The 100: A Ranking Of The Most Influential Persons In History - Michael H. Hart
100 Geatest Personalities of the History & Muhammad(PBUH) is on TOP

The following list of influential figures from world history comes from Michael H. Hart's book The 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Persons in History. In the book, Hart provides brief biographies of each of the individuals, as well as reasons for their ranking.

Note that many influential philosophies (such as Marxist Communism or Confucianism) are not always classified as organized "religions" in the traditional sense, but are classified as such by sociologists because they are a primary motivational worldview for individuals, cultures or subcultures. Also, many founders never considered themselves adherents of philosophies or religions which later bore their name.

In the table below, where there are two religions listed, the first one is the religion the person was born into. The second was the religion or philosophy the person later joined or founded. Comments in the "Influence" column are in bold when the influence is mainly in the realm of religion and philosophy.

Rank

Name

Religious Affiliation

Influence

1

Muhammad

Islam

Prophet of Islam; conqueror of Arabia; Hart recognized that ranking Muhammad first might be controversial, but felt that, from a secular historian's perspective, this was the correct choice because Muhammad is the only man to have been both a founder of a major world religion and a major military/political leader.

2

Isaac Newton

Anglican (rejected Trinitarianism;
believed in the Arianism of
the Primitive Church)*

physicist; theory of universal gravitation; laws of motion

3

Jesus Christ *

Judaism; Christianity

founder of Christianity

4

Buddha

Hinduism; Buddhism

founder of Buddhism

5

Confucius

Confucianism

founder of Confucianism

6

St. Paul

Judaism; Christianity

proselytizer of Christianity

7

Ts'ai Lun

Chinese traditional religion

Inventor of paper

8

Johann Gutenberg

Catholic

developed movable type; printed Bibles

9

Christopher Columbus

Catholic

explorer; led Europe to Americas

10

Albert Einstein

Jewish *

physicist; relativity; Einsteinian physics

11

Louis Pasteur

Catholic

scientist; pasteurization

12

Galileo Galilei

Catholic *

astronomer; accurately described heliocentric solar system

13

Aristotle

Platonism / Greek philosophy

influential Greek philosopher

14

Euclid

Platonism / Greek philosophy

mathematician; Euclidian geometry

15

Moses

Judaism

major prophet of Judaism

16

Charles Darwin

Anglican (nominal)

biologist; described Darwinian evolution, which had theological impact on many religions

17

Shih Huang Ti

Chinese traditional religion

Chinese emperor

18

Augustus Caesar

Roman state paganism

ruler

19

Nicolaus Copernicus

Catholic (priest)

astronomer; taught heliocentricity

20

Antoine Laurent Lavoisier

Catholic *

father of modern chemistry; philosopher; economist

21

Constantine the Great

Roman state paganism; Christianity

Roman emperor who made Christianity the state religion

22

James Watt

nonreligious *

developed steam engine

23

Michael Faraday

Sandemanian

physicist; chemist; discovery of magneto-electricity

24

James Clerk Maxwell

Presbyterian; Anglican; Baptist *

physicist; electromagnetic spectrum

25

Martin Luther

Catholic; Lutheran

founder of Protestantism and Lutheranism

26

George Washington

Episcopalian; Deist

first president of United States

27

Karl Marx

Jewish; Christian;
Atheist; Marxism/Communism *

founder of Communism

28

Orville and Wilbur Wright

United Brethren *

inventors of airplane

29

Genghis Khan

Mongolian shamanism

Mongol conqueror

30

Adam Smith

Liberal Protestant

economist; expositor of capitalism; religious philosopher

31

Edward de Vere
a.k.a. "William Shakespeare"

Christianity *

literature; also wrote 6 volumes about philosophy and religion

32

John Dalton

Quaker

chemist; physicist; atomic theory; law of partial pressures ( Dalton's law)

33

Alexander the Great

Greek state paganism

conqueror

34

Napoleon Bonaparte

Catholic (nominal) *

French conqueror

35

Thomas Edison

Congregationalist; agnostic *

inventor of light bulb, phonograph, etc.

