Since the revelation of the Holy Quran until now, the opponents of the Islamic religion have tried to cast doubts on the divine origin of the Quran, sometimes considering it a creation of the human mind and sometimes taken from previous sources and books of other religions. This issue has been considered among western researchers as a hypothesis that the Holy Quran was adapted from the books of other religions. Muslim experts have rejected this view and are unanimous in rejecting it and have argued that since the origin of all the books of divine religions is the same, similarities may be found in it, but this does not mean that these holy books have been adapted from each other. On the other hand, in many verses of the Qur'an, there are differences with the existing books of previous religions. The purpose of this research is to answer the doubts raised by orientalists regarding the Qur'an. This research was done with analytical and descriptive method and compiled using library sources.
mousavi, S. (2024). Sources of the Holy Quran;
An answer to the doubt that the Torah and the Bible are the source of the Quran. Bi-Quarterly Findings of Interpretation, 3(6), 79-100. doi: 10.22034/oo1.2024.100373
MLA
sayed taqi mousavi. "Sources of the Holy Quran;
An answer to the doubt that the Torah and the Bible are the source of the Quran". Bi-Quarterly Findings of Interpretation, 3, 6, 2024, 79-100. doi: 10.22034/oo1.2024.100373
HARVARD
mousavi, S. (2024). 'Sources of the Holy Quran;
An answer to the doubt that the Torah and the Bible are the source of the Quran', Bi-Quarterly Findings of Interpretation, 3(6), pp. 79-100. doi: 10.22034/oo1.2024.100373
VANCOUVER
mousavi, S. Sources of the Holy Quran;
An answer to the doubt that the Torah and the Bible are the source of the Quran. Bi-Quarterly Findings of Interpretation, 2024; 3(6): 79-100. doi: 10.22034/oo1.2024.100373