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Western writers have often used the
word Arabs or Muhammadans for Muslims and Arabic civilization for
Islamic Civilization. In other instances, the words Saracen(ic) and
Moor(ish) are also used for Muslims (Arabs and non-Arabs) from various
parts of Europe, Africa, Arabia and Asia.
George Sarton's Tribute to
Muslim Scientists in the "Introduction to the History of Science"
"It will suffice here to evoke a
few glorious names without contemporary equivalents in the West: Jabir
ibn Haiyan, al-Kindi, al-Khwarizmi, al-Fargani, al-Razi, Thabit ibn
Qurra, al-Battani, Hunain ibn Ishaq, al-Farabi, Ibrahim ibn Sinan, al-Masudi,
al-Tabari, Abul Wafa, 'Ali ibn Abbas, Abul Qasim, Ibn al-Jazzar, al-Biruni,
Ibn Sina, Ibn Yunus, al-Kashi, Ibn al-Haitham, 'Ali Ibn 'Isa al-Ghazali,
al-zarqab, Omar Khayyam. A magnificent array of names which it would not
be difficult to extend. If anyone tells you that the Middle Ages were
scientifically sterile, just quote these men to him, all of whom
flourished within a short period, 750 to 1100 A.D."
John William Draper in the
"Intellectual Development of Europe"
"I have to deplore the systematic
manner in which the literature of Europe has continued to put out of
sight our obligations to the Muhammadans. Surely they cannot be much
longer hidden. Injustice founded on religious rancour and national
conceit cannot be perpetuated forever. The Arab has left his
intellectual impress on Europe. He has indelibly written it on the
heavens as any one may see who reads the names of the stars on a common
celestial globe."
Robert Briffault in the "Making
of Humanity"
"It was under the influence of the
arabs and Moorish revival of culture and not in the 15th century, that a
real renaissance took place. Spain, not Italy, was the cradle of the
rebirth of Europe. After steadily sinking lower and lower into
barbarism, it had reached the darkest depths of ignorance and
degradation when cities of the Saracenic world, Baghdad, Cairo, Cordova,
and Toledo, were growing centers of civilization and intellectual
activity. It was there that the new life arose which was to grow into
new phase of human evolution. From the time when the influence of their
culture made itself felt, began the stirring of new life.
"It was under their successors at
Oxford School (that is, successors to the Muslims of Spain) that Roger
Bacon learned Arabic and Arabic Sciences. Neither Roger Bacon nor later
namesake has any title to be credited with having introduced the
experimental method. Roger Bacon was no more than one of apostles of
Muslim Science and Method to Christian Europe; and he never wearied of
declaring that knowledge of Arabic and Arabic Sciences was for his
contemporaries the only way to true knowledge. Discussion as to who was
the originator of the experimental method....are part of the colossal
misinterpretation of the origins of European civilization. The
experimental method of Arabs was by Bacon's time widespread and eagerly
cultivated throughout Europe.
"Science is the most momentous
contribution of Arab civilization to the modern world; but its fruits
were slow in ripening. Not until long after Moorish culture had sunk
back into darkness did the giant, which it had given birth to, rise in
his might. It was not science only which brought Europe back to life.
Other and manifold influence from the civilization of Islam communicated
its first glow to European Life.
"For Although there is not a
single aspect of European growth in which the decisive influence of
Islamic Culture is not traceable, nowhere is it so clear and momentous
as in the genesis of that power which constitutes the permanent
distinctive force of the modern world, and the supreme source of its
victory, natural science and the scientific spirit.
"The debt of our science to that
of the Arabs does not consist in startling discoveries or revolutionary
theories, science owes a great deal more to Arab culture, it owes its
existence. The Astronomy and Mathematics of the Greeks were a foreign
importation never thoroughly acclimatized in Greek culture. The Greeks
systematized, generalized and theorized, but the patient ways of
investigation, the accumulation of positive knowledge, the minute method
of science, detailed and prolonged observation and experimental inquiry
were altogether alien to the Greek temperament. Only in Hellenistic
Alexandria was any approach to scientific work conducted in the ancient
classical world. What we call science arose in Europe as a result of new
spirit of enquiry, of new methods of experiment, observation,
measurement, of the development of mathematics, in a form unknown to the
Greeks. That spirit and those methods were introduced into the European
world by the Arabs.