36

Antony van Leeuwenhoek

Calvinist *

microscopes; studied microscopic life

37

William T.G. Morton

??

pioneer in anesthesiology

38

Guglielmo Marconi

Catholic and Anglican *

inventor of radio

39

Adolf Hitler

born Catholic; proponent of Germanic Neo-Paganism and Nazism

conqueror; led Axis Powers in WWII

40

Plato

Platonism / Greek philosophy

founder of Platonism

41

Oliver Cromwell

Puritan (Protestant)

British political and military leader

42

Alexander Graham Bell

Unitarian/Universalist

inventor of telephone

43

Alexander Fleming

Catholic

penicillin; advances in bacteriology, immunology and chemotherapy

44

John Locke

raised Puritan (Anglican);
Liberal Christian

philosopher and liberal theologian

45

Ludwig van Beethoven

Catholic

composer

46

Werner Heisenberg

*

discovered the principle of uncertainty

47

Louis Daguerre

??

an inventor/pioneer of photography

48

Simon Bolivar

Catholic (nominal); Atheist *

National hero of Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia

49

Rene Descartes *

Catholic

Rationalist philosopher and mathematician

50

Michelangelo

Catholic

painter; sculptor

51

Pope Urban II

Catholic

called for First Crusade

52

'Umar ibn al-Khattab

Islam

Second Caliph; expanded Muslim empire

53

Asoka

Buddhism

king of India who converted to and spread Buddhism

54

St. Augustine

Christianity

Early Christian theologian

55

William Harvey

Anglican (nominal) *

discovered the circulation of the blood

56

Ernest Rutherford

??

physicist; pioneer of subatomic physics

57

John Calvin

Protestant; Calvinism

Protestant reformer; founder of Calvinism

58

Gregor Mendel

Catholic (monk)

Mendelian genetics

59

Max Planck

Protestant *

physicist; thermodynamics

60

Joseph Lister

Quaker

principal discoverer of antiseptics which greatly reduced surgical mortality

61

Nikolaus August Otto

??

built first four-stroke internal combustion engine

62

Francisco Pizarro

Catholic

Spanish conqueror in South America; defeated Incas

63

Hernando Cortes

Catholic

conquered Mexico for Spain

64

Thomas Jefferson

Episcopalian; Deist *

3rd president of United States

65

Queen Isabella I

Catholic

Spanish ruler

66

Joseph Stalin

Russian Orthodox; Atheist; Marxism

revolutionary and ruler of USSR

67

Julius Caesar

Roman state paganism

Roman emperor

68

William the Conqueror

Catholic

laid foundation of modern England

69

Sigmund Freud

Jewish (non-practicing); Atheist *
Freudian psychology/psychoanalysis

founder of Freudian school of psychology; psychoanalysis

70

Edward Jenner

Christianity *

discoverer of the vaccination for smallpox

71

Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen

??

discovered X-rays

72

Johann Sebastian Bach

Lutheran; Catholic

composer

73

Lao Tzu

Taoism

founder of Taoism

74

Voltaire

raised in Jansenism;
later Deist *

writer and philosopher; wrote Candide

75

Johannes Kepler

Lutheran *

astronomer; planetary motions

76

Enrico Fermi

Catholic *

initiated the atomic age; father of atom bomb

77

Leonhard Euler

Calvinist

physicist; mathematician; differential and integral calculus and algebra

78

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

born Protestant;
converted as a teen to Catholic;
later Deist

French deistic philosopher and author

79

Nicoli Machiavelli

Catholic

wrote The Prince (influential political treatise)

80

Thomas Malthus

Anglican (cleric)

economist; wrote Essay on the Principle of Population

81

John F. Kennedy

Catholic

president of United States

82

Gregory Pincus

Jewish *

endocrinologist; developed birth-control pill

83

Mani

Manicheanism

founder of Manicheanism, once a world religion which rivaled Christianity in strength

84

Lenin

Russian Orthodox;
Atheist; Marxism/Communism

Russian ruler

85

Sui Wen Ti

Chinese traditional religion

unified China

86

Vasco da Gama

Catholic

navigator; discovered route from Europe to India around Cape Hood

87

Cyrus the Great

Zoroastrianism

founder of Persian empire

88

Peter the Great

Russian Orthodox

forged Russia into a great European nation

89

Mao Zedong

Atheist; Communism; Maoism

founder of Maoism, Chinese form of Communism

90

Francis Bacon

Anglican *

philosopher; delineated inductive scientific method

91

Henry Ford

Protestant

developed automobile

92

Mencius

Confucianism

philosopher; founder of a school of Confucianism

93

Zoroaster

Zoroastrianism

founder of Zoroastrianism

94

Queen Elizabeth I

Anglican

British monarch; restored Church of England to power after Queen Mary

95

Mikhail Gorbachev

Russian Orthodox *

Russian premier who helped end Communism in USSR

96

Menes

Egyptian paganism

unified Upper and Lower Egypt

97

Charlemagne

Catholic

Holy Roman Empire created with his baptism in 800 AD

98

Homer

Greek paganism

epic poet

99

Justinian I

Catholic

Roman emperor; reconquered Mediterranean empire; accelerated Catholic-Monophysite schism

