[Dialogue] {Spam?} Was Muhammed an Epileptic?

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Sat May 12 17:11:17 EDT 2007


 
Excerpt from  God is not Great, Christopher  Hitchens  
Was Muhammed  an Epileptic? 
There is some  question as to whether Islam is a separate religion at all. It 
initially  fulfilled a need among Arabs for a distinctive or special creed, 
and is forever  identified with their language and their impressive later 
conquests, which,  while not as striking as those of the young Alexander of 
Macedonia, certainly  conveyed an idea of being backed by a divine will until they 
petered out at the  fringes of the Balkans and the Mediterranean. But Islam when 
examined is not  much more than a rather obvious and ill-arranged set of 
plagiarisms, helping  itself from earlier books and traditions as occasion 
appeared to require. Thus,  far from being "born in the clear light of history," as 
Ernest Renan so  generously phrased it, Islam in its origins is just as shady 
and approximate as  those from which it took its borrowings. It makes immense 
claims for itself,  invokes prostrate submission or "surrender" as a maxim to 
its adherents, and  demands deference and respect from nonbelievers into the 
bargain. There is  nothing—absolutely nothing—in its teachings that can even 
begin to justify such  arrogance and presumption. 
The prophet  died in the year 632 of our own approximate calendar. The first 
account of his  life was set down a full hundred and twenty years later by Ibn 
Ishaq, whose  original was lost and can only be consulted through its 
reworked form, authored  by Ibn Hisham, who died in 834. Adding to this hearsay and 
obscurity, there is  no agreed-upon account of how the Prophet's followers 
assembled the Koran, or of  how his various sayings (some of them written down by 
secretaries) became  codified. And this familiar problem is further complicated
—even more than in the  Christian case—by the matter of succession. Unlike 
Jesus, who apparently  undertook to return to earth very soon and who (pace the 
absurd Dan Brown) left no  known descendants, Muhammad was a general and a 
politician and—though unlike  Alexander of Macedonia a prolific father—left no 
instruction as to who was to  take up his mantle. Quarrels over the leadership 
began almost as soon as he  died, and so Islam had its first major schism—
between the Sunni and the  Shia—before it had even established itself as a 
system. We need take no side in  the schism, except to point out that one at least 
of the schools of  interpretation must be quite mistaken. And the initial 
identification of Islam  with an earthly caliphate, made up of disputatious 
contenders for the said  mantle, marked it from the very beginning as man-made. 
It is said by  some Muslim authorities that during the first caliphate of Abu 
Bakr, immediately  after Muhammad's death, concern arose that his orally 
transmitted words might be  forgotten. So many Muslim soldiers had been killed in 
battle that the number who  had the Koran safely lodged in their memories had 
become alarmingly small. It  was therefore decided to assemble every living 
witness, together with "pieces of  paper, stones, palm leaves, shoulder-blades, 
ribs and bits of leather" on which  sayings had been scribbled, and give them 
to Zaid ibn Thabit, one of the  Prophet's former secretaries, for an 
authoritative collation. Once this had been  done, the believers had something like an 
authorized  version. 
  
____________________________________

If true, this  would date the Koran to a time fairly close to Muhammad's own 
life. But we  swiftly discover that there is no certainty or agreement about 
the truth of the  story. Some say that it was Ali—the fourth and not the first 
caliph, and the  founder of Shiism—who had the idea. Many others—the Sunni 
majority—assert that  it was Caliph Uthman, who reigned from 644 to 656, who 
made the finalized  decision. Told by one of his generals that soldiers from 
different provinces  were fighting over discrepant accounts of the Koran, Uthman 
ordered Zaid ibn  Thabit to bring together the various texts, unify them, and 
have them  transcribed into one. When this task was complete, Uthman ordered 
standard  copies to be sent to Kufa, Basra, Damascus, and elsewhere, with a 
master copy retained in  Medina. Uthman  thus played the canonical role that had 
been taken, in the standardization and  purging and censorship of the Christian 
Bible, by Irenaeus and by Bishop  Athanasius of Alexandria. The roll was 
called, and some texts  were declared sacred and inerrant while others became 
"apocryphal." Outdoing  Athanasius, Uthman ordered that all earlier and rival 
editions be destroyed.   
Even supposing  this version of events to be correct, which would mean that 
no chance existed  for scholars ever to determine or even dispute what really 
happened in  Muhammad's time, Uthman's attempt to abolish disagreement was a 
vain one. The  written Arabic language has two features that make it difficult 
for an outsider  to learn: it uses dots to distinguish consonants like "b" and 
"t," and in its  original form it had no sign or symbol for short vowels, 
which could be rendered  by various dashes or comma-type marks. Vastly different 
readings even of  Uthman's version were enabled by these variations. Arabic 
script itself was not  standardized until the later part of the ninth century, 
and in the meantime the  undotted and oddly voweled Koran was generating wildly 
different explanations of  itself, as it still does. This might not matter in 
the case of the Iliad, but remember that we are  supposed to be talking about 
the unalterable (and final) word of god. There is obviously  a connection 
between the sheer feebleness of this claim and the absolutely  fanatical certainty 
with which it is advanced. To take one instance that can  hardly be called 
negligible, the Arabic words written on the outside of the Dome  of the Rock in 
Jerusalem are different from any version that  appears in the Koran. 
The situation  is even more shaky and deplorable when we come to the hadith, 
or that vast  orally generated secondary literature which supposedly conveys 
the sayings and  actions of Muhammad, the tale of the Koran's compilation, and 
the sayings of  "the companions of the Prophet." Each hadith, in order to be 
considered  authentic, must be supported in turn by an isnad, or chain, of 
supposedly reliable  witnesses. Many Muslims allow their attitude to everyday life 
to be determined  by these anecdotes: regarding dogs as unclean, for example, 
on the sole ground  that Muhammad is said to have done so.  
As one might  expect, the six authorized collections of hadith, which pile 
hearsay upon  hearsay through the unwinding of the long spool of isnads ("A told 
B, who had it  from C, who learned it from D"), were put together centuries 
after the events  they purport to describe. One of the most famous of the six 
compilers, Bukhari,  died 238 years after the death of Muhammad. Bukhari is 
deemed unusually reliable  and honest by Muslims, and seems to have deserved his 
reputation in that, of the  three hundred thousand  attestations he 
accumulated in a lifetime devoted to the project, he ruled that  two hundred thousand of 
them  were entirely valueless and unsupported. Further exclusion of dubious 
traditions  and questionable isnads reduced his grand total to ten thousand 
hadith. You are  free to believe, if you so choose, that out of this formless 
mass of illiterate  and half-remembered witnessing the pious Bukhari, more than 
two centuries later,  managed to select only the pure and undefiled ones that 
would bear examination.   
The likelihood  that any of this humanly derived rhetoric is "inerrant," let 
alone "final," is  conclusively disproved not just by its innumerable 
contradictions and  incoherencies but by the famous episode of the Koran's alleged 
"satanic verses,"  out of which Salman Rushdie was later to make a literary 
project. On this  much-discussed occasion, Muhammad was seeking to conciliate some 
leading Meccan  poly-theists and in due course experienced a "revelation" that 
allowed them  after all to continue worshipping some of the older local 
deities. It struck him  later that this could not be right and that he must have 
inadvertently been  "channeled" by the devil, who for some reason had briefly 
chosen to relax his  habit of combating monotheists on their own ground. 
(Muhammad believed devoutly  not just in the devil himself but in minor desert 
devils, or djinns, as well.) It was noticed even  by some of his wives that the 
Prophet was capable of having a "revelation" that  happened to suit his short-term 
needs, and he was sometimes teased about it. We  are further told—on no 
authority that need be believed—that when he experienced  revelation in public he 
would sometimes be gripped by pain and experience loud  ringing in his ears. 
Beads of sweat would burst out on him, even on the  chilliest of days. Some 
heartless Christian critics have suggested that he was  an epileptic (though they 
fail to notice the same symptoms in the seizure  experienced by Paul on the 
road to Damascus), but there is no need for us to  speculate in this way. It is 
enough to rephrase David Hume's unavoidable  question. Which is more likely—
that a man should be used as a transmitter by god  to deliver some already 
existing revelations, or that he should utter some  already existing revelations 
and believe himself to be, or claim to be, ordered  by god to do so? As for the 
pains and the noises in the head, or the sweat, one  can only regret the 
seeming fact that direct communication with god is not an  experience of calm, 
beauty, and lucidity. 
There is some  question as to whether Islam is a separate religion at all. It 
initially  fulfilled a need among Arabs for a distinctive or special creed, 
and is forever  identified with their language and their impressive later 
conquests, which,  while not as striking as those of the young Alexander of 
Macedonia, certainly  conveyed an idea of being backed by a divine will until they 
petered out at the  fringes of the Balkans and the Mediterranean. But Islam when 
examined is not  much more than a rather obvious and ill-arranged set of 
plagiarisms, helping  itself from earlier books and traditions as occasion 
appeared to require. Thus,  far from being "born in the clear light of history," as 
Ernest Renan so  generously phrased it, Islam in its origins is just as shady 
and approximate as  those from which it took its borrowings. It makes immense 
claims for itself,  invokes prostrate submission or "surrender" as a maxim to 
its adherents, and  demands deference and respect from nonbelievers into the 
bargain. There is  nothing—absolutely nothing—in its teachings that can even 
begin to justify such  arrogance and presumption. 
The prophet  died in the year 632 of our own approximate calendar. The first 
account of his  life was set down a full hundred and twenty years later by Ibn 
Ishaq, whose  original was lost and can only be consulted through its 
reworked form, authored  by Ibn Hisham, who died in 834. Adding to this hearsay and 
obscurity, there is  no agreed-upon account of how the Prophet's followers 
assembled the Koran, or of  how his various sayings (some of them written down by 
secretaries) became  codified. And this familiar problem is further complicated
—even more than in the  Christian case—by the matter of succession. Unlike 
Jesus, who apparently  undertook to return to earth very soon and who (pace the 
absurd Dan Brown) left no  known descendants, Muhammad was a general and a 
politician and—though unlike  Alexander of Macedonia a prolific father—left no 
instruction as to who was to  take up his mantle. Quarrels over the leadership 
began almost as soon as he  died, and so Islam had its first major schism—
between the Sunni and the  Shia—before it had even established itself as a 
system. We need take no side in  the schism, except to point out that one at least 
of the schools of  interpretation must be quite mistaken. And the initial 
identification of Islam  with an earthly caliphate, made up of disputatious 
contenders for the said  mantle, marked it from the very beginning as man-made. 
It is said by  some Muslim authorities that during the first caliphate of Abu 
Bakr, immediately  after Muhammad's death, concern arose that his orally 
transmitted words might be  forgotten. So many Muslim soldiers had been killed in 
battle that the number who  had the Koran safely lodged in their memories had 
become alarmingly small. It  was therefore decided to assemble every living 
witness, together with "pieces of  paper, stones, palm leaves, shoulder-blades, 
ribs and bits of leather" on which  sayings had been scribbled, and give them 
to Zaid ibn Thabit, one of the  Prophet's former secretaries, for an 
authoritative collation. Once this had been  done, the believers had something like an 
authorized  version. 
If true, this  would date the Koran to a time fairly close to Muhammad's own 
life. But we  swiftly discover that there is no certainty or agreement about 
the truth of the  story. Some say that it was Ali—the fourth and not the first 
caliph, and the  founder of Shiism—who had the idea. Many others—the Sunni 
majority—assert that  it was Caliph Uthman, who reigned from 644 to 656, who 
made the finalized  decision. Told by one of his generals that soldiers from 
different provinces  were fighting over discrepant accounts of the Koran, Uthman 
ordered Zaid ibn  Thabit to bring together the various texts, unify them, and 
have them  transcribed into one. When this task was complete, Uthman ordered 
standard  copies to be sent to Kufa, Basra, Damascus, and elsewhere, with a 
master copy retained in  Medina. Uthman  thus played the canonical role that had 
been taken, in the standardization and  purging and censorship of the Christian 
Bible, by Irenaeus and by Bishop  Athanasius of Alexandria. The roll was 
called, and some texts  were declared sacred and inerrant while others became 
"apocryphal." Outdoing  Athanasius, Uthman ordered that all earlier and rival 
editions be destroyed.   
Even supposing  this version of events to be correct, which would mean that 
no chance existed  for scholars ever to determine or even dispute what really 
happened in  Muhammad's time, Uthman's attempt to abolish disagreement was a 
vain one. The  written Arabic language has two features that make it difficult 
for an outsider  to learn: it uses dots to distinguish consonants like "b" and 
"t," and in its  original form it had no sign or symbol for short vowels, 
which could be rendered  by various dashes or comma-type marks. Vastly different 
readings even of  Uthman's version were enabled by these variations. Arabic 
script itself was not  standardized until the later part of the ninth century, 
and in the meantime the  undotted and oddly voweled Koran was generating wildly 
different explanations of  itself, as it still does. This might not matter in 
the case of the Iliad, but remember that we are  supposed to be talking about 
the unalterable (and final) word of god. There is obviously  a connection 
between the sheer feebleness of this claim and the absolutely  fanatical certainty 
with which it is advanced. To take one instance that can  hardly be called 
negligible, the Arabic words written on the outside of the Dome  of the Rock in 
Jerusalem are different from any version that  appears in the Koran. 
The situation  is even more shaky and deplorable when we come to the hadith, 
or that vast  orally generated secondary literature which supposedly conveys 
the sayings and  actions of Muhammad, the tale of the Koran's compilation, and 
the sayings of  "the companions of the Prophet." Each hadith, in order to be 
considered  authentic, must be supported in turn by an isnad, or chain, of 
supposedly reliable  witnesses. Many Muslims allow their attitude to everyday life 
to be determined  by these anecdotes: regarding dogs as unclean, for example, 
on the sole ground  that Muhammad is said to have done so.  
As one might  expect, the six authorized collections of hadith, which pile 
hearsay upon  hearsay through the unwinding of the long spool of isnads ("A told 
B, who had it  from C, who learned it from D"), were put together centuries 
after the events  they purport to describe. One of the most famous of the six 
compilers, Bukhari,  died 238 years after the death of Muhammad. Bukhari is 
deemed unusually reliable  and honest by Muslims, and seems to have deserved his 
reputation in that, of the  three hundred thousand  attestations he 
accumulated in a lifetime devoted to the project, he ruled that  two hundred thousand of 
them  were entirely valueless and unsupported. Further exclusion of dubious 
traditions  and questionable isnads reduced his grand total to ten thousand 
hadith. You are  free to believe, if you so choose, that out of this formless 
mass of illiterate  and half-remembered witnessing the pious Bukhari, more than 
two centuries later,  managed to select only the pure and undefiled ones that 
would bear examination.   
The likelihood  that any of this humanly derived rhetoric is "inerrant," let 
alone "final," is  conclusively disproved not just by its innumerable 
contradictions and  incoherencies but by the famous episode of the Koran's alleged 
"satanic verses,"  out of which Salman Rushdie was later to make a literary 
project. On this  much-discussed occasion, Muhammad was seeking to conciliate some 
leading Meccan  poly-theists and in due course experienced a "revelation" that 
allowed them  after all to continue worshipping some of the older local 
deities. It struck him  later that this could not be right and that he must have 
inadvertently been  "channeled" by the devil, who for some reason had briefly 
chosen to relax his  habit of combating monotheists on their own ground. 
(Muhammad believed devoutly  not just in the devil himself but in minor desert 
devils, or djinns, as well.) It was noticed even  by some of his wives that the 
Prophet was capable of having a "revelation" that  happened to suit his short-term 
needs, and he was sometimes teased about it. We  are further told—on no 
authority that need be believed—that when he experienced  revelation in public he 
would sometimes be gripped by pain and experience loud  ringing in his ears. 
Beads of sweat would burst out on him, even on the  chilliest of days. Some 
heartless Christian critics have suggested that he was  an epileptic (though they 
fail to notice the same symptoms in the seizure  experienced by Paul on the 
road to Damascus), but there is no need for us to  speculate in this way. It is 
enough to rephrase David Hume's unavoidable  question. Which is more likely—
that a man should be used as a transmitter by god  to deliver some already 
existing revelations, or that he should utter some  already existing revelations 
and believe himself to be, or claim to be, ordered  by god to do so? As for the 
pains and the noises in the head, or the sweat, one  can only regret the 
seeming fact that direct communication with god is not an  experience of calm, 
beauty, and lucidity. 


Cynthia N.  Vance
Strategics International Inc.
8245 SW 116 Terrace
Miami, Florida,  33156
305-378-1327; fax 305-378-9178
_http://members.aol.com/facilitationfla_ 
(http://members.aol.com/facilitationfla) 

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