scientific notions such as the cosmological "fine-tuning" and Behe's biological "irreducible complexity"--coheres very well with al-Razi's and al-Nursi's conception of taskhir as the constrainment of processes in nature for the ultimate benefit of human life, and corresponds accurately with empirical studies Empirical studies in social sciences are when the research ends are based on evidence and not just theory. This is done to comply with the scientific method that asserts the objective discovery of knowledge based on verifiable facts of evidence.  of these processes. As shall be shown below, the concept of taskhir and the argument from design as integral, fine-tuned and irreducible irreducible /ir·re·duc·i·ble/ (ir?i-doo´si-b'l) not susceptible to reduction, as a fracture, hernia, or chemical substance.

ir·re·duc·i·ble
adj.
1.
 complex order impinge im·pinge  
v. im·pinged, im·ping·ing, im·ping·es

v.intr.
1. To collide or strike: Sound waves impinge on the eardrum.

2.
 on our understanding of the true nature of causality and of the true goals of scientific research in Islam.

In modern science there are many prominent cosmologists who have become increasingly aware of the extent of design that is apparent in the physical characteristics of the universe. In the words of physicist and cosmologist Hugh Ross Hugh Ross may refer to
  • Hugh McGregor Ross (computing pioneer and specialist in the Gospel of Thomas)
  • Hugh Ross (clergyman) (c.1797 -1858) http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.
:
   Astronomers have discovered that the characteristics of the
   universe, of our galaxy and of our solar system are so finely
   tuned to support life that the only reasonable explanation for
   this is the forethought of a personal, intelligent creator whose
   involvement explains the degree of finetunedness. It requires
   power and purpose. (36)


In modern cosmophysical parlance Parlance - A concurrent language.

["Parallel Processing Structures: Languages, Schedules, and Performance Results", P.F. Reynolds, PhD Thesis, UT Austin 1979].
, the existence of life on earth, especially human life, is due to the extremely high degree of fine-tuning in the design parameters of the universe. Without this fine-tuning of design parameters, not only life, but even the physical universe as we know it, would not have come into existence. Among the astronomical evidences for the fine-tuning of the universe invoked by Ross are as follows: (37)

1. Gravitational grav·i·ta·tion  
n.
1. Physics
a. The natural phenomenon of attraction between physical objects with mass or energy.

b. The act or process of moving under the influence of this attraction.

2.
 force constant:

if larger, stars would be too hot and would burn up quickly and unevenly;

if smaller, stars would remain so cool that nuclear fusion nuclear fusion

Process by which nuclear reactions between light elements form heavier ones, releasing huge amounts of energy. In 1939 Hans Bethe suggested that the energy output of the sun and other stars is a result of fusion reactions among hydrogen nuclei.
 would never ignite, hence no heavy element production.

2. Ratio of electron to proton mass:

if larger or smaller, insufficient chemical bonding.

3. Expansion rate of the universe:

if larger, no galaxy formation;

if smaller, universe would have collapsed prior to star formation.

4. Entropy level of the universe:

if larger, no star condensation within the protogalaxies;

if smaller, no protogalaxy pro·to·gal·ax·y  
n. pl. pro·to·gal·ax·ies
A mass of hydrogen that is sufficient to form or is already beginning to form a galaxy.
 formation.

5. Velocity of light:

if larger, stars would be too luminous;

if smaller, stars would not be luminous enough.

6. Average distance between stars:

if larger, heavy element density too thin for rocky planets to form;

if smaller, planetary orbits would become destabilized.

Much more relevant to our discussion here is the further discovery of cosmologists that our galaxy-star-earth-moon system has also been fine-tuned for the support of life. They realized that "only a certain kind of star with a planet just the right distance from that star would provide the necessary conditions for life." (38) Not only are the physical parameters of the system fine-tuned, but they are also fine-tuned within specific limits that are very confining. The degree of confinement greatly increases when all these physical parameters must be maintained within such narrow specific limits for the total time span required for the emergence, sustenance and survival of life on earth. The physical conditions for the support of life as we know it Life As We Know It is an American television drama on the ABC network during the 2004-2005 season. It was created by Gabe Sachs and Jeff Judah. The series was based on the novel Doing It by British writer Melvin Burgess.  have been found to be so stringent that some cosmologists such as Robert Rood rood (rd), crucifix mounted above the entrance to the chancel and flanked by large figures of the Virgin and St.  and James Tregil have proposed that "intelligent physical-life exists only on earth." (39) The following are some examples of the high degree of fine-tunedness of the design parameters of the galaxy-sun-earth-moon system for the support of life: (40)

1. Number of stars in the planetary system planetary system, a star and all the celestial bodies bound to it by gravity, especially planets and their natural satellites. Until the last decade of the 20th cent. :

if more than one, tidal interactions would disrupt planetary orbits;

if less than one, heat produced would be insufficient for life.

2. Parent star age:

if older or younger, luminosity luminosity, in astronomy, the rate at which energy of all types is radiated by an object in all directions. A star's luminosity depends on its size and its temperature, varying as the square of the radius and the fourth power of the absolute surface temperature.  of star would change too quickly.

3. Parent star color:

if redder or bluer, photosynthetic pho·to·syn·the·sis  
n.
The process in green plants and certain other organisms by which carbohydrates are synthesized from carbon dioxide and water using light as an energy source. Most forms of photosynthesis release oxygen as a byproduct.
 response would be insufficient.

4. Distance from parent star:

if further or closer, planet would be respectively too cool or too warm for a stable water cycle.

5. Inclination of orbit:

if too great, temperature differences on the planet would be too extreme.

6. Rotation period In astronomy, a rotation period is the time an astronomical object takes to complete one revolution around its rotation axis relative to the background stars. For the Earth this is a sidereal day. :

if longer, diurnal diurnal /di·ur·nal/ (di-er´nal) pertaining to or occurring during the daytime, or period of light.

di·ur·nal
adj.
1. Having a 24-hour period or cycle; daily.

2.
 temperature difference would be too great;

if shorter, atmospheric wind velocities would be too great.

7. Oxygen quantity in atmosphere:

if greater, plants and hydrocarbons would burn up too easily;

if less, advanced animals would have too little to breathe.