100

Mahavira

Hinduism; Jainism

founder of Jainism

RU

St. Thomas Aquinas

Catholic

influential early Christian philosopher

RU

Archimedes

Greek philosophy

Father of experimental science

RU

Charles Babbage

??

mathematician and inventor of forerunner of computer

RU

Cheops

Egyptian paganism

Egyptian ruler; builder of Great Pyramid

RU

Marie Curie

Catholic; nonreligious *

physicist; radioactivity

RU

Benjamin Franklin

Presbyterian; Deist *

American politician and inventor

RU

Mohandas Gandhi

Hinduism; influenced by Jainism (mother was a Jain)

Indian leader and Hindu religious reformer

RU

Abraham Lincoln

Regular Baptist (childhood);
later ambiguous -
Deist, general theist or
a very personalized Christianity*

16th president of U.S.; led during Civil War

RU

Ferdinand Magellan

Catholic

Navigator; named Pacific Ocean; first circumnavigation of globe

RU

Leonardo da Vinci

Catholic

artist; inventor


RU = Runner Up (order is alphabetical).

Source: Hart, Michael H. 1992. The 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Persons in History, Revised and Updated for the Nineties. New York: Citadel Press Book.

 

Muhammad (SAW)
Exerpt from Hart's book:

My choice of Muhammad to lead the list of the world's most influential persons may surprise some readers and may be questioned by others, but He was the only man in history who was supremely successful on both the religious and secular levels...

Muhammad founded and promulgated one of the world's great religions, and became an immensely effective political leader. Today, thirteen centuries after his death, his influence is still powerful and pervasive... Like all religions, Islam exerts an enormous influence upon the lives of its followers. It is for this reason that the founders of the world's great religions all figure prominently in this book. Since there are roughly twice as many Christians as Muslims in the world, it may initially seem strange that Muhammad has been ranked higher than Jesus. There are two principal reasons for that decision. First, Muhammad played a far more important role in the development of Islam than Jesus did in the development of Christianity. Although Jesus was responsible for the main ethical and moral precepts of Christianity (insofar as these differed from Judaism), St. Paul was the main developer of Christian theology, its principal proselytizer, and the author of a large portion of the New Testament

 

Muhammad, however, was responsible for both the theology of Islam and its main ethical and moral principles. In addition, He played the key role in proselytizing the new faith, and in establishing the religious practices of Islam . Moreover, He is the author of the Moslem Holy Scriptures, the Koran, a collection of certain of Muhammad's insights that he believed had been directly revealed to him by Allah. Most of these utterances were copied more or less faithfully during Muhammad's lifetime and were collected together in authoritative form not long after his death. The Koran therefore, closely represents Muhammad's ideas and teachings and to a considerable extent his exact words. No such detailed compilation of the teachings of Christ has survived. Since the Koran is at least as important to Moslems as the Bible is to Christians, the influence of Muhammed through the medium of the Koran has been enormous It is probable that the relative influence of Muhammad on Islam has been larger than the combined influence of Jesus Christ and St. Paul on Christianity. On the purely religious level, then, it seems likely that Muhammad has been as influential in human history as Jesus.

 

 

Furthermore, Muhammad (unlike Jesus) was a secular as well as a religious leader. In fact, as the driving force behind the Arab conquests, he may well rank as the most influential political leader of all time... the Arab conquests of the seventh century have continued to play an important role in human history, down to the present day. It is this unparalleled combination of secular and religious influence that I feel entitles Muhammad to be considered the most influential single figure in human history.

 

Additional Notes

 

Isaac Newton: Religion "Affiliation: Anglican, Heterodox; Newton was born into the Anglican Church and publicly conformed to it." At about age 30 he came to believe "that Trinitarianism was a fraud and that Arianism was the true form of primitive Christianity. Newton held these views, very privately, until the end of his life. On his death bed he refused to receive the sacrament of the Anglican church."

Albert Einstein: Not known to have been a practicing Jew. Had a positive attitude toward religion. Wrote of his belief in a noble "cosmic religious feeling" that enables scientists to advance human knowledge. A famous quote: "Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind.” The Encyclopedia Britannica says of him: "Firmly denying atheism, Einstein expressed a belief in "Spinoza's God who reveals himself in the harmony of what exists." This actually motivated his interest in science, as he once remarked to a young physicist: "I want to know how God created this world, I am not interested in this or that phenomenon, in the spectrum of this or that element. I want to know His thoughts, the rest are details." Einstein's famous epithet on the "uncertainty principle" was "God does not play dice" Some writings by Einstein regarding religion are available

It is reported that Einstein reported Christian Science services regularly in New York and said that Mary Baker Eddy was right in her theories about an essentially non-physical universe. Adherents.com has no expertise on the Einstein-Christian Science connection, but reports this for the sake of completeness. One example of references to this subject online can be found.

