Page 252 - The Importance of the Ahl Al-Sunnah
P. 252

HARUN YAHYA

            has been since the creation of man.
              So far, no man-made visual or recording apparatus has been
            as sensitive and successful in perceiving sensory data as are the
            eye and the ear. However, as far as seeing and hearing are con-
            cerned, a far greater truth lies beyond all this.

              To Whom Does the Consciousness That Sees
              and Hears Within the Brain Belong?
              Who watches an alluring world in the brain, listens to sym-
            phonies and the twittering of birds, and smells the rose?
              The stimulations coming from a person's eyes, ears, and
            nose travel to the brain as electro-chemical nerve impulses. In
            biology, physiology, and biochemistry books, you can find
            many details about how this image forms in the brain.
            However, you will never come across the most important fact:
            Who perceives these electro-chemical nerve impulses as
            images, sounds, odors, and sensory events in the brain? There
            is a consciousness in the brain that perceives all this without
            feeling any need for an eye, an ear, and a nose. To whom does
            this consciousness belong? Of course it does not belong to the
            nerves, the fat layer, and neurons comprising the brain. This is
            why Darwinist-materialists, who believe that everything is
            comprised of matter, cannot answer these questions.
              For this consciousness is the spirit created by Allah, which
            needs neither the eye to watch the images nor the ear to hear
            the sounds. Furthermore, it does not need the brain to think.
              Everyone who reads this explicit and scientific fact should
            ponder on Almighty Allah, and fear and seek refuge in Him, for
            He squeezes the entire universe in a pitch-dark place of a few
            cubic centimeters in a three-dimensional, colored, shadowy,
            and luminous form.

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