The “golden age” of Arabic science extended from the eighth through the thirteenth centuries a.d.. Since then the intellectual decline has been staggering. Hillel Ofek traces the answer back to foundational differences between Islam and Christianity:
There are roughly 1.6 billion Muslims in the world, but only two scientists from Muslim countries have won Nobel Prizes in science (one for physics in 1979, the other for chemistry in 1999). Forty-six Muslim countries combined contribute just 1 percent of the world’s scientific literature; Spain and India each contribute more of the world’s scientific literature than those countries taken together. In fact, although Spain is hardly an intellectual superpower, it translates more books in a single year than the entire Arab world has in the past thousand years. “Though there are talented scientists of Muslim origin working productively in the West,” Nobel laureate physicist Steven Weinberg has observed, “for forty years I have not seen a single paper by a physicist or astronomer working in a Muslim country that was worth reading.”





August 29th, 2011 | 12:37 pm
Is it not obvious? The reason there are so few Nobel prizes among Muslims is that the Nobel committee is racist?
August 29th, 2011 | 1:58 pm
@ Joe De Vet
Now that you mention it:
Chemistry – 19% of World Total Nobel Prizes awarded to Jews
Physics – 26% of World Total Nobel Prizes awarded to Jews
I smell con-spi-racy!!!
/sarc
August 30th, 2011 | 8:38 am
Stanley Jaki argues in several impressive books that science was “still-born” in every culture–Chinese, Hindu, even ancient Greek–except the Christian West. This is because Judeo-Christian metaphysics posits a creation that reflects a rational creator; that creation has a linear story (otherwise the laws of inertia might not have occurred to us); and that the material realm is real and has its own built-in order. We owe much to the Church Fathers and Aquinas.
August 30th, 2011 | 12:09 pm
And to Plato and the Greeks. :)
September 1st, 2011 | 5:25 am
[...] HT: Joe Carter [...]
September 1st, 2011 | 11:01 pm
[...] [HT: Joe Carter] [...]
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