Islam, Science and Civilisation
Saturday, August 1, 2009
For the last two centuries
the world has witnessed unprecedented leaps in science and technology, the development
of railways, aeroplanes, nuclear technology, the Internet, IVF and genetically
modified food. Such developments have taken place in parallel to the
development of the West, reaching levels unparalleled in history. This
monopolisation of technological and scientific inventions has led to the belief
that liberal values are a pre-requisite for development.
Most thinkers, scientists and philosophers claim Islam has no place in the
world today. This view is built upon the premise that none of the Muslim
countries have produced anything in terms of scientific research or
technological invention. The West claims that progress in science and
technology occurred when the West rid itself of the authority of the Church and
separated religion from life. For them the church stifled the development of
science and reason as religion is inherently built upon faith and superstition.
Only with its removal from the public sphere did the West manage to launch an
industrial revolution and then flourish. Today for liberals it is they who
invented science as we know it. They claim they laid its foundations and have
created its numerous branches.
Such a narrative omits a number of historical developments that are not Western
and shows how the West continues to view its history as the history of the
world. Such a narrative also conveniently omits what the West took from
previous civilisations and especially the Islamic civilisation. Historically
all civilisations have been characterised with some form of technological and scientific
development. The West has documented the contributions the Romans made to the
discipline whilst the Islamic world in the 8th - 10th century translated the
works of the Greeks in the area.
Science in essence is the study, research, and experimentation into the
observable parts of the universe.
The development of automobiles was due primarily to the development of the
combustion engine. This is where the burning of fuel in an engine acts on the
pistons causing the movement of the solid parts, eventually moving the
automobile. This was possible due to the British Empire who originally used
steam and then coal to drive pistons and then eventually to generate rotary
(motion) to move machines. Such developments where based upon Al-Jazari's work
in the 12th century where he invented the crankshaft, and created rotary motion
through the use of rods and cylinders. He was the first to incorporate it into
a machine.
A parachute is a device used to slow the motion of an object through an
atmosphere by creating drag. Current day parachutes were developed from the
designs and experiments of the past. In the 9th century, Ibn Firnas invented a
primitive version of the parachute. He jumped from the minaret of the Mezquita
mosque in Córdoba using a huge wing-like cloak to break his fall and landed
with minor injuries. Subsequent Parachutes were made more compact and from
stretched linen over a wooden frame. Then folded silk, was developed as the
material for parachutes taking advantage of silk's strength and light weight.
Such examples amongst others show that no civilisation can lay claim to science
belonging inherently to them but rather they made a contribution to this
universal area. The fact atoms and molecules are subjected to the rules of the
universe which can be manipulated will not change if one is a Muslim, Christian
or a liberal. This is something that is universal and not affected by one's
belief. The real debate is therefore which civilisation made significant
contributions to science and what exactly drove them to excel in the field.
The Islamic golden age is considered to be the period from the 8th century to
the 13th century. During this period, engineers, scholars and traders in the
Islamic world contributed to the arts, agriculture, economics, industry, law,
literature, navigation, philosophy, sciences, and technology, both by
preserving and building upon earlier traditions and by adding to them. Howard
Turner, an expert on medieval history mentioned in his book ‘Science in
Medieval Islam,': ‘Muslim artists and scientists, princes and labourers
together created a unique culture that has directly and indirectly influenced
societies on every continent.' There were a number of specific elements within
Islam that were the driving engine which motivated Muslims to excel in this
field.
The worship of Allah سبحانه
وتعالى was one such factor that led to a
number of inventions. The times of the five daily prayers, the direction for
Qibla and the beginning and ending of Ramadan required accurate readings of the
positions of the stars and the moon. It was due to this that Muslims began to
invent observational and navigational instruments. This is why most
navigational stars today have Arabic names such as Acamar, Baham, Baten Kaitos,
Caph, Dabih, Furud, Izar, Lesath, Mirak, Nashira, Tarf and Vega.
Muslims made a number of contributions to Astronomy and eventually to the
development of the astronomical clock. A Mechanical lunisolar calendar with a
gear train and gear-wheels was invented by Abū Rayhān
al-Bīrūnī in the 10th century. Based on such designs Taqi al-din
invented the mechanical clock in the 15th century. The need to ascertain the
Qibla led to the development of the compass, which itself was based upon the
findings Muslims astronomers had collated. Muslims developed the compass rose
which displayed the orientation of the cardinal directions, north, south, east
and west on a map and nautical chart.
Allah سبحانه
وتعالى says in the Holy Qur'an:
وَهُوَ
الَّذِي
جَعَلَ
لَكُمُ
النُّجُومَ لِتَهْتَدُواْ
بِهَا فِي
ظُلُمَاتِ
الْبَرِّ
وَالْبَحْرِ
"And it is
He who ordained the stars for you that you may be guided thereby in the
darkness of the land and the sea." [TMQ 6:97]
This motivated Muslims to begin to find better observational and navigational
instruments. Such instruments were used to explore the world, which many Muslim
geographers collated into manuals. They were driven by the ayah in the Qur'an
where Allah سبحانه
وتعالى says:
وَجَعَلْنَا
فِي
الْأَرْضِ
رَوَاسِيَ
أَن تَمِيدَ
بِهِمْ
وَجَعَلْنَا
فِيهَا فِجَاجًا
سُبُلًا
لَعَلَّهُمْ
يَهْتَدُونَ
"And we
have placed in the earth firm hills lest it quake with them and we have placed
therein ravines as roads that happily they may find their way." [TMQ
21:31]
Early Muslims understood that Islam views all the material matters which
include the sciences, technology and industry, as merely the study of the
reality and a study of how matter can be manipulated to improve the condition
and living standards of humanity. As many lands came under the fold of the
Islamic civilisation, urbanisation led to a number of developments. The Arabian
Desert had scant water springs making most of the region uninhabitable. This
was overcome by Muslim engineers developing canals from the Euphrates and
Tigris rivers. The swamps around Baghdad were drained, freeing the city of
Malaria. Muslim engineers perfected the waterwheel and constructed elaborate
underground water channels called qanats. This led to the development of
advanced domestic water systems with sewers, public baths, drinking fountains,
piped drinking water supplies and widespread private and public toilet and
bathing facilities.
Muslims thinkers, scientists, engineers and experts made significant
contributions to science as well as many other disciplines. Many of these
contributions were later used by the West who made further contributions to the
field. The nature of science as a universal subject means no single
civilisation can lay claim to inventing it but rather most civilisations have
documented their contributions throughout history which acted as previous
information when experimentation was carried out by latter civilisations. Prior
to the emergence of Islam in the Middle East the host population made no
contribution to science. When the very same people accepted Islam they made contributions
which later generations utilised to invent new items which today still remain
with us. Islam rather than being an obstacle to science, was the catalyst that
drove Muslim's contribution to science.
Posted by
Revival at 1:54 PM
http://revival1924.blogspot.com/2009/08/islam-science-and-civilisation.html