I keep seeing this popular notion among Muslims: “something is haram because God says so. Full stop. You have no say in it.” But what if God says cutting off…
Through the lens of the Quran
I keep seeing this popular notion among Muslims: “something is haram because God says so. Full stop. You have no say in it.” But what if God says cutting off…
Problems with saying that you can be good without God includes the inablity to define good, our limited foresight, and no intrinsic motivation.
They know that without God, their life would be meaningless. But to escape from this, they say that “while we don’t have all the answers, no one really does. And we’re excited of the idea that we can discover them.”
If it is true that God left us without divine communication, then that means God left us in a state of confusion and bewilderment.
The Qur’an told us to question ourselves, is it even sensible to think that God would create anything aimlessly? Is life meaningful according to deists?
The contingency argument hows that there must be an uncaused first cause. I attempt to prove that the uncaused first cause points towards the God of Abraham
Was the universe created out of nothing? Or did it create itself? Or has it always existed? Or there is a higher power? These possibilities are discussed in this article.
Why some Muslims fear and oppose rationality heavily? They claim that Islam isn’t compatible with rationality, because the minds of a human is limited. They further claim that the only way to be ‘safe’ is only by following their religious scholars, not by rationality. Don’t they know that Allah told that His signs are for those who give thought?