Qur’an Majid (the Glorious) is a book of guidance
to humanity. It is known by several names. It is also known as Kitabul Hikmat or
the Book of Wisdom. In over 1,100 verses, the importance of thinking, reflecting
and pondering on the Signs of Allah (SWT) is emphasized. For example
“Behold, verily in
these things
There are Signs for
those who understand
--Qur’an, 13:4
--Qur’an, 13:4
“ Lo! Herein is
indeed a portent for people
Who
reflect.”
-- Qur’an, 16: 11
-- Qur’an, 16: 11
There are several
Ayath in the Qur’an in which we are asked to understand the Signs (natural
phenomena, e.g. 15: 75, 16:
12, 13, 67, 69, etc.,
The greatest gift of Allah (SWT) to man (mankind)
is the mind. The mind of man has the ability to think, reflect, ponder, and
rationalize. This ability of man to think distinguishes him from all the animals
on earth. Even with a high degree of advancement in the neurosciences, our
knowledge of memory, the thinking process and consciousness is very little. Dr.
John Eccles the Nobel Prize Winner in Physiology or Medicine for his pioneering
work on the “synapse” says in his book “ THE EVOLUTION OF THE BRAIN” that the
consciousness of man cannot be explained by evolution. It is indeed a mystery
how consciousness arose. Eccles argues that as all “materialist solutions fail
to account for our experienced uniqueness, I am constrained to attribute the
uniqueness of the Self or Soul to a supernatural spiritual creation. Each Soul
is a new Divine creation which is implanted into the growing fetus at some time
between conception and birth.”
The Muslims believe that the early embryo called
the blastocyst, implants in the wall of the uterus about 10 days after
fertilization. It takes on a human appearance during the eighth week. Thus, L~O
to ~5 nights after its implantation in the uterus, it would be 50 to 55 days old
and has an obvious human appearance. Abdullah b. Masu’ud reported the Prophet
(peace be upon him) as saying, “ When ~I0 nights pass after the semen gets into
the womb, Allah sends the angel and gives him the shape. Then he creates his
sense of hearing, sense of sight, his skin, his flesh, his bones, and then says:
My Lord, would he be male or female? And your Lord decides as He desires....”
(Muslim).
Unlike other religions Islam is not a blind faith
with dogmas to be followed without questioning. Islam is called the most
rationalistic religion and hence one does not see any contradiction between
Islam and science. Actually many modern scientific discoveries lend support to
the revelations in the Qur’an pertaining to natural sciences or natural
phenomena. This article tries to shed some light on how the thinking process
takes place in the three pounds weight human brain.
The thinking process takes place in the brain,
which is the master control center of the body. The brain is an organ that
continuously receives information from the senses about the conditions both
inside and outside the body. Once the information is received, it is immediately
analyzed and then the brain sends out messages to control body functions and
actions. Past experience is also stored in the brain and this enables learning,
and remembering possible. Another important thing about the brain is that it is
the source of thinking, moods, and emotions.
Apes, dolphins, and whales have an exceptionally
well—developed brain. Allah (SWT) has blessed human beings with the most highly
developed brain of all. It consists of billions of brain cells called neurons,
which are interconnected cells and enable human beings to use language, create
works of art, do scientific research, write books, invent and solve difficult
problems. An adult brain weighs about 3 pounds or 1.4 kilograms. A newborn has
1-pound brain and by the time the child reaches 6 years, acquires the full
weight brain of 3 pounds. During this period the child learns and acquires new
behavior patterns at the fastest rate in life.
The spinal cord carries messages between the brain
and other parts of the body. The brain is not only a computer but also is a
chemical factory. Brain cell produce electrical signals and sends them from one
cell to the other along pathways called circuits. Just like in the computer, the
electrical circuits receive, process, store, and retrieve information. The
electrical signals in the brain are created in the brain by chemical means
whereas in the computer needs an outside energy source.
Although neurosciences or neurobiology are the
fields of study to understand the brain, scientists do not know how the brain
works using the modern laws of physics and chemistry.
The brain is mainly divided into three parts:
(1)
The cerebrum,
which makes up about 85 percent of the weight of the human brain. The outermost
of the cerebrum is called the cerebral cortex.
(2)
The
cerebellum, which is part of the brain responsible for balance, posture, and the
coordination of movement. Cerebellum is located below the back part of the
cerebrum. And
(3)
The brain
stem, which is a stalk-like structure that connects the main part, the cerebrum
with the spinal cord. The bottom part of the brain stem is called the medulla
oblongata or medulla. The medulla has nerve centers that control breathing,
heartbeat, and many other vital body processes. The cerebrum has two
hemispheres, the left and the right. The major’ sensory and motor pathways
between the body and the cerebrum cross over as they pass through the medulla.
