Ah, the usual "it's not their fault, the others conspired against them" argument. Let's see...
I didn't say
conspired. You can't argue that that part of the world didn't get a serious rogering from various massive foreign powers. You can't blame all of it on culture and lack of bootstraps, just as you can't blame the fall of the Incas or of Carthage exclusively on their faiths and/or lack of the will to power.
It's really not fair or acceptable to compare it with Europe, which was (during the Dark Ages) recovering from the chaos of countless barbarian invasions (Germanics, Slavs, Avars, Vikings, Magyars the list goes on). It is a fact that many of the knowledge produced by the Islamic world in this period was in fact derived from the work of others, mainly the Persians and Romans.
So Europe gets a pass for being ravaged by barbarians, but the Near East doesn't? Aren't you going to blame Europe's misery on repressive Christianity? It's just as fair, honestly. Religious extremism holds people back no matter what the religion is. Blaming specific faiths for what is ultimately a social phenomenon isn't 'fair or acceptable', either. Plus in the 8th century the Arabs and Turks
were the barbarian invaders. Not long after,
they were the advanced ones.
Religion may be a tool of oppressors but it is rarely their cause.
Mongol invasions were bad, that is true, but they
a) did not destroy the whole muslim world
True - India, bits of Turkey, most of North Africa and various unimportant parts of Indochina were spared. That's like saying that only recieving third-degree burns on 70% of your body means you're okay, though.
b) 95%? that's an overestimation
No, actually. The population of Persia has been estimated at 5m+ before the invasion in 1219; half of that were slaughtered immediately and 90% of the remainder were either starved or murdered during the next forty years. By 1260 the population was less than 250,000. That's a 95% drop. That's a
lot.
c) Europe suffered some pretty bad catastrophies too: Black Plague wiped out at least 1/3 of Europe's population, perhaps even more.
And that was pretty bad, but losing 1/3 is not quite the same as losing 19/20 plus having all your cities and fields burnt. The Black Death was nothing by comparison. And again, the Black Death hit Asia just as hard as Europe.
d) most imporant point: other civilizations have been devastated by the Mongols too, but they recovered: China gradually assimilated them and then become more powerful than ever before.
China didn't get exterminated - the Mongols beat down their armies and replaced the ruling class, as had many other invaders before and after. I wouldn't say it strengthened them, as such; mostly it didn't change them at all. China (and India) have been pretty good at that, historically; strong culture and great numbers do wonders for assimilating invaders.
Note: The Christian kingdoms of the Caucasus haven't recovered, either (Georgia/Armenia). They were pretty awesome, once, too.
That's not an explanation. Again, China recovered, Russia recovered, Hapsburgs recovered.
Again, China was taken over, Russia surrendered and was vassalised rather than face slaughter, and the Habsburgs were German nobles (seriously, what?).
FYI, Mameluks were the first one who defeated the Mongols, they were the most powerful Muslim civilization in that time. You can't say that they succumbed to MUSLIM Ottomans because they were weakened by the Mongols.
Egypt did pretty well, honestly, for a country with no reliable trading partners or natural resources. Even today they're not really more backwards than, say, the Balkans, and doing better than (Christian) Ethiopia, which has had similar problems on the international stage. Plus the Ottomans didn't beat them until 1831, only 25 years after they threw out the French. Their current problem is repressive dictatorship, which as we have established is not unique to Islamic nations.
Ottoman Empire was a Muslim country and it had the opportunity to develop, instead it hindered technological progress. Again, why? I say it happened because of their Islamic culture, which they adopted.
They did develop. Compare the Seljuk Rum of the 12th century with Industrial-Era Ottoman Turkey. By comparison, compare Roman tech c.400ad with that six centuries prior - it's not an impressive difference. Big land empires suck at advancing (c.f. Orthodox Russia).
On top of that, Europe went backwards quite spectacularly between the 4th and 16th centuries. I will therefore assume that because they were Christian, it is Christianity's fault (and therefore that Christians should be looked down upon). I will back this up with selected misunderstandings about Christian theology.
Again, you are trying to lay blame on external factors without thinking about the internal factors - why were the Muslims lagging behind and incapable of resisting the Europeans? You know my answer to that.
Incapable? Well, Egypt and Persia put up quite a fight, and the Ottomans didn't fall until WWI, in which they were a major player. Perhaps there might be more to it than you think?
Anyway, the situation was reversed in the early days of Islam, where just about all of spain, south Italy and the
Roman Empire were taken. The various Caliphates continued to be more advanced and economically developed than the squabbling, feudal Europeans or the stagnant Romaioi until the Horde came.
Actually, it had a lot to do with Christianity. Islam is even more intrusive religion than Christianity, and it influenced the culture much more. You can't say that islam had nothing to do with that, it would be as stupid as to say that Christianity had nothing to do with Crusades
Islam's pretty similar to Christianity, honestly. Were it not for the cultural associations they'd practically be sects of each other. (Technically they're both varieties of radical Judaism). You can't claim that Christianity didn't have an overwhelming effect on European culture, though. And don't get me started on the Crusades.
A completely absurd analogy, which is not really worth a comment.
What's wrong with it? It mirrors your logic perfectly, except with the biases reversed.
Clearly, it's not just him. Islam as a whole is at odds with modernity, with all the ideologies which are essential for modernization.
That's pretty arguable, and even so, Christianity is just as bad (see if you can find a serious Islamic religious movement which argues for flat-earth Geocentrism). As are Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Shintoism, Taoism...
There's got to be more to it than just what faith you follow, right?
You need to have relaxed culture to start economic growth.
Now we're getting somewhere. You know that Christianity prohibited banking, too, right? It's why Jews have a rather enduring reputation for being moneyed; they were the only ones in Europe allowed to lend money or recieve interest.
What changed? Not the religion - Europe is still Christian. Something else changed. Care to guess?
Even the Renaissance was mostly economically driven. The feudal system was completely antithetical to advancement - the serfs had no power, and the nobles liked it the way it was. It wasn't until increased urbanisation and the development of a middle class that Europe managed to do anything at all, and it took them a millennium to get to that point. It has been argued that the Great Plague was the tipping point, by simulateously increasing demand for labour, reducing supply, and driving people into cities. Quite a lot more to it than that, though.
Look, rather than just counterpoint everything I'll say this.
Trade.
Trade is the lifeblood of civilisations. Without trade there are only farmers, warriors and nobles, and civilisation remains in warring stasis.
Consider Sub-Saharan Africa. Not exactly the heart of civilisation, for the most part, but consider those places where it has thrived: Nubia, Ethiopia and the cities of the River Niger. Each rose to great heights and then collapsed when their trade routes disappeared. Look at Timbuktu, at Mali. Vast wealth gained from trade across the Sahara fed great centres of learning and culture, but they crumbled into warring anarchy once their trading partners started sailing around them.
You notice how most of the historical leading lights of technology are small, densely populated coastal states? Trade.
What preceded the Industrial Revolution in Europe? The Age of Exploration, of Sail. The bit where the nations of western Europe became massively wealthy trading powers.
Seriously, trade. The main trade routes of the Near East were Mediterranean sea-trade (limited somewhat by not being friends with Europe) and the Silk Road (obsoleted by the Age of Sail). Now it's oil, but in most places most of the oil wealth is embezzled by a few rich nobles, tyrants and/or oligarchs, who use it to buy golden toilets and American companies.
The world's never as black-and-white as you think.