Nusairah RamliHafizah Noor Binti IsaAffa Rozana Abdul Rashid2025-12-182025-12-182025Nusairah Ramli , Hafizah Noor Binti Isa, Affa Rozana Abdul Rashid. (2025). Does the Moon Shine or Reflect? A Qur’anic and Scientific Exploration of Lunar Light. International Conference of Quran as Foundation of Civilization (SWAT 2025), 1216–1224. https://swatfpqs.usim.edu.my/e-prosiding/2811-3411https://swatfpqs.usim.edu.my/e-prosiding/https://oarep.usim.edu.my/handle/123456789/28268International Conference of Quran as Foundation of Civilization (SWAT 2025) : Maqasid al-Quran and the Madani Vision: A Guiding Light for Regional Serenity and Global Unity Organized by : Faculty of Quranic and Sunnah Studies, in collaboration with Nasyrul Quran and Daffodil International University, Bangladesh. Date:12-13 November 2025This study investigates the nature of moonlight by combining analysis of the Qur’an, the Sunnah, and contemporary scientific perspectives. Previous scholarship has rarely acknowledged Qur’anic allusions to natural phenomena later verified by science. Most studies have contrasted Qur’anic descriptions with established scientific theories or dismissed them as allegorical—especially regarding the origin of moonlight. Critics, in the past, have argued that the Qur’an’s reference to the moon as a luminous body conflicts with the scientific claim that moonlight is only reflected sunlight. This has generated ongoing debate over the compatibility of revelation and empirical inquiry. Recent scientific findings, however, show that the moon, besides reflecting visible light, emits thermal infrared radiation—an invisible form of illumination that humans cannot see but which advanced instruments can detect. This research builds on that observation, arguing that phenomena unseen by ordinary vision may still belong, in principle, to the broader spectrum of the visible and may be perceptible with alternative methods of detection. The study uses qualitative analysis of Qur’anic terminology and scientific data on electromagnetic radiation. It suggests that the moon’s illumination may involve simul taneous reflection and emission of unseen light. These findings affirm the Qur’anic description of the moonas a source of nūr (light), which is distinct from the sun’s ḍiyāʾ (radiant light). This demonstrates harmonybetween revealed knowledge and empirical observation. It also reinforces the Qur’an’s reputation as a text of profound cosmological insight.en-USMoonlight in IslamQuran and sciencelunar observationThermal Infrared Radiationtheolog- ical astronomyDoes the Moon Shine or Reflect? A Qur’anic and Scientific Exploration of Lunar Lighttext::conference output::conference proceedings::conference paper12161224