"It is highly probable that but
for the Arabs, modern European civilization would never have arisen at
all; it is absolutely certain that but for them, it would not have
assumed that character which has enabled it to transcend all previous
phases of evolution."
Arnold and Guillaume in "Lagacy
of Islam" on Islamic science and medicine
"Looking back we may say that
Islamic medicine and science reflected the light of the Hellenic sun,
when its day had fled, and that they shone like a moon, illuminating the
darkest night of the European middle Ages; that some bright stars lent
their own light, and that moon and stars alike faded at the dawn of a
new day - the Renaissance. Since they had their share in the direction
and introduction of that great movement, it may reasonably be claimed
that they are with us yet."
George Sarton in the
"Introduction to the History of Science"
"During the reign of Caliph Al-Mamun
(813-33 A.D.), the new learning reached its climax. The monarch created
in Baghdad a regular school for translation. It was equipped with a
library, one of the translators there was Hunayn Ibn Ishaq (809-77) a
particularly gifted philosopher and physician of wide erudition, the
dominating figure of this century of translators. We know from his own
recently published Memoir that he translated practically the whole
immense corpus of Galenic writings."
"Besides the translation of Greek
works and their extracts, the translators made manuals of which one
form, that of the 'pandects,' is typical of the period of Arabic
learning. These are recapitulations of the whole medicine, discussing
the affections of the body, systematically beginning at the head and
working down to the feet."
"The Muslim ideal was, it goes
without saying, not visual beauty but God in His plentitude; that is God
with all his manifestations, the stars and the heavens, the earth and
all nature. The Muslim ideal is thus infinite. But in dealing with the
infinite as conceived by the Muslims, we cannot limit ourselves to the
space alone, but must equally consider time.
"The first mathematical step from
the Greek conception of a static universe to the Islamic one of a
dynamic universe was made by Al-Khwarizmi (780-850), the founder of
modern Algebra. He enhanced the purely arithmetical character of numbers
as finite magnitudes by demonstrating their possibilities as elements of
infinite manipulations and investigations of properties and relations.
"In Greek mathematics, the numbers
could expand only by the laborious process of addition and
multiplication. Khwarizmi's algebraic symbols for numbers contain within
themselves the potentialities of the infinite. So we might say that the
advance from arithmetic to algebra implies a step from being to
'becoming' from the Greek universe to the living universe of Islam. The
importance of Khwarizmi's algebra was recognized, in the twelfth
century, by the West, - when Girard of Cremona translated his theses
into Latin. Until the sixteenth century this version was used in
European universities as the principal mathematical text book. But
Khwarizmi's influence reached far beyond the universities. We find it
reflected in the mathematical works of Leonardo Fibinacci of Pissa,
Master Jacob of Florence, and even of Leonardo da Vinci."
"Through their medical
investigations they not merely widened the horizons of medicine, but
enlarged humanistic concepts generally. And once again they brought this
about because of their over riding spiritual convictions. Thus it can
hardly have been accidental that those researches should have led them
that were inevitably beyond the reach of Greek masters. If it is
regarded as symbolic that the most spectacular achievement of the
mid-twentieth century is atomic fission and the nuclear bomb, likewise
it would not seem fortuitous that the early Muslim's medical endeavor
should have led to a discovery that was quite as revolutionary though
possibly more beneficent."
"A philosophy of self-centredness,
under whatever disguise, would be both incomprehensible and
reprehensible to the Muslim mind. That mind was incapable of viewing
man, whether in health or sickness as isolated from God, from fellow
men, and from the world around him. It was probably inevitable that the
Muslims should have discovered that disease need not be born within the
patient himself but may reach from outside, in other words, that they
should have been the first to establish clearly the existence of
contagion."
