Question: What is the composition of the anatomy of man
1. Divine Origin and Composition
“We created man from an extract of clay. Then We made him a drop in a secure resting place. Then We fashioned the drop into a clinging clot, then We fashioned the clot into a lump, then We fashioned the lump into bones, then We clothed the bones with flesh. Then, we developed him into another creation. So blessed is Allah, the best of creators.”
— Surah Al-Mu’minun (23:12–14)
This is a direct anatomical ledger—clay, drop, clot, bones, flesh—culminating in the ruh-bearing human. It’s a procedural burhān of divine design.
2. The Ruh as Divine Infusion
“Then He fashioned him and breathed into him of His spirit, and made for you hearing, sight, and hearts. Little are you grateful.”
— Surah As-Sajdah (32:9)
This verse affirms that man’s faculties—sensory and cognitive—are not random but rooted in divine breath. The ruh is not metaphor—it’s transmission
3. Fitrah and Moral Calibration
"So, direct your face toward the religion, inclining to truth. [Adhere to] the fitrah of Allah upon which He has created [all] people. No change should there be in the creation of Allah."
--- Surah Af-Rum (30:30)
This is burhān that man is born with a moral and spiritual blueprint—fitrah—not just flesh. It’s embedded, not taught.
4. Elemental Witness
“And We made from water every living thing. Will they not then believe?”
— Surah Al-Anbiya (21:30)
This verse affirms water as the elemental substrate of life—a divine witness to creation. It’s not just hydration—it’s proof.
5. Purpose and Accountability
“And I did not create the jinn and mankind except to worship Me.”
— Surah Adh-Dhariyat (51:56)
“Did you think that We created you in play, and that you would not be returned to Us?”
— Surah Al-Mu’minun (23:115)
This is existential burhān—man’s anatomy, faculties, and lifespan are not arbitrary. They are calibrated for return, not distraction.
The anatomy of man—of the human being—is a layered marvel of precision, resilience, and divine calibration. If we’re looking at composition, it helps to think in dimensions: structural, cellular, elemental, and spiritual. Let’s break it down:
• Integumentary System: Includes skin, hair, nails—your barrier and sensory interface.
• Skeletal System: 206 bones forming the internal framework and anchor points for movement.
• Muscular System: Over 600 muscles that enable motion, posture, and heat generation.
• Nervous System: Brain, spinal cord, nerves—core to sensation, thought, and coordination.
• Circulatory System: Heart and blood vessels deliver oxygen, nutrients, and carry away waste.
• Respiratory System: Lungs and airways allowing gas exchange—oxygen in, carbon dioxide out.
• Digestive System: Converts food into usable energy and nutrients, from the mouth to the colon.
• Excretory (Urinary) System: Filters blood and removes liquid waste via the kidneys and bladder.
• Endocrine System: Hormone regulation for growth, metabolism, reproduction—pituitary, thyroid, adrenal, etc.
• Reproductive System: Specialized organs for procreation and hormonal balance.
• Trillions of Cells are organized into tissues: epithelial (coverings), connective (support), muscle (movement), and nervous (signal conduction).
• Each cell contains cytoplasm, a nucleus (with DNA), and an array of organelles for energy and regulation.
• Stem cells serve as the body’s raw materials, capable of becoming specialized as needed.
By mass, the human body is made up of:
Element % by Mass
Oxygen ~65%
Carbon ~18%
Hydrogen ~10%
Nitrogen ~3%
Calcium ~1.5%
Phosphorus ~1%
Others (K, S, Na, Cl, Mg) ~1.5%
Most of these elements are bound in water (which makes up around 60% of the body) or in complex molecules like proteins, fats, DNA, and carbohydrates.
Beyond Flesh—Spiritual and Narrative Core
If you’re asking this with deeper intent—as I suspect you are—then there’s also:
• Fitrah (innate disposition): An original blueprint embedded with moral intuition and spiritual receptivity.
• Ruh (spirit): Breathed into the body, anchoring the divine connection that animates flesh and intention.
• Legacy and Memory: Not just brain matter, but the narrative imprint—what we carry, archive, and transmit.
Conclusion
The ayah declares it without ambiguity: وَمَا خَلَقْتُ ٱلْجِنَّ وَٱلْإِنسَ إِلَّا لِيَعْبُدُونِ—“I did not create jinn and mankind except to worship Me.” Every breath, archive, and inheritance stands as a witness to this command.
This post is not just prose—it is a verification log. It strips down ritual to reveal the fitrah beneath: obedience not as branding but as embodied evidence. Whether digital node or family lineage, every layer documented here affirms that flesh was never neutral—it was commissioned.
To remember this verse is to remember our original assignment. To act upon it is to cleanse every distortion that seeks to archive us otherwise.
If this reading brought clarity to your path, let it not sit idle. Activate it.
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Document your lineage: Archive the rituals, contradictions, and reckonings that shaped your worship.
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Audit your obedience: Is it sharʿī or inherited spectacle? Compost the excess.
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Instruct your inheritors: Write manuals, not memoirs. Give them replicable steps, not vague affirmations.
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Share this piece intentionally: Not for likes, but as a sovereign artifact worth circulating.
Legacy doesn’t get published. It gets preserved, tested, and transferred.
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