Galileo: Galileo remained a devout Catholic throughout his life. "Affiliation: Catholic; It is known to everyone that Galileo was denounced to the Inquisition in 1615 and that he was tried and condemned by the Inquisition in 1633, living the rest of his life under house arrest. All of this was for Copernicanism, not for any heretical theological views. Additionally, it may be noted that although Galileo himself did not consider his writings about heliocentricity to be heretical, his Catholic leaders at that time did. Today the Catholic Church does not consider heliocentricity or any of Galileo's writings to be heretical.

Michael Faraday: Faraday's parents were members of the obscure religious denomination of the Sandemanians, and Faraday himself, shortly after his marriage, at the age of thirty, joined the same sect, to which he adhered till his death. Religion and science he kept strictly apart, believing that the data of science were of an entirely different nature from the direct communications between God and the soul on which his religious faith was based.

Edward de Vere/"Shakespeare": Online source: Annotations in Edward de Vere's Bible; Shakespeare and Religion, by Aldous Huxley.

Karl Marx : "Karl Marx was born in Rhinish Prussia 1818 to parents of a long rabbinical line of Jews. His father however, just before Karl's birth, found it politically expedient to become a baptized Christian. Nonetheless, Karl was raised with the taunts of being of Jewish descent despite his father's new Christian credentials." Marx was baptized into a Christian church, but adopted atheism

Orville and Wilbur Wright: The Wright Brothers were the sons of a minister for the United Brethren Church. They themselves may have been merely nominal Protestants as adults. "Wilbur Wright was born in Millville, Indiana, and grew up in Dayton, Ohio. From his father, a clergyman and editor, he learned to love reading, writing, and other scholarly pursuits... He also contributed stories to his father's magazine, Religious Telescope..."

Thomas Edison: Edison attended a Congregational church in Ft. Myers, Florida, where he had a winter home. The church was renamed for him and is now the Thomas Edison Congregational Church. This church was one of those which did not join in the merger whch formed the United Church of Christ. The Second Congregational Church of Greenwich in Connecticut has in its archives a letter from Edison containing suggestions for for protecting their 212-foot steeple from lightning strikes. Edison's wife was a devout Methodist and, early in their marriage, tried to convert him to her religious views, but failed. As for his personal beliefs, Edison made many statements which indicated disbelief on key topics. John P. M. Murphy described Edison's position as "truculent agnosticism."

Antoine Laurent Lavoisier: His biographer, the first to read his papers wrote of him: "Raised in a pious family which had given many priests to the Church, he had held to his beliefs. To Edward King, an English author who had sent him a controversial work, he wrote, 'You have done a noble thing in upholding revelation and the authenticity of the Holy Scriptures, and it is remarkable that you are using for the defence precisely the same weapons which were once used for the attack.

James Watt: "On August 19th, 1819, Watt passed peacefully away at Heathfield, and was buried in Handsworth Church” Now those who knew Mr. Watt, had to contemplate a man whose genius could create such an engine, and indulge in the most abstruse speculations of philosophy, and could at once pass from the most sublime researches of geology and physical astronomy, the formation of our globe, and the structure of the universe, to the manufacture of a needle or a nail; who could discuss in the same conversation and with equal accuracy, if not with the same consummate skill, the most forbidding details of art, and the elegances of classical literature; the most abstruse branches of science, and the niceties of verbal criticism."

James Clerk Maxwell: Devout Protestant Christian. "Maxwell's breadth of appreciation of Christianity grew still further during his time in London. To his background of Presbyterianism (in the Scottish kirk of his father's tradition) and the Anglicanism of his mother and Cambridge, he added an experience of the Baptists."

Guglielmo Marconi: Marconi's marriage to Beatrice O'Brien was performed "in March 1905, before an Anglican minister; for though Signor Marconi had been born of a Catholic father and baptized in the Catholic faith, he had been brought up by his mother as a Protestant, and was in fact an Anglican at the time of the marriage." Their marriage was later granted a Catholic annulment.

Antony van Leeuwenhoek: "Religion: Calvinist. He was baptized and buried in Calvinist churches, and his second wife was the daughter of the Calvinist minister.".