Each cerebral hemisphere thus controls the opposite side of the body.
THE INTELLECT
The human mind is a
source of facts and fantasies, ideas and ideologies, faculties and feelings. The
human mind has fascinated mankind throughout the ages. For hundreds of years
philosophers and religious people were searching for the knowledge of the mind,
and its relationship to the body. Only recently the study of mind has come under
scientific domain. Scientists are defining and trying to quantify such abstract
entities as intelligence and personality, emotions and creativity.
Great advances have been made in correlating the
parts of the brain with certain functions of the mind. It is now known, that the
two halves of the brain are involved in different kinds of creativity and
activity. For example the left hemisphere is involved mainly for inference,
deduction and language, whereas the right brain furnishes our Visio-spatial
skills, our creativity and our appreciation of form and color.
Inspite of the many advances, there are still,
many unknown areas. We still do not know the specific anatomical relationships
between intellectual functions and clusters of brain cells. Memory,
self—awareness and thought processes are so complex that they are believed to
require the involvement of the whole brain rather than one or two restricted
regions.
The study of man’s mental processes remain very
engrossing and many of the answers are so remote, that this itself is an
indication of the phenomenal powers of the cerebrum, which is the seat of human
consciousness and of all learning, speech, thought and recall. For
neuroscientists this is the most challenging field of exploration of all. The
availability of High Technology such as SPECT (Single Photon Emission
Tomography) and PET (Positron Emission Tomography) in Nuclear Medicine is
accelerating our understanding of the structure and function of the brain and in
understanding diseases related to the brain such as schizophrenia, Alzheimer’s
disease, Parkinson’s disease, etc.
PERSONALITY
The definition of personality is the nature of man
and his behavior. It is believed that the personality originates in the frontal
lobe, because it is associated with higher mental activity. The largest part of
the cerebral cortex, and still the least understood, the frontal lobe is the
great mass of tissue, which extends from the region behind the forehead to the
central sulcus, or groove. The most intelligent animals have the largest frontal
lobes. Based on this it was considered that the center of emotional control as
well as the seat of intelligence is the frontal lobe. However, this assumption
is discarded because it is now known that patients with frontal-lobe injury
achieve normal scores on most standard intelligence tests. What is known today
is that the frontal lobe is responsible for planning and judgment and for giving
us the ability to form concepts, by the use of information from other areas of
the brain, including the memory stores.
Today there are so many different and often
contradictory views of personality; each backed by a fund of evidence, that it
is doubtful whether there will ever be one comprehensive theory to account for
the complex nature of man. A simple definition of personality, which is
acceptable by everyone, remains one of neuroscience’s greatest challenges.
THE LOGICAL BRAIN
In 1874 the British neurologist John H. Jackson
described the left hemisphere of the brain as the seat of the “faculty of
expression.” Now it is known that the left-brain has the power of logic.
Patients who have only a functioning left hemisphere, act more like total
persons than individuals with only a functioning right hemisphere. These
patients can speak, and can write with their right hands. The left hemisphere
permits them to describe feelings and sensations, although they cannot draw
shapes and they are poor in music. It is also known that damage to the left
hemisphere often interferes with language ability. Hence they difficulty in
speaking or they cannot speak at all. Numbers, mathematics and logic, and the
abilities necessary to process a mass of information into words, actions and
thoughts are also controlled by the left cerebral hemisphere, which functions as
the logical brain. The left hemispheric activity has been evaluated by
performing Intelligence tests, which investigate vocabulary, verbal
comprehension, memory and mental arithmetic. The difference in abilities between
the two cerebral hemispheres seems to be unique to human beings. One reason why
the two parts of the brain became specialized in this way is that language and
logic call for more-ordered thought processes than the brain-power needed for
spatial orientation. The two halves of the brain are complementary, giving human
beings alternative modes of thought, which they can utilize, in an increasingly
complex world. The right hemisphere is of equal importance and is principally
responsible for Visio-spatial ability, for artistic ability and for the
understanding and appreciation of music.
LEARNING
When we are awake we experience new things and
store them in our memories for future use. As a result of these past
experiences, we respond in certain ways in the future. This is the process of’
learning. Walking, taking medicines to cure pain, wearing clothes, reading a
book- are all examples of’ learned responses, and many other forms of behavior
which we have taken for granted. Learning has a great influence on our lives, on
our likes and dislikes, our opinions and beliefs, and even the pattern of the
society in which we live. For a long time it was thought that learning is
associated with a stimulus and response relationships, and correct responses
being “stamped in” with a reward. Later it was believed that all learning was
built up from basic units of behavior called conditional reflexes. Rewarding
them for certain behavior and punishing them for certain responses or to
“unlearn” the behavior or suppression of a certain habit can train animals.
