What does the video say about the 'religion of peace' argument?
The video argues the claim relies on early peaceful verses (e.g., 5:32) but is undermined by later Medinan verses (e.g., 9:5, 9:29); Muslims resolve tensions via naskh (abrogation), which the video says prioritizes later, more militant verses.
Does the video accept that the Quran was perfectly preserved?
No — it presents evidence from Hadith, the seven ahruf doctrine, multiple qira'at, and the Sana'a palimpsest to argue that variant readings existed and that Uthman's standardization involved destroying other codices.
Are 'scientific miracles' in the Quran convincing according to the video?
The video rates these claims as weak, saying the Quranic language is vague and sometimes requires charitable interpretation, while some verses conflict with modern science (e.g., claims about sperm origin).
How does the video evaluate claims that Muhammad was a moral exemplar?
It disputes that claim, citing primary sources about Muhammad's marriage to Aisha as a child, the Banu Qurayza massacre, and Quranic/hadith material on slaves and concubinage to challenge his moral exemplarity.
Does the video's analysis treat Islamic expansion as proof of divine truth?
No — the video calls expansion 'might makes right,' arguing rapid conquest and a historical 'golden age' are insufficient evidence of divine mandate.