Napoleon Bonaparte: Believed in God, but criticized religion. "As for myself, I do not believe that such a person as Jesus Christ ever existed; but as the people are inclined to superstition, it is proper not to oppose them." A number of quotes attributed to him indicate a utilitarian view of religion. "Religion is excellent stuff for keeping common people quiet."; He also said: "Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich" (quoted from Robert Byrne, 1,911 Best Things Anybody Ever Said, 1988).

Werner Heisenberg: He wrote: "Wenn wir an die naechste Zeit denken, so droht uns die staerkste Gefahr wohl von der Verwechslung der boesen und der guten Maechte. Gerade in einer Epoche, in der sich die Bindung zur alten Religion loest, ist die Gefahr, dass Daemonen die Herrschaft der Goetter uebernehmen, groesser als je; und die Daemonen verbuenden sich stets mit jenem glaenzenden Phantom, das die Menschen zu allen Zeiten irregefuehrt hat, mit der politischen Macht" (Ordnung der Wirklichkeit 1942).

Descartes: "Descartes was a French mathematician, scientist and philosopher who has been called the father of modern philosophy. His school studies made him dissatisfied with previous philosophy: He had a deep religious faith as a Catholic, which he retained to his dying day, along with a resolute, passionate desire to discover the truth. At the age of 24 he had a dream, and felt the vocational call to seek to bring knowledge together in one system of thought. His system began by asking what could be known if all else were doubted - suggesting the famous 'I think therefore I am'. Actually, it is often forgotten that the next step for Descartes was to establish the near certainty of the existence of God - for only if God both exists and would not want us to be deceived by our experiences can we trust our senses and logical thought processes. God is, therefore, central to his whole philosophy. What he really wanted was to see his philosophy adopted as standard Catholic teaching. Rene Descartes and Francis Bacon (1561-1626) are generally regarded as the key figures in the development of scientific methodology. Both had systems in which God was important, and both seem more devout than the average for their era.

Simon Bolivar: Became an atheist. Was excommunicated from the Catholic Church.

Lenin: Lenin's maternal grandfather was a Jew. Lenin's Jewish ancestry is discussed in detail in Oxford University historian Robert Service's biography Lenin (Harvard University Press, 2000). See also: "Lenin: Jewish roots of a revolutionary," by Zev Ben-Shlomo, Jewish Chronicle, London, April 21, 1995 (http://www.fpp.co.uk/online/98/11/JConLenin210495.html):

[Lenin] was the great-grandson of Moishe Itskovich Blank and the grandson of Srul Moishevich Blank. At his baptism, Blank changed his name and patro-nymic to Aleksandr Dmitrievich...

Lenin's Jewish origin on his maternal grandfather's side became, after his death, a matter of controversy between Lenin's sisters and Stalin. In a letter to Stalin, Anna, Lenin's elder sister, wrote: "It is probably no secret for you that the research on our grandfather shows that he came from a poor Jewish family, that he was, as his baptismal certificate says, the son of a 'Zhitomir burgher, Moishe Blank' and this fact could serve in combating anti-Semitism."

Furthermore, she claimed, that Lenin's Jewish origins were "further confirmation of the exceptional abilities of the Semitic tribe... Lenin always valued the Jews highly." Stalin replied: "Not one word about it."

William Harvey: "Religion: Anglican; Harvey conformed to the established church, but there is no evidence of serious religious commitment and more than one suggestion (though only on the level of gossip) of considerable free thought."

Max Planck: "Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck was born on April 23, 1858, in Kiel, Germany, the sixth child of a distinguished jurist and professor of law at the University of Kiel. The long family tradition of devotion to church and state, excellence in scholarship, incorruptibility, conservatism, idealism, reliability, and generosity became deeply ingrained in Planck's own life and work... In his later years, Planck devoted more and more of his writings to philosophical, aesthetic, and religious questions. Together with Einstein and Schrdinger, he remained adamantly opposed to the indeterministic, statistical worldview introduced by Bohr, Max Born, Werner Heisenberg, and others into physics after the advent of quantum mechanics in 1925-26. Such a view was not in harmony with Planck's deepest intuitions and beliefs. The physical universe, Planck argued, is an objective entity existing independently of man; the observer and the observed are not intimately coupled, as Bohr and his school would have it."

Planck made many contributions to physics, but is best known for quantum theory, which has revolutionized our understanding of the atomic and sub-atomic worlds. In his 1937 lecture "Religion and Naturwissenschaft," Planck expressed the view that God is everywhere present, and held that "the holiness of the unintelligible Godhead is conveyed by the holiness of symbols." Atheists, he thought, attach too much importance to what are merely symbols. Planck was a churchwarden from 1920 until his death, and believed in an almighty, all-knowing, beneficent God (though not necessarily a personal one). Both science and religion wage a "tireless battle against skepticism and dogmatism, against unbelief and superstition" with the goal "toward God!"

