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→‎Sources for additional content: Changed my mind about this idea after researching. Most Umayyah poems are considered inauthentic and he didn't claim prophethood; The others claimed prophethood after Muhammad did.
(These three have been completely rewritten (cosmology), encyclopedic sections added (geo) or cleaned up (embryology) since they were added to the list in Feb/May last year)
(→‎Sources for additional content: Changed my mind about this idea after researching. Most Umayyah poems are considered inauthentic and he didn't claim prophethood; The others claimed prophethood after Muhammad did.)
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*[https://muslimskeptic.com/2021/07/01/human-evolution-islam-david-jalajel-refutation/#post-6707-_Toc76027348 Is Human Evolution Compatible with Islam?] (July 1, 2021) — article by orthodox Muslim researcher that heavily references classical, authoritative Islamic authorities/texts which can be cited in a breakdown of the traditional Islamic view on evolution
*[https://muslimskeptic.com/2021/07/01/human-evolution-islam-david-jalajel-refutation/#post-6707-_Toc76027348 Is Human Evolution Compatible with Islam?] (July 1, 2021) — article by orthodox Muslim researcher that heavily references classical, authoritative Islamic authorities/texts which can be cited in a breakdown of the traditional Islamic view on evolution
*<nowiki>https://miningthemadness.wordpress.com/2017/08/06/can-islamic-slavery-be-defended/</nowiki> This is an excellent article containing numerous academic references on various aspects of slavery in Islamic Jurisprudence. We don't currently (as at October 2021) have a page on Slavery in Islamic Law, but this information could be a starting point. We have the QHS Slavery page, but academic quotes about jurisprudence probably wouldn't fit well in a Scholars section there which is meant for quotes from primary sources like tafsirs and fiqh manuals.
*<nowiki>https://miningthemadness.wordpress.com/2017/08/06/can-islamic-slavery-be-defended/</nowiki> This is an excellent article containing numerous academic references on various aspects of slavery in Islamic Jurisprudence. We don't currently (as at October 2021) have a page on Slavery in Islamic Law, but this information could be a starting point. We have the QHS Slavery page, but academic quotes about jurisprudence probably wouldn't fit well in a Scholars section there which is meant for quotes from primary sources like tafsirs and fiqh manuals.
*A major topic which enjoys little wider awareness is that there were other contemporary Arab prophets besides Muhammad: Musaylima, Sajah, al-Aswad al-'Ansi, Tulayha and Umayya abi Salt. Lots of things were remembered about Musaylima for example, even surahs attributed to him. This article is very useful on Umayya as well as having some discussion on the others https://www.academia.edu/8273673/RE_THINKING_OTHER_CLAIMANTS_TO_PROPHETHOOD_the_Case_of_Umayya_ibn_Abi_Salt There could even be a series of articles on each of these prophets to put Muhammad in context.


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