75:26 No! When the soul has reached the collar bones 27 And it is said, “Who will cure [him]?”
28 And the dying one is certain that it is the [time of] separation 29 And the leg is wound about the leg, 30 To your Lord, that Day, will be the procession.
31 And the disbeliever had not believed, nor had he prayed. 32 But [instead], he denied and turned away. 33 And then he went to his people, swaggering [in pride].
34 Woe to you, and woe! 35 Then woe to you, and woe!
Koran 75:26-35
Verses 26-28 seem to indicate that Muhammad experienced disassociation with a panic attack. Or even something like heartburn or acid reflux. You can’t feel your soul leaving your body, as this happens when you’re dead. Obviously, Muhammad was describing what was happening to himself, so this should not be in the perfect words of the perfect Qur’an from perfect Allah.
Verse 29 seems to be Muhammad referring to his inability to stand after the Jewess poisoned the lamb that Muhammad ate. Again, Muhammad describing what is happening to himself, should not be in the perfect words of the perfect Qur’an from perfect Allah.
Verse 30, “To your Lord, that Day, will be the procession.” – that’s Muhammad speaking, thinking he’s going to die. But obviously, nothing happened. Muhammad was in pain for three years from the corrosive poison, unable to walk and in severe agony. Again, with all that pain, it’s obvious that Muhammad would be a false prophet, thinking he was going to die.

Verse 31-35 seems like an out-of-order response to this story:
They claim that the Prophet of Allah grabbed the clothes of the enemy of Allah, Abu Jahl. The Prophet then said to him, “Woe to you! And then (again) woe to you! Again woe to you! And then (again) woe to you!”
At this the enemy of Allah, Abu Jahl, said, “Are you threatening me, O Muhammad? By Allah! Neither you nor your Lord are able to do anything, and verily, I am the mightiest person walking between its (Makkah’s) two mountains.”
Tafsir Ibn Kathir, 75:26
And you know, Abu Jahl was right. Muhammad has copied/pasted his own words to Abu Jahl, into his recitation, in his Koran. Muhammad and Allah were unable to do anything about Abu Jahl, except for Muhammad ranting in anger in his recitation, the Koran, exposing Islam as a false religion and so Allah is imaginary.
The best replacement for this passage is: “”, the empty sentence.