8. Oceans-to-continents ratio:

if greater or smaller, diversity and complexity of life-forms would be limited.

The foregoing are clear scientific attestations to the reality that the heavens and the earth have been "constrained" to be "compliant" and "subservient" for the ultimate service of humankind. In concluding his overview of cosmological findings, Ross says that modern cosmologists are confessing that:
   ... the best, perhaps the only, explanation for the universe we
   observe is the action of an entity beyond the space-time
   continuum of the universe who/that is capable of design and of
   carrying out that design. (41)


As elaborated briefly earlier on, taskhir pertains not only to cosmological phenomena but also to the biological, physiological and psychological phenomena and processes of the human self--phenomena and processes that have been referred to by al-Razi with the term al-ni'am al-anfusiyyah. Frontiers of research in various areas of life sciences such as ecology (interactive, multi- and inter-systemic complexity of diverse life forms and their environments), microbiology and biochemistry (irreducible complexity (42) of life processes at the cellular and molecular level), genetics (specified complexity (43) of the DNA sequence DNA sequence Genetics The precise order of bases–A,T,G,C–in a segment of DNA, gene, chromosome, or an entire genome. See Base pair, Base sequence analysis, Chromosome, Gene, Genome. ), cognitive linguistics In linguistics and cognitive science, cognitive linguistics (CL) refers to the school of linguistics that understands language creation, learning, and usage as best explained by reference to human cognition in general.  (the innate biologically endowed en·dow  
tr.v. en·dowed, en·dow·ing, en·dows
1. To provide with property, income, or a source of income.

2.
a.
 conceptual system A conceptual system is a system that is comprised of non-physical objects, i.e. ideas or concepts. In this context a system is taken to mean "an interrelated, interworking set of objects". Overview
A conceptual systems is simply a model.
 underlying human speech and its special design properties) and cognitive psychology cognitive psychology, school of psychology that examines internal mental processes such as problem solving, memory, and language. It had its foundations in the Gestalt psychology of Max Wertheimer, Wolfgang Köhler, and Kurt Koffka, and in the work of Jean  (mental construction of experience), (44) have also revealed a high degree of fine-tuning of design parameters in the animate systems of living beings. The Australian molecular biologist and medical doctor Michael Denton Michael John Denton (born 25 August, 1943) is a British-Australian biochemist who is Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Otago in New Zealand.  graphically presses home to the mind's eye mind's eye
n.
1. The inherent mental ability to imagine or remember scenes.

2. The imagination.


mind's eye
Noun

in one's mind's eye in one's imagination

 this overwhelming complexity by a vivid analogy:
   To grasp the reality of life as it has been revealed by molecular
   biology, we must magnify a cell a thousand million times until it
   is twenty kilometers in diameter and resembles a giant airship
   large enough to cover a great city like London or New York.
   What we would then see would be an object of unparalleled
   complexity and adaptive design. On the surface of the cell we
   would see millions of openings, like port holes of a large space
   ship, opening and closing to allow a continual stream of
   materials to flow in and out. If we were to enter one of these
   openings we would find ourselves in a world of supreme
   technology and bewildering complexity. We would see endless
   highly organized corridors and conduits branching in every
   direction away from the perimeter of the cell, some leading to
   the central memory bank in the nucleus and others to assembly
   plants and processing units. A huge range of products and raw
   materials would shuttle along all the manifold conduits in a
   highly ordered fashion to and from all the various assembly
   plants in the outer regions of the cell.... We would wonder at the
   level of control implicit in the movement of so many objects
   down so many seemingly endless conduits, all in perfect
   unison. (45)


This dynamic order, regularity, balance and integrated interactive complexity at each level of animate and inanimate organization from the sub-atomic to the cosmic levels, and the ultimate total integrated complexity of all levels, render the notion of linear, gradual and random physical causality not only entirely meaningless, but also entirely inconceivable. As argued by Denton, "It is the sheer universality of perfection, the fact that everywhere we look, to whatever depth we look, we find an elegance and ingenuity of an absolutely transcending quality, which so mitigates against the idea of chance." (46) In exposing the conceptual and empirical bankruptcy of the notion of material causality, al-Nursi says:
   If all material causes were to gather together and if they
   possessed will, they could not gather together the being of a
   single fly and its systems and organs with their particular
   balance. And even if they could gather them together, they
   could not make them remain in the specific measure of the
   being. And even if they could make them remain thus, they
   could not make those minute particles, which are continually
   being renewed and coming into existence and working, work
   regularly and in order. In which case, self-evidently, causes
  cannot claim ownership of things. (47)


Accordingly, physicist Yamine Mermer comments that at most, apparent causes are merely conditions for a particular effect, are situated together with that effect within a particular order, and are thus created together simultaneously as the order is actualized, and so "everything is directly a miracle of divine power." (48) As the notion of random, gradualistic causality becomes increasingly untenable in the light of the empirical evidence, biochemist Michael Behe is drawn to the serious, empirically compelling consideration that, "Clearly, if something was not put together gradually, then it must have been put together quickly or even suddenly." (49) It seems that, ultimately, the "causal" connections between things in nature are only ideal or conceptual (hence discontinuous discontinuous /dis·con·tin·u·ous/ (dis?kon-tin´u-us)
1. interrupted; intermittent; marked by breaks.

2. discrete; separate.

