Jim Al-Khalili
March 27, 2008
WATCHING the daily news of hardship, misery and violence across the Arab world and central
Asia, it is not surprising that many in the West view the culture of these countries as
backward and their religion as at best conservative and often as violent and extremist.
I am on a mission to dismiss a crude and inaccurate historical hegemony and present the
positive face of Islam. It has never been more timely or more resonant to explore the extent to
which Western cultural and scientific thought is indebted to the work, a thousand years ago, of
Arab and Muslim thinkers. What is remarkable, for instance, is that for more than 700 years the
international language of science was Arabic.
We read in most accounts of the history of science that the contribution of the ancient Greeks
would not be matched until the European Renaissance and the arrival of the likes of Copernicus
and Galileo in the 16th century. The 1000 years sandwiched between the two is dismissed as the
Dark Ages. But the scientists and philosophers whom the ninth-century Abbasid caliph of
Baghdad, Abu Ja'far Abdullah al-Ma'mun, brought together, and whom he entrusted with his dreams
of scholarship and wisdom, sparked a period of scientific achievement that was just as
important as the Greeks or Renaissance.
Of course, some Islamic scholars are well known in the West. The Persian philosopher Avicenna -
born in 980 - is famous as the greatest physician of the Middle Ages. His Canon Of Medicine was
to remain the standard medical text in the Islamic world and across Europe until the 17th
century, a period of more than 600 years. But Avicenna was also undoubtedly the greatest
philosopher of Islam and one of the most important of all time.
But Avicenna was not the greatest scientist in Islam. For he did not have the encyclopedic mind
or make the breadth of impact across so many fields as a less famous Persian who seems to have
lived in his shadow: Abu Rayhan al-Biruni. Not only did Biruni make significant breakthroughs
as a brilliant philosopher, mathematician and astronomer, but he also left his mark as a
theologian, encyclopedist, linguist, historian, geographer, pharmacist and physician. He is
also considered to be the father of geology and anthropology. The only other figure in history
whose legacy rivals the scope of his scholarship would be Leonardo da Vinci. And yet Biruni is
hardly known in the Western world.
Many of the achievements of Arabic science often come as a surprise. For instance, while no one
can doubt the genius of Copernicus and his heliocentric model of the solar system in heralding
the age of modern astronomy, he relied on work carried out by Arab astronomers many centuries
earlier. Many of his diagrams and calculations were taken from manuscripts of the 14th-century
Syrian astronomer Ibn al-Shatir. Why is he never mentioned in our textbooks? Likewise, we are
taught that English physician William Harvey was the first to correctly describe blood
circulation in 1616. He was not. The first to give the correct description was the 13th-century
Andalucian physician Ibn al-Nafees.
We are told Newton is the undisputed father of modern optics. School science books abound with
his famous experiments. But Newton stood on the shoulders of a giant who lived 700 years
earlier. For without doubt one of the greatest of the Abbasid scientists was the Iraqi Ibn
al-Haytham (born in 965), who is regarded as the world's first physicist and as the father of
the modern scientific method - long before Renaissance scholars such as Bacon and Descartes.
But what surprises many even more is that a ninth-century Iraqi zoologist by the name of
al-Jahith developed a rudimentary theory of natural selection 1000 years before Darwin. In his
Book Of Animals, Jahith speculates on how environmental factors could affect the
characteristics of species, forcing them to adapt and then pass on those new traits to future
generations.
The brand of Islam between the beginning of the ninth and the end of the 11th century was one
that promoted a spirit of free thinking, tolerance and rationalism. The comfortable
compatibility between science and religion in medieval Baghdad contrasts starkly with the
contradictions and conflict between rational science and many religious faiths in the world today.
Guardian News & Media
Jim Al-Khalili is a professor of physics at the University of Surrey.
This story was found at: http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2008/03/26/1206207206806.html