"One of the most famous exponents
of Muslim universalism and an eminent figure in Islamic learning was Ibn
Sina, known in the West as Avicenna (981-1037). For a thousand years he
has retained his original renown as one of the greatest thinkers and
medical scholars in history. His most important medical works are the
Qanun (Canon) and a treatise on Cardiac drugs. The 'Qanun fi-l-Tibb' is
an immense encyclopedia of medicine. It contains some of the most
illuminating thoughts pertaining to distinction of mediastinitis from
pleurisy; contagious nature of phthisis; distribution of diseases by
water and soil; careful description of skin troubles; of sexual diseases
and perversions; of nervous ailments."
"We have reason to believe that
when, during the crusades, Europe at last began to establish hospitals,
they were inspired by the Arabs of near East....The first hospital in
Paris, Les Quinze-vingt, was founded by Louis IX after his return from
the crusade 1254-1260."
"We find in his (Jabir, Geber)
writings remarkably sound views on methods of chemical research, a
theory on the geologic formation of metals (the six metals differ
essentially because of different proportions of sulphur and mercury in
them); preparation of various substances (e.g., basic lead carbonatic,
arsenic and antimony from their sulphides)."
Ibn Haytham's writings reveal his
fine development of the experimental faculty. His tables of
corresponding angles of incidence and refraction of light passing from
one medium to another show how closely he had approached discovering the
law of constancy of ratio of sines, later attributed to snell. He
accounted correctly for twilight as due to atmospheric refraction,
estimating the sun's depression to be 19 degrees below the horizon, at
the commencement of the phenomenon in the mornings or at its termination
in the evenings."
"A great deal of geographical as
well as historical and scientific knowledge is contained in the thirty
volume meadows of Gold and Mines of Gems by one of the leading Muslim
Historians, the tenth century al Mas'udi. A more strictly geographical
work is the dictionary 'Mujam al-Buldan' by al-Hamami (1179-1229). This
is a veritable encyclopedia that, in going far beyond the confines of
geography, incorporates also a great deal of scientific lore."
"They studied, collected and
described plants that might have some utilitarian purpose, whether in
agriculture or in medicine. These excellent tendencies, without
equivalent in Christendom, were continued during the first half of the
thirteenth century by an admirable group of four botanists. One of these
Ibn al-Baitar compiled the most elaborate Arabic work on the subject
(Botany), in fact the most important for the whole period extending from
Dioscorides down to the sixteenth century. It was a true encyclopedia on
the subject, incorporating the whole Greek and Arabic experience."
"'Abd al-Malik ibn Quraib al-Asmai
(739-831) was a pious Arab who wrote some valuable books on human
anatomy. Al-Jawaliqi who flourished in the first half of the twelfth
century and 'Abd al-Mumin who flourished in the second half of the
thirteenth century in Egypt, wrote treatises on horses. The greatest
zoologist amongst the Arabs was al-Damiri (1405) of Egypt whose book on
animal life, 'Hayat al-Hayawan' has been translated into English by
A.S.G. Jayakar (London 1906, 1908)."
"The weight of venerable
authority, for example that of Ptolemy, seldom intimidated them. They
were always eager to put a theory to tests, and they never tired of
experimentation. Though motivated and permeated by the spirit of their
religion, they would not allow dogma as interpreted by the orthodox to
stand in the way of their scientific research."
References:
1. George Sarton, "Introduction to
the History of Science, Vol. I-IV," Carnegie Institute of Washington,
Baltimore, 1927-31; Williams and Wilkins, Baltimore, 1950-53.
2. Robert Briffault, "The Making of
Humanity," London, 1938.
3. T. Arnold and A. Guillaume, "The
Legacy of Islam," Oxford University Press, 1931.
4. E. Gibbon, "Decline and Fall of
Roman Empire," London, 1900.
Resource:
Zahoor, A.
(1997). Islamic Civilization.
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