DeExupery:
Wrong. You are the first one to state that thatās impossible for Mohammed to copy from Talmud.
wrong, the initial claim was made by none other than yourself. why didnāt you quote the statement i quoted from you in that very same post?
DeExupery:
And if it has been in Talmud, itās not an impossibility that Mohammed PBUH had already read it, or know it, for he lived in a place where there were a lot of Jews (the previous Arabia).
to which i said that it was impossible because prophet muhammad was illiterate; meaning: it was impossible to have read it because of this fact.
as for the last portion of your statement here, f.y.i., arabia was
not āa place where there were a lot of jewsā. the people of the book in general were a large minority in arabia, with the jews of that time mostly settled in and around yathrib (al-madeenah), which was quite a journey away from makkah back then.
again m.m. ali states (pg.260):
it is an acknowledged fact that there were jews and christians in arabia; the former mainly at yathrib (madinah) and the latter mainly at najran. so far as makkah, the birth-place of the prophet and the immediate scene of his activities is concerned, there were only a few christians of humble social and intellectual status, being either slaves or petty retailers, and mostly immigrants. one or two original inhabitants of makkah like uthman ibn al-huwayrith and waraqah ibn nawfal had turned chrisitians, the former out of personal or political considerations, and the latter as a result of his search or a better faith. also the makkans conducted trading operations with such countries such as syria and abyssinia where christianity prevailed. it is therefore quite understandable that the knowledgeable section of the makkan community including muhammad (s) had been aware of both judaism and christianity as systems of religion and did doubtless so know something of the common beliefs and practicies of the votaries of those religions. indeed all three of our scholars, muir, margoliouth and watt, are at one in stating, after all of their arguments, that muhammadās (s) knowledge of judaism and christianity was at best second-hand, āsuperficialā and erroneous.
in comment to this, what is mentioned at the end no where even suggests that he would have been able to copy something out of their scriptures, such as the talmud. for if it did and it was a real and legitimate possibility, his knowledge would not be considered āsecond-hand at bestā.
secondly, that there will be common points of belief between all three religions is something that is expected, as all of the prophets whom each religion believes in were sent by Allah, all bring the same basic beliefs to their respective peoples.
so again, since it was you who made the initial claim, the burden of proof is upon you. bring your proof that prophet muhammad took from judaismās or christianityās scriptures. speculation and conjecture doesnāt constitute proof or evidence.