3. lacking logical order or coherence.
, transcendent and imposed), not material or physical (hence not continuous, inherent and essential). (50) Moreover, as pointed out by al-Attas, even the "things" themselves are in reality "only mentally posited (i'tibari)." (51) In short, the scientific evidence points overwhelmingly toward a symbolic (or "existentialist ex·is·ten·tial·ism  
n.
A philosophy that emphasizes the uniqueness and isolation of the individual experience in a hostile or indifferent universe, regards human existence as unexplainable, and stresses freedom of choice and responsibility for the
") (52) rather than an essentialist interpretation of nature, and therefore, as al-Nursi puts it, nature has a meaning that is "other-referential" (ma'na harfi), not "self-referential" (ma'na ismi). (53)

In outlining his philosophy of science, al-Attas affirms that nature is a symbolic form perpetually manifesting divine creativity at the level of phenomenal reality. (54) Nature consists of discontinous events, processes and relations which in reality are but perpetually renewed manifestations of an underlying, abiding spiritual reality of existence that both includes and excludes them. (55) The multiple and diverse natural forms "partake of symbolic existence by virtue of being continually articulated by the creative word of God," (56) as alluded to in the verses, His command, when He intended a thing, is only that He says unto it: Be! and it is, (57) and As We began the first creation, We repeat it. (58) Consequently, things in the world are not independent, self-subsisting, self-organizing essences having persistence in absolute time and space, but rather they perish upon coming into existence and are continually being recreated by the Creator, thus "the absence of a necessary relation between cause and effect." (59) Therefore, everything, from the tiniest particular part to the greatest universal whole, is both immediately and ultimately caused by Allah, (60) hence there is not a thing but hymns His praise. (61) The feature of integral structural and functional order in nature is self-evident enough to indicate that such a philosophy of science is not merely a speculative, fact-free metaphysical dogma, but is truly and accurately descriptive of the fundamental systemic nature of reality, as well as grounded in that reality, both through direct intuitive experience and discursive logico-empirical arguments.

Taskhir and the Goals of Scientific Research in Islam

The foregoing consideration of al-Razi's and al-Nursi's explication of the Qur'anic concept of taskhir and of its conceptual and empirical affinity with the modern scientific concepts of fine-tuning and irreducible complexity has wide-ranging implications for our conceptualization con·cep·tu·al·ize  
v. con·cep·tu·al·ized, con·cep·tu·al·iz·ing, con·cep·tu·al·iz·es

v.tr.
To form a concept or concepts of, and especially to interpret in a conceptual way:
 of the general goals of scientific research in Islam. Current empirical discoveries in modern science bring into renewed and refined focus the concept of taskhir as referring to the fine-tuning of the design parameters of the cosmos and the biosphere, including human life. The physical configurations of the cosmos and the biological configurations of living things Living Things may refer to:
  • Life, or things in nature that are alive
  • Living Things (band), a St. Louis musical group
  • Living Things (album) by Matthew Sweet
 have been fixed in such a precise manner that they ultimately serve the function of rendering service to humankind as the epitome of divine creativity.

The service that is rendered unto humanity through the fine-tuning of the physical parameters of creation has two aspects: an aspect that pertains to material or physical self, and an aspect that pertains to spiritual or metaphysical self. With respect to the former, taskhir has to do with fulfilling the biophysiological need of human beings for nourishment, shelter and clothing, and their psychologico-emotional need for sociocultural so·ci·o·cul·tur·al  
adj.
Of or involving both social and cultural factors.



soci·o·cul
 interactions with fellow human beings. With respect to the latter, taskhir has to do with bringing humanity to acknowledge the perpetual divine presence and wisdom manifested in all things, and to show gratitude (shukr) to Him. Such acknowledgement and gratitude on the part of humanity as the epitome of creation facilitate in them the attainment of spiritual peace and satisfaction, and make perfect and whole their spirit. Al-Nursi says:
   The All-Wise Creator of the universe made the universe like a
   tree with conscious beings as its most perfect fruit, and among
   conscious beings He made man its most comprehensive fruit.
   And man's most important fruit, indeed the result of his
   creation, the aim of his nature, and the fruit of his life are his
   thanks and worship. (62)


In other words, the whole of creation together with all its mutually dependent and interacting components have been created and ordered for the purpose of making possible the biological, cultural and spiritual life of human beings. To put it even more succinctly, creation has been made perfect for human life to be existentially possible and spiritually meaningful.

If creation with all its harmoniously interacting components has been perfected by the Creator for humankind, then the scientific endeavor in Islam cannot be about overpowering, dominating and controlling an "imperfect," "capricious capricious adv., adj. unpredictable and subject to whim, often used to refer to judges and judicial decisions which do not follow the law, logic or proper trial procedure. A semi-polite way of saying a judge is inconsistent or erratic. " and "hostile" nature in order that it may be "readjusted" and "manipulated" for human welfare. There can be no such thing as human beings making "improvements" on the workings of nature by unlocking its "laws" and manipulating them to serve the "betterment" of human civilization by furthering its "development" and "progress." From the Islamic point of view, domination, control and exploitation of nature can never be the true goal of scientific research, since only the Creator has the knowledge and the power, and hence the right to subjugate sub·ju·gate  
tr.v. sub·ju·gat·ed, sub·ju·gat·ing, sub·ju·gates
1. To bring under control; conquer. See Synonyms at defeat.

2. To make subservient; enslave.
 nature. Nature is not something to be dominated, controlled or manipulated by human beings precisely because it has already been divinely constrained to be of service to them. From this perspective then, it is quite clear that the modern incessant urge to unlock the "secrets" of nature in order to "subdue sub·due  
tr.v. sub·dued, sub·du·ing, sub·dues
1. To conquer and subjugate; vanquish. See Synonyms at defeat.

2. To quiet or bring under control by physical force or persuasion; make tractable.

3.
" it smacks of a pathological dissatisfaction with, even denial of, divine bounty (fadl), and an utter ignorance of its ultimate significance.

I think it would be appropriate here, in view of the foregoing, to comment briefly on a dangerous misconception of taskhir discernible in the writings of some Muslim authors, such as C. A. Qadir, for instance. Since the Qur'anic concept of taskhir clearly means God's subjugation of nature for man, and not man's subjugation of nature for himself, then it is problematic to say, as Qadir does, that "The Quran requires Muslims to subjugate the forces of nature for the good of mankind.... " (63) Even more questionable is his citation of the verse All that is in heaven and earth has been subjugated sub·ju·gate  
tr.v. sub·ju·gat·ed, sub·ju·gat·ing, sub·ju·gates
1. To bring under control; conquer. See Synonyms at defeat.