Psychiatrists are attempting to cure undesirable patterns of’ behavior by using
the principles of conditioning and counterconditiong. Treatment of alcoholism
and phobias are two examples. American psychologist B.F. Skinner tried to
explain human behavior in terms of rewards and punishment. He said money could
be used as a reward in order to reinforce certain activities in humans. But
human beings’ motivation to learn cannot be explained so simply.
Our intelligence makes learning and behavior far
more complex than a matter of more rewards and punishments. Learning for its own
sake is found not only in man, but also in other animals to which we attribute
curiosity.
Allah (SWT) has blessed human beings with an
ability to learn that far exceeds that of any other animal. By learning language
human beings have taken one of the greatest steps forward in intellectual
advancement. Through language not only can we learn from our own experiences but
we can also pass on this learning to others.
MEMORY
Memory is not a distinct physical entity, which is
located somewhere in the brain. Memory is nowhere near as tangible as a part of
the body. It is known not as a thing, but as a fundamental function built into
the living brain. Without memory we would be mindless, unable to learn, to read,
to write, to talk or even to think. Without memory we could comprehend nothing
and communicate nothing. Without our awareness, for every fraction of every
second, information is entering the brain and memory is at work. Whether
transiently or for long periods, the information from all our senses modifies
the brain’s activity in some way, so that events are “remembered” in its complex
circuits.
Nobody can explain the physical basis of memory.
It appears that there are quite distinct stages in the process of acquiring and
storing information. When information is acquired, there is first an extremely
brief stage, which is called sensory storage, or sometimes immediate forgetting,
and this is followed by short-term memory. Long-term memory, the
storage of information for considerable periods, may or may not follow.
Short-term memory retains information and passes it into long-term memory only
if the information is “rehearsed”- that is, thought about again and again by
making a conscious effort. If’ not the information will be lost in less than 30
seconds. For example in order to dial, one has to repeat a telephone number to
oneself after looking it up. Without rehearsal, a seven—digit number is
forgotten in seconds. If sufficient rehearsal is given, it may pass into
long—term memory and be remembered for days or even years. Nobody knows how
information is retained in long-term memory. Nor is it even known whether one
particular memory is stored in a specific part of the brain, or diffusely
throughout it.
Besides acquisition (registration), and retention,
memory has a third component called “recall.” Again it is not known how this
process works. Also how, out of all the memories we store up in our lives, we
can select certain ones at will quite readily, while others seem to remain
temporarily inaccessible and yet others seem to disappear forever.
MENTAL SKILLS
One of the most baffling abstracts for human
beings to grasp is the size and scope of their own intelligence. Human
intelligence is a resource so much greater than anything to be found in the
animal world. Intelligence is difficult to define. Some say intelligence is a
collection of abilities all closely interwoven. It is well recognized that
intelligence is a function of the entire brain and nervous system. The brain as
a whole is implicated, rather than any specific part of it, although its two
hemispheres are involved in different types of ability. Intelligence is not
related to the brain’s size.
Studies of identical twins show that intelligence
is inherited. Birth order is a modifier of intelligence. First-born children
tend to be more intelligent than their siblings. Inspite of genetic endowment, a
satisfactory environment is essential to the attainment of’ high intelligence
levels. This realization is very important for minorities living in any country,
and particularly so for Muslims living in India, occupied Palestine or
Afro-Americans living in USA.
Creativity is a vital feature of intellect.
Geniuses are in a class of their own, most of whom share a close relationship
with their parents. They tend to develop early and experience a very unusual
childhood. Francis Galton, an early pioneer in the measurement of
intelligence, knew several languages and was reading Homer at the age of six.
Mozart, who played the harpsichord at the age of three, was composing at four
and touring at six. At the age of 10 Ibn Sina was well versed in Qur’an and
different branches of literature. Before he reached the age of 17 he mastered
logic, geometry, astronomy, medicine, physics and metaphysics. Other reputed
physicians in difficult cases consulted him. It is a fact that Olympian
intelligence does not necessarily correlate well with success in life.
Psychologists do not know what proportion of IQ (Intelligence Quotient) may
contribute to measure of’ academic successes, such as examinations, or of
commercial or industrial triumph. Whatever its dimensions, intelligence is still
only a part of’ what makes an individual an outstanding human being.
