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What, Exactly, are the Great Achievements of the Islamic World?
moi
Posted on 01/11/2002 8:52:14 AM PST by ml/nj
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To: Non-Sequitur
Were all of those men Muslims, or are there some whose names were simply converted to Arabic? And how were they treated by the Islamic culture of the time?
181
posted on
02/07/2002 11:52:52 PM PST
by
Styria
To: Styria
They were all Muslims and, as far as I know, they were all respected.
Comment #183 Removed by Moderator
To: Otto von Bismark
Do you honestly think that your brand of religion affects your skills? The Pharoah's dictatorship surely didn't theirs. Is not Egypt part of the Islamic world and are we not crediting them as a people? We are not asking what their creativity wrought in terms of religion, although they did contribute their architectural creativity to such as the Rose window in the Chartres cathedral, the nave through the Greeks,etc.
To: jamesbond
One of the great achievements of the Islamic world is that they are able to reproduce their people. For all the advances of western Christianity, it is no longer able to self-replicate. If Western Christianity keeps up these low birthrates Western Europeans will be extinct in 300-500 years. In that time Islam and its follwers will not only exist, they would have multiplied many times over. The Muslims will probably claim credit for all of the achievements of Western Civilazation then because there will be no Western European to answer back. Th first function of any civilaztion/religion is to reproduce, in that respect Islan has succeeded admirably while European Christianity has failed.
185
posted on
02/08/2002 3:20:55 PM PST
by
koba
To: koba
hummus
To: VaBthang4
"Thread over." Well why didn't it stop? Maybe we ought to start what they've SUBTRACTED?
Too long?
Comment #188 Removed by Moderator
Comment #189 Removed by Moderator
To: nobodyUknow
bump
To: ml/nj
There is linguistic evidence that scientific and mathematical concepts unknown to Europeans found their way into Portuguese, Spanish, French, German, and English through Arabic-speaking people. While the Christians and Moslems were at war in Spain (for about 800 years starting in the 8th century AD) there was much cultural assimilation and new words came into the language to fill the cultural vacuum. More than 4000 modern Spanish words have Arabic roots, and almost all of these deal with technology (medicine, astronomy, algebra, and other sciences.) Most English words starting with "al" are of Arabic origin, too. Examples include alchemy, alcohol, algebra, algorithm, alkali, and almanac, to name a few. Regardless of whether one likes or dislikes the influence, pretending that it doesn't exist is counterproductive at best, or as the saying goes, it is better to walk forward through history with at least one eye open *smile*
191
posted on
02/09/2002 8:36:30 PM PST
by
drANN!
To: drANN!
That was Then, this is Now!
To: ml/nj
1. They did not necessarily lead the world in all of those areas.
2. The "great" discoveries and things like the numbering system came about long before the pathetic scam of Islam came about.
3. Therefore, these were not Islamic concepts or discoveries.
It's a myth, like the one about black egyptians with wings flying around the pyramids.
193
posted on
02/09/2002 10:16:29 PM PST
by
RJS1950
To: ml/nj
bump
To: ml/nj
bump for newbies to peruse and think about!
To: DJ MacWoW
bump for the newbies and veterans to see!
To: Non-Sequitur
You failed to date any of these scholars. Furthermore, you should be aware that many of them were not Islamics. They were conquered peoples. The Islamics typically renamed people giving them an Arabic name.
To: Paul Ross
How the heck did you come across this old post? Whatever, all the scholars mentioned lived between 800 and 1500 AD. And I'm sure you're right, they are all probably Belgians, Australians, Japanese and the like.
To: Attillathehon
Sorry; Al Gore did not invent the zero; his parents did.
And he is it.
He did, however, discover it the first time he looked in a mirror.
199
posted on
04/11/2004 3:36:51 PM PDT
by
ApplegateRanch
(The world needs more horses, and fewer Jackasses!)
To: Salgak
The Mathematical concept of "Zero" can be attributed to the Islamic World. Prior to that numbering systems worked similar to the familiar "Roman" numbering system. MMII isn't that tough for 2002, but try MCMLXXXXIX for 1999. . . . Zero made positional notation, and modern mathematic possible
The zero is an Indian invention along with algebra and the basics of calculus
200
posted on
08/29/2004 6:23:52 AM PDT
by
Cronos
(W2K4)
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