2. To make subservient; enslave.
 to man, to lend support for his further assertion that "Knowledge is power, in the sense that it is through knowledge that one can dominate nature and make it subservient to one's will." (64) The literal meaning of the verse he cites does not support his assertion, and if there are Qur'anic commentators who concur with him, he does not cite them. A deeper reflection on this verse and other verses of similar import will go a long way toward warding off a Baconian infiltration of Islamic philosophy Islamic philosophy (الفلسفة الإسلامية) is a branch of Islamic studies, and is a longstanding attempt to create harmony between philosophy (reason) and the religious teachings of Islam  and science through the back door.

To resume, one may say that Nature has been created for the service of human beings since they are the raison d'etre rai·son d'ê·tre  
n. pl. rai·sons d'être
Reason or justification for existing.



[French : raison, reason + de, of, for + être, to be.
 for its existence. Instead of viewing nature as a foe or an adversary to be overcome and subdued sub·due  
tr.v. sub·dued, sub·du·ing, sub·dues
1. To conquer and subjugate; vanquish. See Synonyms at defeat.

2. To quiet or bring under control by physical force or persuasion; make tractable.

3.
 to realize some narrow, ill-conceived short-term "utility," it should instead be viewed as a precious gift in the form of a ready and able companion or helpful friend who deserves to be treated with respect, understanding and a strong sense of responsibility and appreciation, as a precious divine bounty to be held in trust for all posterity POSTERITY, descents. All the descendants of a person in a direct line. . Any tampering tampering The adulteration of a thing. See Drug tampering.  with the subtle and delicate design parameters of nature would most certainly reduce its capacity to be of service to humankind, and may even prove destructive, not only to human life, but also to the biosphere as a whole:
   Corruption doth appear in the land and sea because of what the hands
   of men have wrought, that He may make them taste a part of that
   which they have done, in order that they may return. (65)


Both rough and ready common sense and scientific observations (especially in the field of ecology and environmental science) have shown that the forces of nature on earth have been dynamically and harmoniously balanced for the continual sustenance and generation of life in all its organized interlocking interlocking /in·ter·lock·ing/ (-lok´ing) closely joined, as by hooks or dovetails; locking into one another.
interlocking Obstetrics A rare complication of vaginal delivery of twins; the 1st
 multiplicity, diversity and complexity. This holistic scientific fact or reality should have a strong bearing on our assumptions about what should be the proper immediate (horizontal) and ultimate (vertical) goals of scientific research. Humans, as self-conscious, intelligent and moral beings, have been endowed with the cognitive capacity to uncover regulating patterns and design parameters in nature, including the manner in which these are mutually dependent and fine-tuned for life to exist and prosper. At the same time they have also been endowed with the will and ability to manipulate and tamper with these patterns and parameters. They can create and have created artificial environments in which the configurations of these design parameters can be altered for specific purposes, despite their very limited understanding of the profound overall dynamic interdependency and interaction of these parameters, and the unknown, even unknowable un·know·a·ble  
adj.
Impossible to know, especially being beyond the range of human experience or understanding: the unknowable mysteries of life.
, consequences of such flippant flip·pant  
adj.
1. Marked by disrespectful levity or casualness; pert.

2. Archaic Talkative; voluble.



[Probably from flip.
 meddling med·dle  
intr.v. med·dled, med·dling, med·dles
1. To intrude into other people's affairs or business; interfere. See Synonyms at interfere.

2. To handle something idly or ignorantly; tamper.
 in the workings of nature.

Now this is where the danger lies. If nature is viewed as being already made perfect for the ultimate service of humankind, then there is a limit to the extent of human manipulation of natural laws. Nature consists of dynamically interconnected elements and compounds with specific structures and functions having design-parameters fine-tuned to very confining ranges of values that cannot be transgressed without bringing about unforseen, unforeseeable Un`fore`see´a`ble

a. 1. Incapable of being foreseen.

Adj. 1. unforeseeable - incapable of being anticipated; "unforeseeable consequences"
unpredictable - not capable of being foretold

 and probably disastrous consequences for human life and for the natural environment as a whole. When an integral constituent of a holistically functioning system is reconfigured, all other constituents of the system will be affected in one way or another, and will have to be reconfigured accordingly in order for the system to continue functioning smoothly and efficiently. But obviously, in view of the total complexity of the cosmos and the biosphere, human beings certainly do not have the knowledge, hence nor the right, to take on the great responsibility of readjusting the way nature works. Therefore, it is quite clear that the scientist's very uncovering of the fine-tunedness of design parameters in nature compels them morally to work within the narrow confining limits of these parameters, and never to transgress nor alter them. For, these are the limits imposed by Allah, and so trangress them not; for whoso who·so  
pron.
Who; whoever; whatever person.
 transgresses Allah's limits, such are the wrongdoers. (66)

On the other hand, if nature is somehow viewed as "imperfect" for realizing some shortsighted short·sight·ed
adj.
1. Nearsighted; myopic.

2. Lacking foresight.



shortsight
 ideals of human "comfort," then naturally scientists will tamper with the physical limits of these design-parameters. Such an attitude will clearly be an outgrowth of selfish intellectual arrogance expressing itself in the view that nature is not sacred, but only a lifeless automaton automaton: see robot; robotics  that can be taken apart and put together in endless new ways to fulfill someone's vague notions of the "good life." Such a philosophy of science which strips nature of any transcendent significance by viewing it as a result of "blind chance" instead of intelligent design, deprives it of any meaning save as an object of the scientist's and technologist's absolute domination, mastery and control, or even as a plaything of idle curiosity to be studied "disinterestedly" for its "own sake." Such a study of nature is "devoid of real purpose and the pursuit of knowledge becomes a deviation from the truth, which necessarily puts into question the validity of such knowledge." (67) Ultimately, a particularly tiny minority of people--those with privileged access to scientific information, technical expertise, political power and economic leverage--will cooperate to strive their utmost to manipulate nature and exploit "natural resources," including other "lesser" people, i.e., "human resources The fancy word for "people." The human resources department within an organization, years ago known as the "personnel department," manages the administrative aspects of the employees. ," in order to achieve their destructive self-serving objectives universalized as "global development and progress." (68)

