freediver wrote on Mar 3
rd, 2013 at 10:11am:
Most of the Muslims I have spoken to here say that apostasy is punishable by death under Islam. Does that count?
no. That doesn't even make sense FD.
freediver wrote on Mar 3
rd, 2013 at 10:11am:
Also, the basic sciences seemed to suffer under Islam, and still do. Abu countered this with examples from a Saudi University of research into the medicinal benefits of camel urine.
And you have evidence that camel urine has no medicinal benefits - or that this theory/belief has been arrived at unscientifically? Show me the studies and/or the scientific debate (if any exists). Seems a pretty bizarre example to demonstrate how science suffers under islam.
Postmodern Trendoid III wrote on Mar 3
rd, 2013 at 10:55am:
What, then, explains the phenomenon of Islamic countries creating nothing in 800 years?
As I argued in the other thread, islam has been going through a dark age - just like christianity did. What happened in western (christian) Europe between circa 500AD and 1400? Wasn't exactly an age of enlightenment and learning was it? This is the period in which the church ruled, and actively suppressed the scientific and artistic pursuits that didn't strictly conform to the church's world view. Whats happening in islam today - and for the last 800 years or so isn't nearly as bad as what happened to christianity, but there is no denying it is a relatively closed-minded period. But lets not forget this period proceeded a period of some 500 years of great cultural and scientific enlightenment under islam. But like all great civilizations, they eventually enter a period of decline - just as christianity and western civilization is entering now - and its lasted about the same time as Islam's golden age.
Postmodern Trendoid III wrote on Mar 3
rd, 2013 at 10:55am:
Islam has submission to Allah as more important than any social or political reform and advances in the arts and sciences.
yes you've said this before, and as Karnal explained to you before, artistic, scientific, social and political reforms are not considered less important than submission to Allah - when these things are seen as the very expression of submitting to Allah. In fact, Islam demands the pursuit of knowledge - and as I said in my last post, I can't think of any sort of scientific or artistic field that is contradictory to islam such that it must be suppressed.
freediver wrote on Mar 3
rd, 2013 at 11:04am:
It is easy to paint the whole history of European science as a clash between the church and academia - if you are satisfied with one or two examples as evidence, as gandalf appears to. But the facts show a completely different picture.
The entire medieval period - nearly a whole millenium - is just one gigantic case study of the suppression of scientific knowledge and artistic pursuit. They don't call it the dark ages for nothing.
Of course scientific and artistic advancements came about only when western Europe began to rebel against the church's crippling hold on society, and committed acts which previously were condemned as heresy.
Postmodern Trendoid III wrote on Mar 3
rd, 2013 at 11:28am:
Yes, pretty much all the early thinkers and scientists in medieval Europe were Christians.
um yeah - could that possibly be because medieval Europe was christian?
In any case, your statement is still bullshit:
Quote:Córdoba was the cultural centre of al-Andalus.[12] Mosques, such as The Great Mosque, were the focal point of many Caliphs' attentions. Also found in Córdoba is the Caliph's large palace found on the outskirts of the city. This palace had many rooms filled with riches and prizes from the East. Córdoba was the intellectual centre of al-Andalus, with translations of ancient Greek texts to Arabic, Latin and Hebrew. The 10th-century library of Al-Ḥakam II was one of the largest libraries in the world, housing at least 400,000 volumes. Throughout the period of al-Andalus civilization, Jews and Arabs lived in harmony: Jewish stonemasons have left their marks incised into many columns of the great Mosque at Córdoba. It was not until the fall of al-Andalus in 1492 that the incoming Christians banished the Jews from Spain.
Appreciable advances in science, history, geography, philosophy and grammar occurred during the Caliphate.[13] Al-Andalus became susceptible to eastern cultural influences as well. Ziryab is credited on bringing hair and clothing styles to the Iberian peninsula (as well as toothpaste and deodorant).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caliphate_of_Córdoba