So far so good.SAM said:So let me see, if we say Jewish Noble Prize winners, that's wrong?
We say Muslim President for a Muslim president. Whats wrong with that?
We say Islamic country for countries where a majority are Muslims.
But defining a science by the religious beliefs of the scientists, regardless of the the place or time or culture in which they worked, is almost certainly misleading. Hitler called Relativistic Physics "Jewish science" - sound reasonable ?SAM said:We say Islamic science for the science that was practised by the first or early Muslims. Its the defining characteristic of the scientists.
On the contrary, it would probably be far more informative. It might at least supply a location.SAM said:We also say Greek Philosophy, Indian astronomy etc, but Muslims are ethnically diverse, so saying Arab science or Persian science is less informative than saying Islamic science.
So can we mock all the prophets we don't think are real Prophets, or just some of them ?Arsalan said:Just because some Americans (Always a credible source) think that Bush is some kind of Jesus, doesnt make it so.
So far so good.
But defining a science by the religious beliefs of the scientists, regardless of the the place or time or culture in which they worked, is almost certainly misleading. Hitler called Relativistic Physics "Jewish science" - sound reasonable ?
On the contrary, it would probably be far more informative. It might at least supply a location.
Westerners labeling something "Islamic science" is an expression of bigotry or ignorance on their part - they can't be bothered, or have failed despite effort, to distinguish different Muslims, or different scientific traditions within the Islamic world.
I'm not sure if your interpretation of Islam is the same as Arsalan's. I don't recall you saying that Universalism was the central "message" in your belief?
"Cultures, once tampered with, are nearly impossible to reclaim. "
Identity is a very powerful social barometer. Most Indians are conditioned to seeing themselves as the British saw them.
So then isn't it unfair to pick on the US, which was once the property of those very same British?
I'm just trying to understand why it's all "Aww, feel sorry for India" and "Fuck the Americans", when you could make the same argument for both.
You're confusing the settlers with the native Americans.
Bullshit. Answer the question.
Not my job. Theirs. I probably would not try to include all the scientists of 700 years and half a continent under one umbrella term, actually - not if I were trying to be informative.SAM said:If you can come up with a better definition of the scientists from the 7th century to the 14th century, from Arabia to Moorish Spain, be sure to inform the science historians.
Those are locations. There probably are (there normally are) differences in the concentrations, approaches, patterns of discovery, etc, between these different groups of scientists in these different locations during these different centuries. That is informative. See how that works ?SAM said:On the contrary, it would probably be far more informative. It might at least supply a location.
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Not really, Persian scientists may have done their work in Egypt. Egyptians in Moorish Spain.
So far, it sounds quite similar to a concept familiar in various Christian schools of theology - the notion of various benighted peoples having good-hearted but flawed conceptions of the same One God the Christians have the true version of is not at all alien to various Christian traditions. The effort spent in telling Westerners the concept is mysteriously difficult to explain might be better employed in simply explaining it.SAM said:Its called Tawheed, its a difficult concept to explain to someone who is not familiar with Islam or only understands it through a western lens.
Not my job. Theirs. I probably would not try to include all the scientists of 700 years and half a continent under one umbrella term, actually - not if I were trying to be informative.
Those are locations. There probably are (there normally are) differences in the concentrations, approaches, patterns of discovery, etc, between these different groups of scientists in these different locations during these different centuries. That is informative. See how that works ?
We have people coming to the US now to do science at Christian universities. We do not call what they do "Christian science", nor would such a label inform.
Do you believe that Japan after WW2 up until present day has gone through a Renaissance? The term alone is very much associated with Europe but somewhat eaqual to it except more focused and less broad in terms of substituting art for technology. I would include Germany but Germany is more dependant and tied into the whole of Europe or at the very least associated with all of Europe.
Edit: When i imply of a modern day Japanes Renaissance i mean as much as possible in modern times where technology and advancements are more international.
No, not like the Renaissance.SAM said:I probably would not try to include all the scientists of 700 years and half a continent under one umbrella term, actually - not if I were trying to be informative.
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You mean like the Rennaissance?
Not my field, no idea.SAM said:What differences do you perceive that are defined by location and not by all of them living under an Islamic culture?
But not all these Islamicized places produced science, did they ? Over 700 years, schools of various sciences sprang up (a common feature of emerging empires) here and there, now and then. Throwing them all into the same box is not informative, and naming that box according to the dominant religion of the communities involved postively obscures.SAM said:We have people coming to the US now to do science at Christian universities. We do not call what they do "Christian science", nor would such a label inform.
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Maybe not, but its not the same circumstance is it? From 700 to 1400, Islam spread from Arabia to Indonesia, the culture was Islamicised,
And the stuff about multiculturism is no longer operative in thsi context. Got it. But what does that have to do with the science ?SAM said:The common thread in all of them was they were born into a culture that was newly established by Arabs from a corner of the Asian subcontinent,
When empires establish theocratic states and base their legal, economic, and other institutions on religious edicts, labeling them by that body of edicts informs - you know something about them.SAM said:But I find it interesting that the people who do not want to define the scientists who were fostered under Islamic cultures as Islamic, they are all too willing to define all empire building by any Muslim [self professed, like the communist atheists or George W Bush, Christian extraordinaire] by their religion.
I have no idea what the historians in general have actually been up to. I think you should do better than toSAM said:So you don't perceive there are differences because its not your field and yet you think science historians should have done better?
I know a lot of people from Africa to Iraq that say they are Arabs and no longer speak their native tongues and no longer worship their native Gods. Hmmmm.... What do you think?I did. The damage the British did to Indian culture in India, they also did to Indian culture in the US. By redefining themselves as Americans or Australians, the British and other settlers replaced the native populations and almost exterminated their culture. I don't see what your comparison is supposed to define.
Middle Easterner colonists.If you can come up with a better definition of the scientists from the 7th century to the 14th century,
Islamic culture? Does India have Islamic culture or Indian culture?Islamic culture.