Precisely because the Creator has already made nature to be subservient unto humans, humans in turn, as a matter of moral logic, have to render sincere worship and give thanks to Him. Al-Nursi says:
   ... men are observers, sent by the Pre-Eternal Sovereign to
   contemplate and study the wonderful, strange miracles of power
   displayed in the exhibition of the universe. And that after
   receiving their marks and ranks in conformity with the degree
   they have grasped the value and grandeur of those miracles of
   power and the degree to which the miracles point to the
   grandeur of the Pre-Eternal Sovereign, they will return to the
   Sovereign's realm. So he will say: "All praise be to God!" for the
   bounty of belief which has given him this bounty. (69)


Thus the study, use and enjoyment of nature can never be an end in itself, but it must be for the purpose of creating and maintaining a socio-cultural ambience conducive to human beings' adoration of their Creator. It follows then that one of the central goals of scientific research in Islam is to uncover, understand and appreciate as much and as truly as possible the many ways in which nature has been constrained by the Creator to be of service unto humankind, and thus to ascend in the knowledge, recognition and appreciation of His Wisdom and His limitless, unending Grace. Obviously, such a goal is more intellecto-moral than utilitarian. This means that the "outer" utilitarian dimension of science must be subsumed under and guided by the "inner" intellecto-moral one, and not vice-versa. From this perspective, the vision of science in Islam--as projected in the Qur'anic conception of tashkir--can be understood as the conceptual and empirical investigation of the phenomenal manifestations of the underlying enduring spiritual reality of existence, by which investigation belief in that reality can be founded on verified experiential certainty, and thus freed from doubt and blind dogmatic imitation of false beliefs. Such a conception of science leads the scientist to uncover the ontological unity between the natural and spiritual order, and ultimately brings him to affirm the Unity and Oneness of the Creator. In the insightful words of Yamine Mermer:
   It is a great crime for believers to leave this meaningful, wise,
   and purposeful universe to the hands of the materialists and
   turn a blind eye to their condemning it to meaninglessness,
   purposelessness, chance and coincidence under the name of
   "scientific study." The believer should take the universe in his
   hand, see it as a book, and under the guidance of the Qur'an,
   "which teaches the meaning of the book of the universe," read it
   in the name of his Sustainer. This is "scientific study" for the
   believer. In whatever field of knowledge he works, it is the duty
   of every believer who follows the Qur'an to open up that long
   distance between cause and effect and to see the Most Beautiful
   Divine Names which show themselves clearly in that space, and
   to display them. (70)


Conclusion

The concept of taskhir in the Qur'an refers to the easily observable fact that nature, in both its cosmic and biospheric dimensions, has been constrained by Allah to render service and benefit unto humankind. In modern cosmological terms, taskhir can be said to refer to the extremely high degree of fine-tunedness of the design-parameters of the universe for the support of life on earth, and ultimately, conscious and intelligent human life. Through taskhir, the perfection of Allah's Wisdom (hikmah) is manifested in the phenomenal world, and His Grace (fadl) realized for humanity. The service rendered to mankind by the divine subjugation of nature is ultimately not physical in nature, but metaphysical in its significance: that humanity would be brought to recognize, acknowledge and glorify their Creator, and thus to realize fully the enduring transcendent meaning of their fleeting, phenomenal life on earth. Axiologically, this means that Islamic science is less utilitarian than intellecto-moral, and hence, the "outer" utilitarian dimension of science is to be subsumed under, and guided by, its "inner" intellecto-moral dimension, and not vice-versa.
   Can there be any doubt concerning Allah, the Creator of the heavens
   and the earth? (71)

   We shall show them Our portents on the horizons and within themselves
   until it becomes manifest to them that it is the truth. (72)

   Such is the Knower of the invisible and the visible, the Mighty, the
   Merciful, Who has perfected all things which He created ... (73)

   Such then is Allah, your true Lord: Apart from the Truth, what is
   there save error? How then are you turned away? (74)


(1.) Hans Wehr For the dictionary, see .

Hans Wehr (1909-1981), German arabist who was professor at University of Münster from 1957-1974. Wehr published the Arabisches Wörterbuch (1952), which was later published in an English edition as
, A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic The Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic is an Arabic-English dictionary compiled by Hans Wehr and edited by J Milton Cowan. First published in 1961 by publishers Otto Harrassowitz in Wiesbaden, Germany, it was inspired by Wehr's German edition  (Beirut: Librairie du Liban, 1980), p. 401; Muhammad b. Abu Bakr Abu Bakr (ä`b bäk`ər), 573–634, 1st caliph, friend, father-in-law, and successor of Muhammad.  b. 'Abd al-Qadir al-Razi, Mukhtar al-Sihah (Beirut: Maktabah Lubnan, 1988), p. 122; al-Fayruzabadi, al-Qamus al-Muhit, 2 vols. (Beirut: Dar Ihyab al-Turath al-'Arabi, 1997), 1: 571; Ibn Manzur, Lisan al-'Arab, 18 vols. (Beirut: Dar Ihyab al-Turath al-'Arabi, 1997), 6: 203.

(2.) Respectively, Ibrahim: 32-33; Luqman: 20; al-Jathiyah: 12-13; al-Hajj: 65; and al-Racd: 2. All translations of Qur'anic verses are based on Muhammad Marmaduke Pickthall

For other people named Pickthall, see Pickthall (disambiguation).


(Mohammed) Marmaduke Pickthall' (1875–May 19, 1936) was a Western Islamic scholar, noted as a poetic translator of the Qur'an into English.
, The Meaning of the Glorious Qur'an (Mecca: Muslim World League The Muslim World League (MWL, or Rabita from Rabita al-Alam al-Islami) is one of the largest Islamic non-governmental organizations. It was founded in 1962 by Muslim religious figures from 22 countries in Mecca.

The current Secretary General is Dr.
, 1977).

(3.) Mutakallim, a scholar of Islamic dialectical theology (kalam); mufassir, an exegete ex·e·gete   also ex·e·ge·tist
n.
A person skilled in exegesis.



[Greek exg
 of the Qur'an.

