Thursday, March 18, 2010

Government Playmates - DO Sappe, Minivan News and Hilath

It seems that some journalists are above the law. Because when they mock and attack others and their faith and the very faith of this nation, there have been no press release and action taken against them.
If you (MJA) wants to protect and practice the article 27 in its full meaning than I suggest to work within the walls of it and to be a free and fair association rather than promoting a certain propaganda.
It’s very sad that that the Maldivian police falls in to a trap and portray themselves as if they are a privet company providing security for anyone who pay them. Police issuing a press release stating that they will hunt down anyone who gives out death threats and anti Islamic articles as if it’s very hard to hunt them down. There are several well known people like Ahmed Moosa (DO sappe),and Hilath Rasheed . So if the great police force of our nation wants to bring an end to these threats and peace to this nation I suggest to fully practice our constitution and to be fair in all events conducted by the police and not to promote any political propaganda.And never was it a problem and a fear when the state minister for Islamic Affairs, Mr. Mohamed Shaheem Ali Saeed was called and given a death threat even though police confirmed it, so was the threat to Umar Naseer (hallakee umar or hallala umar). But all of a sudden Hilath and DO Sappe is very important. I wonder why?
It is very obvious if this nation is a 100% Muslim country it will be in peace and prosper and if they have united it will be very hard for “some people” to sell out this nation so they need the community to have different factions and different ideologies. READ MORE


Sunday, March 14, 2010

Modern versions of islam and the maldives


A devout Muslim, Ibn al-Haitham believed that human beings are flawed and only God is perfect. To discover the truth about nature, Ibn a-Haitham reasoned, one had to eliminate human opinion and allow the universe to speak for itself through physical experiments. "The seeker after truth is not one who studies the writings of the ancients and, following his natural disposition, puts his trust in them," the first scientist wrote, "but rather the one who suspects his faith in them and questions what he gathers from them, the one who submits to argument and demonstration."
Descartes, the renowned French philosopher and mathematician, and, before him. Imam Ghazali in his book " Saviour from Misguidance" both chose 'doubt' as a point of departure for their enquiry into certainty. In fact, Descartes : used 'doubt as a means to reach certainty.

Descartes evolved the theory of doubt. He doubted everything, even his own self, yet when he thought of it he could have no doubt of its existence. And since there is no doubt without a doubter he made the famous statement "I think, therefore I exist". Of course he existed, but who brought him into that existence? It goes without saying that material objects are inanimate and devoid of the power of reasoning. But can an irrational being create a rational being? How could a person who does not possess something give it to others? READ MORE

Saturday, March 13, 2010

The father of physics Ibn al-Haytham - ( The Secret Scientists-BBC )

Ibn al Haytham - Abū ʿAlī al-Ḥasan ibn al-Ḥasan ibn al-Haytham, Born in Basra Iraq in 965. Known in the West as Alhazen, Alhacen, or Alhazeni, he was the first person to test hypotheses with verifiable experiments, developing the scientific method more than 200 years before European scholars learned of it.
He made significant contributions to the principles of optics, as well as to anatomy, astronomy, engineering, mathematics, medicine, ophthalmology, philosophy, physics, psychology, visual perception, and to science in general with his early application of the scientific method.
In his massive study of light and vision, Kitâb al-Manâzir (Book of Optics ), Ibn al-Haytham submitted every hypothesis to a physical test or mathematical proof. To test his hypothesis that "lights and colors do not blend in the air," for example, Ibn al-Haytham devised the world's first camera obscura, observed what happened when light rays intersected at its aperture, and recorded the results. Throughout his investigations, Ibn al-Haytham followed all the steps of the scientific method.
Richard Powers nominated Ibn al-Haytham's scientific method and scientific skepticism as the most influential idea of the second millennium.
Recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics Abdus Salam considered Ibn-al-Haytham "one of the greatest physicists of all time".
George Sarton, the father of the history of science, wrote that "Ibn Haytham's writings reveal his fine development of the experimental faculty" and considered him "not only the greatest Muslim physicist, but by all means the greatest of mediaeval times".
Robert S. Elliot considers Ibn al-Haytham to be "one of the ablest students of optics of all times".
The author Bradley Steffens considers him to be the "first scientist".
and Professor Jim Al-Khalili also considers him the "world's first true scientist".

Friday, March 12, 2010

Death threat against maldivian artist from Anti-Islamic Movement

( PS: Siruarts, you may NOT base ANY of your fapping material off ANY picture on this blog. If you do, I'll f....king hunt you down and then radio a bunch of angry monkeys your coordinates. Be afraid - because...Read More

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Biruni - ( The Secret Scientists - BBC )

His full name was Abu Rayhan Muhammad Ibn Ahmad Biruni. He was born in September of 973 in Khwarezm, Khorasan and died in another city of Khorasan, Ghazna. He was a Tajik scholar and scientist and one of the most outstanding figure and learned man of his age.
Biruni had excelled in many fields of the knowledge of the day particularly in astronomy, mathematics, chronology, physics, medicine, and history.

In 1030, Biruni completed the book Tarikh al-Hind (History of India). Many scholars consider this masterpiece as the most important treatise on Indian history and culture before twentieth century. The degree of objectivity and details that is displayed in this book Tarikh al-Hind is without parallel for the time and it is still of great value to the contemporary scholars.


He also completed another major book almost in the same time. It is the book called Kitab al-qanun al-Masudi fi l-hay a wa l-nujum (Canon of Masudi) and was dedicated to the Sultan Masud son of Sultan Mahmoud Ghaznavid. This book is the largest and most important of Biruni's mathematical, geographical and astronomical studies.
Biruni himself has claimed to have authored more than one hundred treatise of varying length in his life time. They include works on arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and toward the end of his career, works on medical sciences. His collection of Indian and Chinese minerals, drugs, potions and other concoctions, still not systematically studied and may be of immense value to pharmacology.

His broad knowledge of astronomy and geography led him to the verge of modern scientific ideas. He believed that the apparent movement of celestial bodies are due to rotation of earth around its axis and also made accurate calculation of latitude and longitude. On the basis of reports of various flotsam found in the seas, He reasoned that the continent of Africa must be surrounded by water. It was a deviation from the popular Ptolemaic geography which was popular in the West and asserted the continent of Africa extended indefinitely to the south. On examining the Indus Valley, Biruni correctly guessed that once it had been a shallow sea filled in through the centuries by alluvial deposits from the river. Biruni also explained the operations of artesian springs and wells in terms of modern hydrostatic principles. He also determined with remarkable accuracy the densities of more than a dozen precious stones and metals.