Thomas Jefferson: Raised as an Episcopalian/Anglican. Influenced by English Deists and often identified by historians as a Deist. Held many beliefs in common with Unitarians of the time period, and sometimes wrote that he thought the whole country would become Unitarian. Wrote that the teachings of Jesus contain the "outlines of a system of the most sublime morality which has ever fallen from the lips of man." Wrote: "I am of a sect by myself, as far as I know.

Marie Curie: Daughter of a Polish 'freethinker' but raised by a Catholic mother. Abandoned the Church before she was 20; Marriage with Pierre Curie was a civil ceremony because, as she wrote: " Pierre belonged to no religion and I did not practice any."

Sigmund Freud: Freud was always proud of Jewishness, despite the fact that neither he nor his family were religious in the practicing sense. His nursemaid was a devout Catholic which helped as well. Later Freud maintained a deep interest in biblical history and religion, again guite possibly motivated by these childhood experiences.

Edward Jenner: As yet we do not know if Jenner was more than just a nominal church member, or which denomination he belonged to. "Edward Jenner was born on May 17, 1749, in Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England, the son of a parish vicar"

Johannes Kepler: Studied at Adelberg monastery school (lower seminary). Religious Affiliation: Lutheran. We've found nothing notable, either in terms of heterodoxy or devotion. "Kepler was an extremely sincere and pious Lutheran, whose works on astronomy contain writings about how space and the heavenly bodies represent the Trinity. Kepler suffered no persecution for his open avowal of the sun-centered system, and, indeed, was allowed as a Protestant to stay in Catholic Graz as a Professor (1595-1600) when other Protestants had been expelled!"

Voltaire: "His entire life was a parodox. He despised mankind and yet he was passionately fond of men. He ridiculed the clergy and dedicated one of his books to the pope. He made fun of royalty and he accepted a pension from King Frederick the Great. He hated bigotry and he was bigoted in his attitude toward the Jews. He sneered at the vanity of riches and he acquired a vast fortune (by means that were not always honest). He disbelieved in God and he tried all his life to find Him. He had no respect for religion and he created a new religion of laughter... His father was a Jansenist, which in itself was a paradox. For the Jansenists were a sect of 'Protestant Catholics.'... His father imposed his doctrine of abstract mysticism so vigorously upon him that Voltaire grew up with a rebellious thirst for concrete reality. He cordially hated Jansenism. But he grew up with another hatred--a hatred against the persecution of Jansenists. Against any kind of persecution."; Pg. 185: "He was not, as is commonly believed, an atheist. He was a deist. He believed in the existence of God. Indeed, 'if God did not exist,' he said, 'it would be necessary to invent him.' But Voltaire's God is not an exclusive king of a single ecclesiastical order. He is the world's 'supreme Intelligence, a Workman infinitely able'--and infinitely impartial. He has no favorite people, no favorite country, no favorite church. For the true worshiper there is but a single faith, equal tolerance to all mankind."; Pg. 186: "...he helped them in the preparation of the great Encyclopedia of Free Thought. The Encyclopedists accused him of being a Christian and the Christians accused him of being an infidel, and between the two parties he had his hands full." (Source: Henry and Dana Lee Thomas. Living Biographies of Great Philosophers, Garden City, NY: Garden City Books (1959); Other source: "Late in life Voltaire wrote considerably against religious injustice and was quite opposed to the Catholic Church and Christianity in general."

Voltaire made an official deathbed affirmation of Catholic beliefs, but his intentions in doing so are disputed. Like his writing, many of his activities consisted of multi-layered satire. There is no way to know conclusively what his motivation was. Certainly, from a cultural and literary perspective, Voltaire was deeply involved in Catholicism more than any other religion, often to the consternation of the Catholic Church.

Enrico Fermi: "Enrico Fermi, born in Rome, Italy on September 29, 1901 was baptized as a Catholic though he wasn't raised in any sort of religious fashion." Fermi's wife was Jewish.

