What does that have to do with me or my assessment?
Applying a same amount of flexibility, I accept most of them. I mean, the HMN reference is not really the same as HMNHTP, and the Egyptians preserving their own pharaoh as had been their custom for ages doesn't mean much; the only sign it seems to provide today is a big sign in front of a museum that there's going to be a long line. But, the pneumatic tubes thing and the hover-cars thing aren't quite spot on either. And while Islam isn't really the majority or dominant religion in the world, nuclear power isn't the largest source of power except in some countries even though it does energize much of the world. So, like I said, I'm applying a similar amount of wiggle room to both.
The ones I don't accept from the OP are the one about the one guy who wouldn't convert. It's completely unimportant. All of Clarke's predictions were about significant projects or changes, not about whether one guy would change his mind. It doesn't belong on the list.
Also, the one about the lost city is not a prediction at all. The Quran didn't predict that it would be thought a myth, and didn't predict that it would be discovered. It only mentioned it. There's no prediction there. It doesn't count.
So, leaving those two off (not scoring them as hits or misses), we have a score of 7 out of 9 from the OP list. That compares with 8 out of 12 for Clarke. In other words, the True Prophet of the Creator of the World performed
a little bit better than the guy who wrote science fiction books.
However, Clarke's predictions came with a time limit by which the predicted things were predicted to happen. That's much more specific than predicting things that could happen eventually, with no time limit. So Mohammed performed
a little bit better at an easier task than the guy who wrote science fiction books.
If we level
that part of the playing field, and remove the time limit from Clarke's predictions, well, maybe eventually there will be a lunar colony, an undersea city, complete urbanization of the BOS-WASH corridor, or a solar power satellite. Just as maybe eventually, Noah's Ark will be discovered and Jesus will return. If any one of Clarke's happens before any more of Mohammed's, the score will be very close to tied (9/12 vs. 7/9) and if two of them happen Clarke will be in the lead.
And by the way, many years earlier, Clarke predicted long before rockets ever reached orbit that artificial satellites would be used for communications, and in 1956, still a year before Sputnik 1, he predicted
satellites would be used for worldwide television broadcasting, GPS, and satellite phones. The competition grows tighter still!
Do you see the problem here? Shouldn't the divine prophecy, if it's truly divine, be clearly unequivocally absolutely not-even-close better at predictions than one human guy managed? Instead, it's so close we have to scrutinize every number to see who's really doing better. It's like God racing a 5K against the local record-holder, and winning by three meters. It doesn't make sense.