roadrunner
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True. The thread itself is irrational. Muslims are economically at a low point in history. So where are the Nobel Prizes supposed to come from?
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You are arguing with the wrong people !!!!!!
He did. He was also Head of Suparco and awarded many medals.
What do you expect with this award,Obama won the Peace Award.
Q: Yet science has done well under totalitarian regimes in China and the former Soviet Union, and even under some fairly unpleasant governments during Islam's "golden age of science" between the 9th and 13th centuries...
Let me make a distinction between empirical research and thinking per se. Thinking needs a free environment. Empirical research, where you have a well-defined project with official approval, can indeed flourish even under a totalitarian regime, because scientists can still meet other scientists, read the literature and publish. But it is impossible to advance new theories - particularly in the social sciences - when you are under the influence of a particular view, or under the pressure of a particular dogma. And I disagree with you about Islam's golden age. Totalitarianism is absolutely a modern phenomenon. In the past, kings were despots but they were not totalitarian. They weren't able to put their hands on science and philosophy. There was no widespread plan to limit scientists, philosophers and other academics. If there were restrictions, they came from religion or fellow philosophers rather than the political system.
The only contortion here is the circular argument being championed in the face of historical facts. Facts that simply do not stack up to the assertion.
Bottom line: Muslim scientists and artists flourished during a certain period of Islam's history. What was special about that period? It was a period of stable governance.
We can continue to look for secondary scapegoats. The Muslims' failure is due to certain Islamic scholars. But what about Africa? well, it's because of colonialism or inherent 'stupidity'. What about South America? it's because of this or that...
In short, we can conjure up custom excuses for all different societies, or we can look for a common theme among all these peoples and -- in conjunction with historical patterns -- identify the culprit: governance.
As I said, in times of good governance, religion becomes less relevant, so it doesn't matter what some Islamic intellectuals say.
Focus on governance and the rest will follow.
Sandy
This "influence of a particular view" is in fact the orthodoxy imposed on Muslims by reactionary religious scholars and their political fellow travelers - it is this that is responsible for the decline of Muslims in the fields of sciences and innovation, because the orthodoxy regards sciences and innovation with deep suspicion.
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Stability may be a necessary condition but not sufficient condition for scientific innovation.
In the end I found that Islam is the religion that makes more sense and is the most pro-science religion in the world.