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And to think that between the 8th and 13th centuries Islam led the world in
science..............

Research and religion can be a difficult mix
Muslims scientists analyze why the work of contemporaries fails to result in
breakthroughs.
By SUSAN TAYLOR MARTIN, Times Staff Writer
Published January 27, 2008

Dr. Essam Heggy, 32, is a planetary scientist in NASA's Mars exploration
program. "Science has now been replaced by religious thinking," he said.

In recognizing the top 50 scientific breakthroughs of 2007, Scientific
American cites advancements in alternative fuels, treatment of Parkinson's
disease and technology that would make consumer electronics easier to use.
Among those honored are researchers in Japan, Italy and the Netherlands, a
country with a population of just 16-million. Yet the list does not include
a single noteworthy breakthrough in any of the world's 56 Muslim nations,
encompassing more than 1-billion people.
Dr. Essam Heggy has a reason.
"We don't live in an environment where we value science," says Heggy, a
Muslim astronomer who left his native Libya and is working in Houston on
NASA's Mars exploration program. "Science and intellectual presence have
been seen as a real threat to governments that have no serious plans for
democratic rule."
Why the dearth of scientific achievement in the modern Muslim world? Like
Heggy, many critics blame authoritarian regimes that stifle independent
thinking and limit contacts with the outside world. Most schools and
universities in Muslim countries emphasize rote learning over debate and
analysis. Defense budgets -- especially in the bellicose Middle East --
consume billions of dollars that might otherwise go to research.
And just as Christian conservatism in America has led to curbs on genetic
research and pressure to teach alternatives to evolution, the rise of
Islamic fundamentalism has turned many Muslims away from science and toward
religion as a way to view and explain the world.
"Religious fundamentalism is always bad news for science," Pervez Amirali
Hoodbhoy, a Pakistani Muslim physicist, recently wrote in an article on
Islam and science for Physics Today.
"Scientific progress constantly demands that facts and hypotheses be
checked. But there lies the problem: The scientific method is alien to
traditional, unreformed religious thought."
While the reasons are many and often controversial, there is no doubt that
the Muslim world lags far behind in scientific achievement and research:
Muslim countries contribute less than 2 percent of the world's scientific
literature. Spain alone produces almost as many scientific papers.
In countries with substantial Muslim populations, the average number of
scientists, engineers and technicians per 1,000 people is 8.5. The world
average is 40.
Muslim countries get so few patents that they don't even register on a bar
graph comparison with other countries. Of the more than 3-million foreign
inventions patented in the United States between 1977 and 2004, only 1,500
were developed in Muslim nations.
In a survey by the Times of London, just two Muslim universities -- both in
cosmopolitan Malaysia -- ranked among the top 200 universities worldwide.
Two Muslim scientists have won Nobel Prizes, but both did their
groundbreaking work at Western institutions. Pakistan's Abdus Salam, who won
the 1979 physics prize while in Britain, was barred from speaking at any
university in his own country.
Why? Salam belonged to what the Pakistani government had declared a
heretical sect.
Vanguard of learning
Despite a popular myth, people in the Muslim world are not resistant to new
technology. Even the poorest have cell phones, some with global positioning
features that show the exact direction in which to pray to Mecca. Prayer
rugs now contain computer chips that count the number of bend-downs. And as
al-Qaida's frequent messages show, the Internet has been a valuable tool in
spreading threats against the West.
But it is a far cry from Islam's early days when the prophet Mohammed said
"the ink of the scholar is more sacred than the blood of martyrs."
As Islam spread from its birthplace on the Arabian Peninsula, Muslim
scientists expanded on the knowledge gained from the Romans, Greeks and
other cultures.

The Golden Age of Islam, spanning the 8th through 13th centuries, saw major
advances in mathematics, optics, chemistry, astronomy and medicine while
Europe slept through centuries of intellectual darkness.

Over time, though, tensions grew between liberal Muslims, who had a flexible
interpretation of Islam, and fundamentalists, who believed in predestination
with all its chilling implications for learning and discovery. As reason
bowed to faith, "science in the Islamic world essentially collapsed,"
Hoodbhoy writes. "No major invention or discovery has emerged from the
Muslim world for well over seven centuries now."
Today, many of the brightest scientific minds leave their countries to study
in Western universities like Virginia Tech and the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, both of which have sizeable Muslim student associations. By
some estimates, more than half of the science students from Arab countries
never return home to work.
"Science has now been replaced by religious thinking," says Heggy, 32, the
NASA researcher who got his doctorate in France. "Logic unfortunately is a
smaller and smaller part of society."
Muslim scientists who do work in their native countries often find
themselves embracing -- publicly at least -- so-called "Islamic science."
Popularized in the '80s as an alternative to Western science and its
perceived lack of moral values, the Islamic version tries to mesh religion
and science with curious results.
"Some scholars calculated the temperature of Hell, others the chemical
composition of heavenly djinnis spirits," Hoodbhoy writes. "None produced a
new machine or instrument, conducted an experiment or even formulated a
single testable hypothesis."
Instead, fundamentalists typically view science only of value in giving more
proof of God or showing the truth of the Koran. One oft-visited Internet
site reveals this "astounding scientific fact" -- the Koran anticipated
black holes and genes.
'Silent note-takers'
While critical of fellow Muslims, Hoodbhoy thinks the United States is
partly to blame for the dismal record of scientific achievement. Western
support for unpopular secular governments in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and other
Muslim countries has fueled a rise in fundamentalism that in turn
discourages academic and cultural freedom.
At Hoodbhoy's own university in Islamabad, Pakistan, almost all female
students now wear veils and have become "silent note-takers" who are
increasingly timid and afraid to ask questions, he says. Movies, dramas and
music are shunned as un-Islamic. The campus has three mosques, but no
bookstore.
The picture is not entirely bleak. Saudi Arabia, though home to one of the
most intolerant strains of Islam, is building a world-class research
university in collaboration with Cape Cod's prestigious Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution.
Turkey -- whose founder, Kemal Ataturk, wanted to Westernize his country --
has more than tripled its science funding since 2003 while under a
religiously conservative prime minister. Tunisia, another secular Muslim
nation, has largely rejected "Islamic science" in favor of practical
research. The number of laboratories there grew to 139 from 55 in six years.
But far more needs to be done, says Hoodbhoy, who argues that arrested
scientific development in the Muslim world is contributing to the
"marginalization" of Muslims and their growing sense of injustice and
victimhood. Muslim countries will continue to stagnate scientifically -- and
in other ways as well.
"The struggle to usher in science," Hoodbhoy writes, "will have to go
side-by-side with a much wider campaign to elbow out rigid orthodoxy and
bring in modern thought, arts, philosophy, democracy and pluralism."
Susan Taylor Martin can be contacted at [log in to unmask]

Notable modern Muslim scientists
Abdus Salam: Pakistani. Winner of Nobel Prize in Physics in 1979
Ahmed Zewail: Egyptian. Winner of Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1999
Farouk El-Baz: Egyptian. NASA scientist involved in the Apollo moon program
Essam Heggy: Egyptian-Libyan. Planetary scientist in NASA's Mars exploration
program
Lotfi Asker Zadeh: Iranian. Mathematician and computer scientist, founder of
fuzzy logic, which recognizes more than simple true-or-false values. Used in
artificial intelligence applications and some spell-checkers to suggest
replacements for misspelled words
Habiba Bouhamed Chaabouni: Tunisian. Medical geneticist, winner of 2006
UNESCO Women in Science Award
[Last modified January 26, 2008, 23:51:18]

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
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