(4.) Syed Muhammad Naquib al-Attas Syed Muhammad al Naquib bin Ali bin Abdullah bin Muhsin al Attas (born September 5, 1931) is a prominent contemporary Muslim philosopher and thinker from Malaysia. He is one of the few contemporary scholars who is thoroughly rooted in the traditional Islamic sciences and who is , Prolegomena to the Metaphysics of Islam: An Exposition of the Fundamental Elements of the Worldview of Islam (Kuala Lumpur Kuala Lumpur (kwä`lə lm`pr), city (1990 est. pop. : ISTAC ISTAC Information Systems Technical Advisory Committee
ISTAC International Institute of Islamic Thought And Civilization
, 1995), p. 1.

(5.) Ibid., pp. 1-2.

(6.) Muhammad b. 'Umar b. al-Husayn b. al-Hasan b. cAli al-Bakri al-Tabaristani Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, al-Tafsir al-Kabir, 32 parts in 11 vols. (Beirut: Dar Ihyab al-Turath al-'Arabi, 1996), 6 (18): 526-7. This work is also known as Mafatih al-Ghayb, which means Keys to the Unseen.

(7.) Mafatih, 6 (18): 527.

(8.) Ibid., 7 (19): 96-100; and 9 (25): 123-4.

(9.) Ibid., 7 (19): 185-7.

(10.) Ibid.

(11.) Ibid., 7 (19): 99-100; translation mine.

(12.) Ibid., 9 (25): 123-4.

(13.) (Aleppo: al-Maktabah al-'Ilmiyyah, 1928); translated into English by M. A. S. Abdel Haleem as Chance or Creation: God's Design in the Universe (Reading: Garnet Publishing, 1995).

(14.) Published in Majmucah Rasabil al-Imam al-Ghazali (Beirut: 1994).

(15.) Abdel Haleem, Chance or Creation, p. xii.

(16.) Sukran Vahide, Bediuzzaman Said Nursi: The Author of the Risale-i Nur (Istanbul: Sozler Publications, 1992), pp. 23-5, 379-90.

(17.) The Supreme Sign, trans. Hamid Algar (Istanbul: Sozler Nesriyat, 1993), p. 89.

(18.) Ibid.

(19.) al-Baqarah: 164.

(20.) Supreme Sign, p. 26.

(21.) Thirty-Three Windows, trans. Sukran Vahide (Istanbul: Sozler Nesriyat, 1991), p. 30-1.

(22.) The Tongues of Reality, trans. Sukran Vahide (Istanbul: Sozler Nesriyat, 1991).

(23.) Badicuzzaman Sacid al-Nursi, The Risale-i Nur Collection, trans. Sukran Vahide (Istanbul: Sozler Nesriyat, 1992-97). For the comprehensive Arabic edition, see Ihsan Qasim al-Salihi, trans., Kulliyat Rasabil al-Nur, 9 vols. (Istanbul: Sozler Nesriyat, 1998).

(24.) Trans. Sukran Vahide (Istanbul: Sozler Nesriyat, 1997).

(25.) Trans. Sukran Vahide (Istanbul: Sozler Nesriyat, 1991).

(26.) Trans. Meryem Weld (Istanbul: Sozler Nesriyat, 1991).

(27.) For a biochemical analysis of "purposeful arrangement" as indicative of "intelligent design," see Michael Behe, Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution (New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
: The Free Press, 1996), pp. 192-6; and for an incisive microbiological refutation ref·u·ta·tion   also re·fut·al
n.
1. The act of refuting.

2. Something, such as an argument, that refutes someone or something.

Noun 1.
 of evolution, see Michael Denton, Evolution: A Theory in Crisis (London: Adler and Adler, 1996).

(28.) Supreme Sign, p. 136.

(29.) Nature: Cause or Effect, pp. 19, 29, 36, 47; Supreme Sign, pp. 115-25 passim PASSIM - A simulation language based on Pascal.

["PASSIM: A Discrete-Event Simulation Package for Pascal", D.H Uyeno et al, Simulation 35(6):183-190 (Dec 1980)].
. For al-Razi on the argument for God from design and order in the universe, see the useful overview by Yasin Ceylan, Theology and Tafsir in the Major Works of Fakhr al-Din al-Razi (Kuala Lumpur: ISTAC, 1996), p. 85, in which is also noted Ibn Rushd's view that the observed design and order in nature is the strongest proof for the existence of God.

(30.) Nature: Cause or Effect, p. 47; Colin Turner, The Risale-i Nur: A Revolution of Belief, with facing Turkish translation (Istanbul: Risa1e-i Nur Institute, 1997), pp. 8-10. As for the similitude of the watchmaker: if it is argued that he may not necessarily be directly involved in the actual material fabrication fabrication (fab´rikā´shn),
n the construction or making of a restoration.
 of some of the individual parts and so he cannot be totally responsible, the counter-argument is that his idea is necessarily involved in determining exactly how each part should be materially fabricated fab·ri·cate  
tr.v. fab·ri·cat·ed, fab·ri·cat·ing, fab·ri·cates
1. To make; create.

2. To construct by combining or assembling diverse, typically standardized parts:
 and fitted into the whole; and since "God's is the highest similitude" (wa li'Llahi'l-mathalu'l-a'la), He alone is directly and perpetually involved in creation both in idea and in act. As al-Nursi says in the Twentieth Letter, "There is no division in His regarding and acting towards the creation." (See Sukran Vahide, Bediuzzaman Said Nursi: The Author of the Risale-i Nur, pp. 389-90.)

(31.) Luqman: 28

(32.) al-Nahl: 77.

(33.) al-Israb: 44.

(34.) al-Qamar: 50.

(35.) Michael Behe, Darwin's Black Box, pp. 193-4, 215. This definition is actually my synthetic paraphrase of his words.

