Mott1
King
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2006
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- 742
I believe that deserves a big ----naziassbandit said:They did. In fact the very fundamentals of Islam are influenced by Greeks and Christians... During the hey-days of their empires, scholars openly discussed Greek philosophies, sciences, and so on, advancing them immensly as well as preserving them.


When you attribute science and the preservation of greek philosophy to fundamental Islam you actually do a terrible injustice to the brilliant Arab and Persian minds of that time. Such as:
The Persian Poet Abu Nuwas, al-Mutanabbi, the Turkish heterodox Nesimi and Persian epic poet Hakim Abu al-Qasim Mansur Firdowsi. Most of these men were open Islamic heretics. They left behind many great works and contributions, but most of these are notable not for their Islamic character but for their lack of it.
Muslims once led the rest of the world in mathematics and science, what caused the decline? There is scarcely any trace left.
For example in the medical sciences, Muslims established the first pharmacies and were the first to require standards of knowledge from doctors. In the late 8th century the first hospital was established in Baghdad, many followed After. Yet it was European physicians who paved the way for modern medical advances, not Muslims.
Is it because Europeans all of a sudden became intellectual geniuses? Hardly.
A more likely scenerio is that strict Islamic jurisprudence prohibited the advancement of medical science in the Islamic world.
While Europeans were able to dissect human bodies, that practice was forbidden in Islam. Europeans documented detailed anatomical drawings, but also forbidden in Islam were artistic representations of the human body.
Quite simply, Allah killed science in the Muslim world. Aristotle, along with great Arab commentators Averroes and Avicenna were studied in European universities in the 12th century and after, while in the Islamic world their work was largely ignored and certainly not taught in schools. Schools which concentrated mostly on memorization and study of the Quran.
Why were Avicenna and Averroes read in the West along with other Arab and Persian philosophers, but considered anomalies in their own traditions? Philosophy was not even studied in Islamic schools at the time.
The same could be said of the Church in Europe. Although the Church served many purposes and contributed greatly to Europes emergance from the dark ages, it certainly did not contribute to science.
Both the Church and Islam set repressive limitations to their societies freethinkers. It just so happens that the Church was more flexible.