Gregory Pincus: "Pincus was the son of Joseph William and Elizabeth Florence (nee Lipman) Pincus. He was born on April 9, 1903, in Woodbine, New Jersey. His father was a teacher, the editor of the Jewish Farmer and an agricultural consultant. Pincus' father was also a leader in a community of Russian Jews who hoped to turn refugees from the czar's pogroms into American farmers in the late 19th century." [Online source: Florida Atlantic University Libraries:

Francis Bacon : "Affiliation: Anglican. Bacon's mother was a thorough Calvinist. He adhered to the middle road of the Church of England, however, neither authoritarian nor sectarian. His religion was more formal than fervent." Also: "Thus, Bacon delineated the principles of the inductive thinking method, which, while as a method goes back to Aristotle, constituted a breakthrough in the approach to science. He was just these kind of materialist theories that brought about the great discoveries Copernicus and Galileo. Bacon could see that the only knowledge of importance to man was empirically rooted in the natural world; and that a clear system of scientific inquiry would assure man's mastery over the world. That is not to say that Bacon did not believe that there was a God, for, as he said in 'Of Atheism': 'I had rather believe all the fables in the legends and the Talmud and the Alcoran, than that this universal frame is without a mind.'"

 

Gorbachev : At the end of a November 1996 interview on CSPAN's Booknotes, Gorbachev described his plans for future books. He made the following reference to God: "I don't know how many years God will be giving me, [or] what his plans are."

Benjamin Franklin : "Franklin, who normally preferred to contemplate the eternal in the privacy of his own home, had been invited by Jedediah Andrews to become a member of the Presbyterian church. He attended for five Sundays in a row. He became a pew holder and a contributor, but he nevertheless ceased to attend weekly services... In general, most Franklin scholars have found him to be quite moderate in his attitude toward religion. Typically, Alfred Owen Aldridge has described Franklin as a confirmed Deist, who, in contrast to more militant Deists like Tom Paine, did not attempt to 'wither Christianity by ridicule or bludgeon it to death by argument.'"

 

Abraham Lincoln: "Considerable uncertainty arises... when Lincoln's own religion is examined... it is obvious that Christianity exerted a profound influence on his life. His father was a member of Regular Baptist churches in Kentucky and Indiana. Lincoln himself read the Bible throughout his life, quoted from it extensively... during his years as president he did regularly attend the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in Washington. On the other hand, Lincoln never joined a church nor ever made a clear profession of standard Christian beliefs... Lincoln's friend Jesse Fell [suggested that Lincoln's views on Christian theology] were not orthodox... It is probable that Lincoln was turned against organized Christianity by his experiences as a young man in New Salem, Illinois, where excessive emotion and bitter sectarian quarrels marked yearly camp meetings and the ministry of traveling preachers. Yet although Lincoln was not a church member, he did ponder the eternal significance of his own circumstances.”

 

Most Influential Asians of the 20th Century

  • Hirohito
  • Ho Chi Minh
  • Pol Pot
  • Issey Miyake
  • Daisuke Inoue
  • Rabindranath Tagore
  • Sun Yat-sen
  • Mohandas Gandhi
  • Sukarno
  • Mao Zedong
  • Lee Kuan Yew
  • Deng Xiaoping
  • Corazon Aquino
  • Park Chung Hee
  • Eiji Toyoda
  • King Rama
  • Swaminathan
  • Akira Kurosawa
  • Dalai Lama
  • Akio Morita

 

You Must Know Him

This article is from Internet and may be strange to u because you Are Muslim and are more religious than me but I have send u this article so that u can send it to Ur non-Muslim friends.

This is the only mission behind this article and plz don’t be shy in doing it.

Ur well-wisher.

MUHAMMAD RASHID HAMID HASHMI

 

Y ou may be an atheist or an agnostic or you may belong to any of the religious denominations that exist in the world today. You may have been a Communist or a believer in democracy and freedom. No matter what you are, and no matter what your religious and political beliefs, personal and social habits happen to be— YOU STILL MUST KNOW THIS MAN!

He was by far the most remarkable man that ever set foot on this earth. He preached a religion, founded a state, built a nation, laid down a moral code, initiated numberless social and political reforms, established a dynamic and powerful society to practice and represent his teachings, and he revolutionized the worlds of human thought and human action for all time.

His name was Muhammad (peace and blessings of Almighty Creator be upon him)—and he accomplished all these wonders in the unbelievably short span of twenty-three years.

Muhammad (pbuh) was born in Arabia in 570 CE, and when he died at the age of 63, the whole of the Arabian Peninsula had changes from paganism and idol worship to the worship of One God; from tribal quarrels and wars to national solidarity and cohesion; from drunkenness and debauchery to sobriety and piety; from lawlessness and anarchy to disciplined living; from utter moral bankruptcy to the highest standards of moral excellence. Human history has never known such a complete transformation of a people or a place before or since.