(36.) Hugh Ross, "Astronomical Evidences for a Personal Transcendent God" in J. P. Moreland James Porter Moreland (born 1948), better known as J. P. Moreland, is an American philosopher, theologian, and Christian apologist. He is currently Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Talbot School of Theology at Biola University in La Mirada, California. , ed., The Creation Hypothesis: Scientific Evidence for a Intelligent Designer (Downers Grove Downers Grove, village (1990 pop. 46,858), Du Page co., NE Ill.; settled 1832, inc. 1873. Downers Grove has undergone population growth and commercial development that include the construction of new office complexes. : InterVarsity Press, 1994), p. 160. Aspects of the historical and contemporary cosmological argument cosmological argument

Form of argument used in natural theology to prove the existence of God. Thomas Aquinas, in his Summa theologiae, presented two versions of the cosmological argument: the first-cause argument and the argument from contingency.
 can be accessed in William Lane Craig William Lane Craig (born August 23, 1949) is an American philosopher, theologian, New Testament historian, and Christian apologist. He is an author and lecturer on issues related to the philosophy of religion, the historical Jesus, the coherence of the Christian worldview, and , The Kalam Cosmological Argument The Kalām cosmological argument is a version of the cosmological argument derived from the Islamic Kalam form of dialectical argument. It attempts to prove the existence of God by appealing to the principle of universal cause.  (Eugene: Wipf and Stock, 2000); and George Ellis George Ellis, FRS, (born August 11, 1939) is the Distinguished Professor of Complex Systems in the Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics at the University of Cape Town in South Africa.  and Peter Collins, Before the Beginning: Cosmology Explained (London and New York: Marion Boyars boyars (bōyärz`), upper nobility in Russia from the 10th through the 17th cent. The boyars originally obtained influence and government posts through their military support of the Kievan princes. , 1993).

(37.) Ross, "Astronomical Evidences," pp. 160-3. See also Richard Swinburne Richard G. Swinburne (born December 26, 1934) is an eminent British professor and philosopher primarily interested in the philosophy of religion and philosophy of science. , "Argument from the Fine-Tuning of the Universe" in John Leslie The name John Leslie may refer to several people:
  • John Leslie (author) Mystery / Crime fiction writer
  • Sir John Leslie (physicist) (1766–1832), Scottish mathematician and physicist
, ed., Physical Cosmology This article is about the physics subject. For other uses, see Cosmology.

Physical cosmology, as a branch of astronomy, is the study of the large-scale structure of the universe and is concerned with fundamental questions about its formation and evolution.
 and Philosophy (New York: Macmillan, 1990), pp. 154-73. For an extended, critical and more impartial presentation of the "evidence of fine-tuning" see John Leslie, Universes (London: Routledge, 1989), pp. 25-65.

(38.) Ross, "Astronomical Evidences," p. 165.

(39.) Ibid., p. 170.

(40.) Cited in ibid., pp. 165-9 passim.

(41.) Ibid., p. 171.

(42.) Behe (Darwin's Black Box, p. 39) defines an irreducible complex system as one which is "composed of several well-matched, interacting parts that contribute to the basic function, wherein the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to effectively cease functioning"; for further elaboration, see ibid., pp. 39-48 passim.

(43.)"Specified complexity" as a concept of information theory refers to the high number of non-redundant specific instructions conditioning the occurrence and operation of complex functional structures, whether natural or artificial, animate or inanimate; see Walter L. Bradley and Charles B. Thaxton, "Information and the Origin of Life" in Creation Hypothesis, pp. 173-210 on 203-209 passim.

(44.) All these findings at the frontiers of scientific research are surveyed in Moreland, ed., Creation Hypothesis passim. For the language faculty in relation to the mental creation of experience, see Ray Jackendoff Ray Jackendoff (born January 23, 1945) is an influential contemporary linguist who has always straddled the boundary between generative linguistics and cognitive linguistics, committed as he is both to the existence of an innate Universal Grammar (an important thesis of generative , Patterns in the Mind: Language and Human Nature (New York: Harvester harvester, farm machine that mechanically harvests a crop. Small-grain harvesting has been mechanized to a certain extent since early times. In the modern period the first harvester to gain general acceptance was made by Cyrus McCormick in 1831 (see reaper).  Wheatsheaf, 1993).

(45.) Evolution: A Theory in Crisis, p. 328.

(46.) Ibid., p. 342.

(47.) Risale-i Nur Collection, vol. 3: The Flashes Collection, p. 308.

(48.) Yamine Mermer, "Cause and Effect in the Risale-i Nur," Third International Symposium on Badiuzzaman Said Nursi, 24th-26th September, 1995, Istanbul, proceedings, trans. Sukran Vahide, 2 vols. (Istanbul: Sozler Nesriyat, 1997), 1: 49.

(49.) Darwin's Black Box, p. 187.

(50.) Ibid., pp. 43-5. Behe makes a distinction between a physical precursor and a conceptual precursor in his analysis of complex transformations in nature, and points out that if a system is irreducibly complex, it can have no (horizontal) functional precursors.

(51.) S. M. N. al-Attas, The Positive Aspects of Tasawwuf: Preliminary Thoughts on an Islamic Philosophy of Science (Kuala Lumpur: Islamic Academy The Islamic Academy is a religious and political foundation and charity in Bangladesh. It had been briefly banned in 1972 for alleged support for the Pakistani Army against the Awami League. The academy has been blamed for working to Islamize politics in Bangladesh.  of Science [ASASI ASASI Australian Society of Air Safety Investigators ], 1981), pp. 6-7; see also Prolegomena, p. 291.

(52.) al-Attas, Positive Aspects of Tasawwuf, p. 7n7.

(53.) Mesnevi-i Nuriye, 46, cited in Sukran Vahide, "The Book of the Universe: Its Place and Development in Bediuzzaman's Thought" in A Contemporary Approach to Understanding the Qur'an: The Example of the Risale-i Nur, proceedings of International Symposium, Istanbul 20-22 September 1998 (Istanbul: Sozler Nesriyet, 2000), pp. 466-83 on 471. A fuller discussion of ma'na harfi and ma'na ismi in relation to causation and causality and the synthetic interpretation of nature is Yamine B. Mermer, "The Hermeneutical Dimension of Science: A Critical Analysis Based on Said Nursi's Risale-i Nur" in The Muslim World The term Muslim world (or Islamic world) has several meanings. In a cultural sense it refers to the worldwide community of Muslims, adherents of Islam. This community numbers about 1.5-2 billion people, about one-fourth of the world.  Review, Special Issue: Said Nursi and the Turkish Experience, LXXXIX: 3-4 (July-October 1999), pp. 270-96 passim.