CREATIVITY
Of all the abilities of human beings, the creative
faculty has always been regarded as the most mysterious. In many cultures,
creativity is believed to emanate from a divine or at least an unconscious
source, a power not to be summoned up at will or brought under control by
ordinary conscious sources. Ramanujan, the South Indian mathematical genius gave
credit to his family goddess for his mathematical creativity. Mozart, speaking
of his musical Ideas, said, “Whence and how they come, I know not, nor can I
force them...I really do not aim at any originality.” The French Mathematician
Jules Poincare described how an important mathematical insight came to him as he
boarded a bus. “At the moment when I put my foot on the step the idea came to
me, without anything in my former thought seeming to have paved the way for it.”
Modern psychology has failed to explain
creativity in objective and logical terms. Recently it is known that the
difference between the highly creative groups and relatively noncreative groups
did not lie in intelligence as it is measured by intelligence tests. It is
possible for a creative individual to be sharply differentiated from the others
on the basis of personality measures. It has been shown that highly creative
people tend to be introverted, need long periods of solitude and seem to have
little time for what they regard as the trivia of every day life and social
activity. They tend to be strongly intuitive and more interested in the abstract
meaning of the outside world than in the way it appears to the senses. Creative
people have poor human relationship and may avoid social gatherings. Creative
individuals appear to be relatively free from conventional restraints and are
not particularly concerned with what other people think of them.
There are two types of creative personalities-the
artistic and scientific. Musicians and creative scientists tend to be more
emotionally stable than the average individual, when this is not so their
instability emerges as anxiety, depression, social fears or excitability, rather
than neurosis. Among artists and writers, however, genius often appears to be
akin to madness; serious neurosis, drug or alcohol addiction or insanity
appearing with abnormal frequency. There is no relationship between creativity
and IQ, because it is quite possible to be highly creative but of average
intelligence or to be of high intelligence but lack originality.
Convergent-thinking people are inclined to approach problems logically and find
conventional solutions. Whereas divergent thinkers tend to use nonlogical or
“lateral” thinking in order to find fresh and no conventional approaches. Modern
Western educational school system favors the intelligent noncreative child (the
converger) over the creative child. The converger is likely to produce the kind
of work the academic machine asks for, not doubting the textbooks. On the other
hand the creative child may not have a very likable personality. He is found to
be shy, withdrawn, not obeying the teacher, preferring to follow his own
interests rather than those laid down in the curriculum. One important aspect
of’ creativity is independence from the opinions of others. People of
creativity are perceived as a danger and threat in Muslim countries particularly
to the Muslim rulers and the Ulemas (Muslim Scholars). Unfortunately the Muslims
of creativity are eliminated from society either by confinement in jails or by
execution. They become a target of hatred. Muslims should be encouraged to voice
every passing notion, however wild, without self-censorship or criticism. This
will lead to an increase in creativity. Other ways in which creativity can be
increased have been suggested by studies of the states of mind in which creative
people usually perceive their insights. The pattern remains constant. The mind
must be prepared by the collection of all relevant information. There are
persistent attempts to come to terms with the problem in a logical fashion while
being careful not to accept a conventional solution. But the answer itself, the
creative idea, nearly always comes at a time when the individual is not
concentrating on the problem, but is in a peaceful state of drowsiness, waking
dream or reverie.
Creative people tell us that creative insights
often seem to occur on train or bus journeys or in the bath, both situations,
which can induce, by their monotony, a trancelike condition. In these states of
consciousness the barriers against the unconscious are lowered and fantasy and
imagery are allowed free play. And it is from the unconscious, with its faculty
for synthesizing across gaps which logic is insufficient to span, and its
relative freedom from conformity and convention, that creativity ultimately
springs.
SUMMARY
Scientists have an
elementary understanding of the extraordinary complicated processes of thinking
and remembering. Thinking involves processing information over circuits in the
association cortex and other parts of the brain. These circuits enable the brain
to combine information stored in the memory with information gathered by the
senses. Scientists are just beginning to understand the brain’s simplest
circuits. The forming of abstract ideas and the study of’ difficult subjects
must require circuits of truly astonishing complexity. Explanation of these
types of thinking is still beyond scientists’ understanding. Scientists also
know little about the physical basis of memory. But evidence suggests that
memories may be formed through the establishment of new brain circuits or the
alteration of existing circuits. Either process would involve changes at the
synapses that is, at the points where impulses pass from one neuron (brain cell)
to another. Extensive research will be required to verify this general
explanation of memory formation and to discover the specific details of the
processes involved.
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