Geocentrism and the Quran: Difference between revisions

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→‎Geocentrism in hadiths: I have added in the point that no notable classical scholar has had a heliocentric reading of the Quran (probably none at all have) based on it's language, and listed the major Sunni (and one Shia) as examples to drive the point.
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(→‎Geocentrism in hadiths: I have added in the point that no notable classical scholar has had a heliocentric reading of the Quran (probably none at all have) based on it's language, and listed the major Sunni (and one Shia) as examples to drive the point.)
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These Hadiths are all deemed '[[sahih]]' (authentic) according to Islamic scholars. According to historians, however, even if these hadiths are not historically reliable, they nonetheless indicate what very early Muslim authorities believed about the sun and are thus useful in interpreting the intended meaning of the Qur'an.
These Hadiths are all deemed '[[sahih]]' (authentic) according to Islamic scholars. According to historians, however, even if these hadiths are not historically reliable, they nonetheless indicate what very early Muslim authorities believed about the sun and are thus useful in interpreting the intended meaning of the Qur'an.
==== Classical Commentators ====
It is also notable that no major classical Islamic scholar came up with a heliocentric reading based of the language of the Quran (nor an understanding of our universe close to what we know it is today), as can be seen in their writings, particularly their tafsirs/Quranic commentaries. This includes from the most well-known and influential scholars of all time including al-Tabari, al-Razi, al-Qurtubi, Ibn Abbas, Ibn Kathir, Ibn Taymiyyah, Al Jalalayn, al-Qummi (a prominent Shia scholar), Al-Baghawi and al-Zamakhshari.


===Ancient and modern Muslim astronomers===
===Ancient and modern Muslim astronomers===
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