(54.) Islam and the Philosophy of Science, p. 3; Prolegomena, p. 113; Positive Aspects of Tasawwuf, pp. 6-8, 11-12.

(55.) Islam and the Philosophy of Science, pp. 21, 28, 33; Prolegomena, pp. 128, 134, 140.

(56.) Islam and the Philosophy of Science, p. 27; Prolegomena, p. 133.

(57.) Ya Sin: 82.

(58.0 al-Anbiyab: 104; similarly, see also al-'Ankabut: 19 and 20: See they not how Allah originates creation, then repeats it? ... Travel in the land and see how He did originate creation, then Allah did bring forth the later production.

(59.) Islam and the Philosophy of Science, p. 28; Prolegomena, p. 134.

(60.) Supreme Sign, pp. 115-21 passim.

(61.) al-Isra': 44. It can be said that in philosophico-scientific terms this verse alludes to the logical and empirical fact that given any integral system, if the ultimate efficient cause for it exists, then this same ultimate cause has also, of necessity, to be its direct and immediate efficient cause.

(62.) Nature: Cause or Effect, p. 41.

(63.) C. A. Qadir, Philosophy and Science in the Islamic World (London: Routledge, 1988), p. 15.

(64.) Ibid., p. 22. The verse is Qadir's own rendition.

(65.) al-Rum: 41.

(66.) al-Baqarah: 229. Al-Nursi calls the Laws of Nature "the Shari'ah of Creation" or the "Greater Shari'ah" by analogy to the Laws of Religion; see Nature: Cause or Effect, pp. 33-4; and Sukran Vahide, "The Book of the Universe," p. 482.

(67.) al-Attas, Islam and the Philosophy of Science, pp. 27-8; Prolegomena, pp. 133-4; Positive Aspects of Tasawwuf, p. 6.

(68.) For an excellent historical, ideological and political-economic critique of development and progress as "collective delusion delusion, false belief based upon a misinterpretation of reality. It is not, like a hallucination, a false sensory perception, or like an illusion, a distorted perception. " see Gilbert Rist Gilbert Rist is a professor at the institut universitaire d'études du développement (graduate institute of development studies) in Geneva. He is best known for his ground-breaking study of the concept and practice of development. , The History of Development: From Western Origins to Global Faith, trans. Patrick Camiller (London and New York: Zed Books and Cape Town Cape Town or Capetown, city (1991 pop. 854,616), legislative capital of South Africa and capital of Western Cape, a port on the Atlantic Ocean. It was the capital of Cape Province before that province's subdivision in 1994. : UCT UCT University of Cape Town
UCT Ukhta (Russia)
UCT Underwater Construction Team
UCT Upper Critical Temperature
UCT Order of United Commercial Travelers of America
UCT University Center Tower
 Press, 2000); and for a good specific case study in the Malaysian context, see Colin Nicholas, The Orang Asli Orang Asli ("original peoples" or "aboriginal peoples" in Malay) is a general term used for any indigenous groups that are found in Peninsular Malaysia. They are divided into three main tribal groups: Semang (negrito), Senoi, and Proto-Malay.  and the Contest for Resources: Indigenous Politics, Development and Identity in Peninsular Malaysia (Copenhagen: International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs The International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA) is an independent and non-profit international human rights-based membership organization, whose central charter is to endorse and promote the collective rights of the world's indigenous peoples.  IWGIA IWGIA International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs
IWGIA International Working Group on Indigenous Affairs
 & Subang Jaya Subang Jaya (Subang = Earrings; Jaya = Success) is a residential hub in the Klang Valley in Selangor, Malaysia. It is situated in the district of Petaling. Through continuous development, the township has physically merged into a conurbation that includes the newer , Malaysia: Center for Orang Asli Concerns [COAC COAC Commercial Operations Advisory Committee (US Customs)
COAC Collegi d'Arquitectes de Catalunya
COAC Combined Air and Space Operations Center (US Air Force) 
], 2000).

(70.) Yamine Mermer, "Cause and Effect," p. 53.

(71.) Ibrahim: 10.

(72.) Fussilat: 53.

(73.) al-Sajdah: 6-7.

(74.) Yunus: 32.

'Adi Setia is Research Fellow (History and Philosophy of Science The history and philosophy of science (HPS) is an academic discipline that encompasses the philosophy of science and the history of science. Although many scholars in the field are trained primarily as either historians or as philosophers, there are degree-granting departments of ) at the International Institute of Islamic Thought The International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT) is a privately held non-profit organization concerned with issues of Islamic thought. Headquartered in Herndon, Virginia, the Institute was founded in 1981 AC (1401 AH) with seed money from the Muslim Brotherhood  and Civilization (ISTAC), Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; Email: adisetiamuh@pd.jaring.my
COPYRIGHT 2004 Center for Islam & Science
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Setia, Adi
Publication:Islam & Science
Date:Jun 22, 2004
Words:9109
Previous Article:Shadhrah 2.
Next Article:Jan P. Hogendijk and Abdelhamid I. Sabra, The Enterprise of Science in Islam: New Perspectives.(Book Review)
Topics:



Related Articles
'Intelligent' design? Relax, God is stranger still.
Weird science: President Bush's support for teaching 'intelligent design' in public schools adds to growing controversy over science instruction in...
What's scientific about it? Why intelligent design belongs in social studies class.(Short Take)
Liberal democrat points to deficiencies in Darwinism.(QuickQuotes)(Bob Beckel, Intelligent design (Creationism))(Brief Article)
'Intelligent Design' comes under fire from Conservative critics.(Charles Krauthammer, George F. Will, columnists)
Governors advocate teaching 'intelligent design' in public school science classes.(Kentucky, Texas, Florida)
Designing an intelligent curriculum.(EDUCATION REPORT)
Evolution in action: the trials and tribulations of intelligent design.(laws for teaching evolution to students)
Intelligent design not testable; it can't be a scientific theory.(Commentary)(Evolution is not controversial; we shouldn't teach our children that it...
A leading science educator explains why 'Intelligent Design' is wrong for our schools.(Eugenie C. Scott)(Interview)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles