The extent to which my worst fears were exceeded, exceeded my worst fears.
It was a 4-hour event with two lectures plus Q&A. The audience consisted of 60 Muslim students and me. This must have been a very high proportion of the Muslim students at the college. What dismayed me, was not just that the event took place at all, but that the audience evidently lapped it up. Not a glimmer of dissent or debate.
Harun Yahya was the main speaker and you can get a flavour of his idiocy from his website . Here's a sentence plucked at random: "Harun Yahya is well-known as an author who has written very important works disclosing the imposture of evolutionists, the invalidity of their claims and the dark liaisons between Darwinism and bloody ideologies."
Harun Yahya was the main speaker and you can get a flavour of his idiocy from his website . Here's a sentence plucked at random: "Harun Yahya is well-known as an author who has written very important works disclosing the imposture of evolutionists, the invalidity of their claims and the dark liaisons between Darwinism and bloody ideologies."
I got my question in first, hoping that others would come in behind me. But none did so. I said I was disappointed the Muslim Cultural Society had chosen to make anti-science their theme, and asked, why didn’t they focus on the story of Arab and Muslim science being the foundation of European science?
Afterwards they were all very polite about it, thanked me for coming, and tried to convert me! Jim al Khalili is the man they should be inviting, I suggested to one of the organisers. I don’t think they will.
Are the Muslim students at UCC unusual?
Until you told me that Muslim and Arab science was the foundation of European science, I didn't know. I wonder what proportion of the students at this lecture knew that. It doesn't sound like your question prompted much debate, but I would like to hear you and one of the curators of that event debating the subject.
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