The Encyclopedia Britannica calls him "the most successful of all religious personalities of the world." Bernard Shaw said, "if Muhammad (pbuh) were alive today, he would succeed in solving all those problems which threaten to destroy human civilization in our times." Thomas Carlysle was amazed as to how one man, single-handedly, could weld warring tribes and wandering Bedouins into a most powerful and civilized nation in less than two decades. Napoleon and Gandhi never tired of dreaming of a society along the lines established by this man in Arabia fourteen centuries ago.

Indeed no other human being ever accomplished so much, in such diverse fields of human thought and behavior, in so limited a space of time, as did Muhammad (pbuh). He was a religious teacher, a social reformer, a moral guide, a political thinker, a military genius, an administrative colossus, a faithful friend, a wonderful companion, a devoted husband, and a loving father—all in one. No other man in history ever excelled or equaled him in any of these difficult departments of life.

The world has had its share of great personalities. But these were one-sided figures who distinguished themselves in but one or two fields, such as religious thought or military leadership. None of the other great leaders of the world ever combined within himself so many different qualities to such an amazing level of perfection as did Muhammad (pbuh).

The lives and teachings of other great personalities of the world are shrouded in the mist of time. There is so much speculation about the time and the place of their birth, the mode and style of their life, the nature and detail of their teachings and the degree and measure of their success or failure that it is impossible for humanity today to reconstruct accurately and precisely the lives and teachings of those men.

Not so this man Muhammad (pbuh). Not only was he born in the fullest blaze of recorded history, but every detail of his private and public life, of his actions and utterances, has been accurately documented and faithfully preserved to our day. The authenticity of the information so preserved is vouched for not only by faithful followers but also by unbiased critics and open-minded scholars.

At the level of ideas there is no system of thought and belief—secular or religious, social or political —which could surpass or equal ISLAM—the system which Muhammad (pbuh) propounded. In a fast-changing world, while other systems have undergone profound transformations, Islam alone has remained above all change and mutation, and retained its original form for the past 1400 years. What is more, the positive changes that are taking place in the world of human thought and behavior truly and consistently reflect the healthy influence of Islam in these areas.

It is not given to the best of thinkers to put their ideas completely into practice, and to see the seeds of their labors grow and bear fruit in their own lifetime. Except of course, Muhammad (pbuh), who not only preached the most wonderful ideas but also successfully translated each one of them into practice. At the time of his death his teachings were not mere precepts and ideas straining for fulfillment. They had become the very core of the life of tens of thousands of perfectly trained individuals. At what other time or place and in relation to what other political, social, religious system, philosophy or ideology—did the world ever witness such a perfectly amazing phenomenon? Except of course, ISLAM, which was established as a complete way of life by Muhammad (pbuh)himself. History bears testimony to this fact and the greatest skeptics have no option but to concede this point.

In spite of the phenomenal success which crowned his efforts, he did not for a moment claim to be God or God's incarnation or Son —but only a human being who was chosen and ordained by the Creator to be a teacher of truth to mankind and a complete model and pattern for their actions.

He was a man with a noble and exalted mission —and his unique mission was to unite humanity in the worship of the One and only God and to teach them the way to honest and upright living in accordance with the laws and commands of God. He always described himself as a Messenger and servant of God, as indeed every single action and movement of his proclaimed him to be.

A world which has not hesitated to raise to Divinity individuals whose very lives and missions have been lost in legend and who, historically speaking, did not accomplish half as much—or even one tenth—as was accomplished by Muhammad (pbuh), should stop to take serious note of this remarkable man's claim to be God's messenger to mankind.

Today, after the lapse of some 1400 years, the life and teachings of Prophet Muhammad (pbuh), have survived without the slightest loss, alteration or interpolation. Today they offer the same undying hope for treating mankind's many ills which they did when Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) was alive. This is our honest claim and this is the inescapable conclusion forced upon us by a critical and unbiased study of history.

The least YOU should do as a thinking, sensitive, concerned human being is to stop for one brief moment and ask yourself: Could it be that these statements, extraordinary and revolutionary as they sound, are really true? Supposing they really are true, and you did not know this man Muhammad (pbuh) or hear about his teachings? Or did not know him well and intimately enough to be able to benefit from his guidance and example? Is it not time you responded to this tremendous challenge and made some effort to know him? It will not cost you anything but it may well prove to be the beginning of a completely new era in your life.

Come; let us make a new discovery, the life of this wonderful man Muhammad (pbuh), the like of whom never walked on this earth, and whose example and teachings can change YOUR life and OUR world for the better. May God shower His choicest blessings upon him!
Written by S. H. Pasha