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Islam and Science /Volume7

Islam and Science /Volume7

Islam and Science /Volume7

Publication year :

1993

Number of volumes :

7

Publish number :

First

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Islam and Science /Volume7

The dialogue between Islam and science is not a modern invention but a continuation of an intellectual tradition that once shaped global civilization. Islam and Science /Volume7 forms part of a broader series dedicated to examining this relationship with historical depth and analytical clarity.

About the Book Islam and Science /Volume7 investigates key questions surrounding scientific inquiry, technological development, and epistemology within an Islamic framework. Building upon earlier volumes, this installment addresses contemporary scientific issues while remaining grounded in Qur’anic principles and classical Islamic thought.

The book highlights Islam’s encouragement of observation, experimentation, and rational inquiry, while simultaneously affirming the ethical and metaphysical limits of science. Scientific progress, the author argues, must be evaluated not only by its technical success but also by its impact on human dignity, moral responsibility, and spiritual well-being.

Special attention is given to modern scientific challenges—such as reductionism, materialism, and the absolutization of empirical knowledge—and how these trends contrast with the Islamic understanding of knowledge as a unified whole. The volume emphasizes that science answers questions of how, while revelation addresses why, and that confusion arises when one domain is forced to replace the other.

Through historical examples, philosophical discussion, and Qur’anic references, the book presents Islam as a worldview capable of engaging modern science critically without either rejecting it or surrendering to it unconditionally.

What You Will Discover

  • Islam’s principles regarding scientific investigation and progress.
  • Ethical boundaries of science from an Islamic perspective.
  • A critique of modern materialistic interpretations of science.
  • The complementary roles of revelation and empirical knowledge.
  • Insights into contemporary scientific debates affecting Muslim societies.

About the Author The author is a researcher in Islamic thought with a focus on science, philosophy, and modern intellectual challenges.

Who Is This Book For? This book is for students, researchers, and readers seeking a mature and principled Islamic engagement with modern science and its philosophical implications.