Former Archbishop of Canterbury no less.
Exactly.
I'd also point out that Oresme studied uniformly accelerated motion prior to Galileo. He also did geometric reasoning with questions of motion that presaged Descartes' work on analytic geometry.
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
Former Archbishop of Canterbury no less.
You confuse the Arabic-Berber culture with religion.
It's like I said that the greatness of the British Empire was due to Anglicanism
Why are the Mongol invasions religion?
Apart from the discovery of the kabbab, what else did the Islamic golden age give the world?The Islamic Golden Age witnessed outstanding levels of scientific, cultural, and economic developments during the 8th to 14th centuries. The House of Wisdom was established in Baghdad, a city that was to become a great centre of learning, arguably unrivalled by other civilisations during this period. The translation of Greek literature into Arabic, the development of many established branches of knowledge, and an openness to new perspectives and ideas. Many historians argue the influence of Islamic civilisation was amongst the most important factors to ignite the European Renaissance.
So what were the influences of the Islamic Golden Age and how significant was the Quran in encouraging the pursuit of knowledge?
How overrated or understated is this period of history from a Western perspective and why?
To what extent did the Islamic Golden Age really stimulate Europe to move beyond the Middle Ages?
What lead to the demise of an Empire once so vast, illustrious and open to new knowledge?
I want to second this. The translations that stimulated later thought were almost exclusively done by monks. Much of the debate about the nature of inertia, questions involving mathematics, the use of the astrolabe (another Arabic development), how to understand astronomy, etc were done by clerics and monks until the late 15th century at least. One good example was Oresme, a monk in Paris who studied, essentially, rational exponents and speculated about irrational exponents. This was far beyond anything done previously with this notion. A good deal of questioning of Aristotelian physics happened within the Church (Thomas Bradwardine, for example). If it wasn't for the foundation laid by monks in the 13th and 14th centuries, the work of Galileo would never have happened. Don't forget that Copernicus was a monk also.
Yes, the Galileo story is more complicated than typically admitted. Remember that this was also during the backlash to the Protestant movement, so there was more concern about heretical ideas in 1600 than there were in 1400. Galileo was, from all sources, an incredibly unpleasant man. He found great joy in poking fun of those who would have helped him.
And, as you say, the issues surrounding the heliiocentric universe were certainly not resolved in the early 1600's. Galileo's observations were crucial, but not yet conclusive. Kepler's contributions also contributed greatly.
Indeed.
Did anyone other than monks have the leisure and freedom to pursue learning at that time?
A few clients of rulers, perhaps.
Did anyone other than monks have the leisure and freedom to pursue learning at that time?
A few clients of rulers, perhaps.
Apart from the discovery of the kabbab, what else did the Islamic golden age give the world?
The Muslims are still living in the 14th century, they haven't made any progress since then. I've never heard of any great Muslim scientists or any great discoveries. The Jews are only small in number but they have won most of the Noble Prizes for innovation in science, medicine and technology.
Islam is famous for all the wrong reasons like terrorism, I've never heard of anything good ascociated with it.
So what were the influences of the Islamic Golden Age and how significant was the Quran in encouraging the pursuit of knowledge?
How overrated or understated is this period of history from a Western perspective and why?
To what extent did the Islamic Golden Age really stimulate Europe to move beyond the Middle Ages?
What lead to the demise of an Empire once so vast, illustrious and open to new knowledge?
You sure wouldn't want Christianity to be remembered for all the bad folks who happened to be Christian and used Christianity for their ends.Islam is famous for all the wrong reasons like terrorism, I've never heard of anything good ascociated with it.
The Islamic Golden Age witnessed outstanding levels of scientific, cultural, and economic developments during the 8th to 14th centuries. The House of Wisdom was established in Baghdad, a city that was to become a great centre of learning, arguably unrivalled by other civilisations during this period. The translation of Greek literature into Arabic, the development of many established branches of knowledge, and an openness to new perspectives and ideas. Many historians argue the influence of Islamic civilisation was amongst the most important factors to ignite the European Renaissance.
So what were the influences of the Islamic Golden Age and how significant was the Quran in encouraging the pursuit of knowledge?
How overrated or understated is this period of history from a Western perspective and why?
To what extent did the Islamic Golden Age really stimulate Europe to move beyond the Middle Ages?
What lead to the demise of an Empire once so vast, illustrious and open to new knowledge?
The Islamic Golden Age witnessed outstanding levels of scientific, cultural, and economic developments during the 8th to 14th centuries. The House of Wisdom was established in Baghdad, a city that was to become a great centre of learning, arguably unrivalled by other civilisations during this period. The translation of Greek literature into Arabic, the development of many established branches of knowledge, and an openness to new perspectives and ideas. Many historians argue the influence of Islamic civilisation was amongst the most important factors to ignite the European Renaissance.
So what were the influences of the Islamic Golden Age and how significant was the Quran in encouraging the pursuit of knowledge?
How overrated or understated is this period of history from a Western perspective and why?
To what extent did the Islamic Golden Age really stimulate Europe to move beyond the Middle Ages?
What lead to the demise of an Empire once so vast, illustrious and open to new knowledge?
The Islamic Golden Age witnessed outstanding levels of scientific, cultural, and economic developments during the 8th to 14th centuries. The House of Wisdom was established in Baghdad, a city that was to become a great centre of learning, arguably unrivalled by other civilisations during this period. The translation of Greek literature into Arabic, the development of many established branches of knowledge, and an openness to new perspectives and ideas. Many historians argue the influence of Islamic civilisation was amongst the most important factors to ignite the European Renaissance.
I don't see the science in the quran or any because of it.
So what were the influences of the Islamic Golden Age and how significant was the Quran in encouraging the pursuit of knowledge?
Again I don't see the quran as a book for those who peruse knowledge, I think it was because of soaking up conquered peoples knowledge.
How overrated or understated is this period of history from a Western perspective and why?
Its overrated because if you had an abundance of knowledge it wouldn't stagnate and move on Imo.
To what extent did the Islamic Golden Age really stimulate Europe to move beyond the Middle Ages?
Humans ability to learn science from others.
What lead to the demise of an Empire once so vast, illustrious and open to new knowledge?
The Islamic Golden Age witnessed outstanding levels of scientific, cultural, and economic developments during the 8th to 14th centuries. The House of Wisdom was established in Baghdad, a city that was to become a great centre of learning, arguably unrivalled by other civilisations during this period. The translation of Greek literature into Arabic, the development of many established branches of knowledge, and an openness to new perspectives and ideas. Many historians argue the influence of Islamic civilisation was amongst the most important factors to ignite the European Renaissance.
So what were the influences of the Islamic Golden Age and how significant was the Quran in encouraging the pursuit of knowledge?
How overrated or understated is this period of history from a Western perspective and why?
To what extent did the Islamic Golden Age really stimulate Europe to move beyond the Middle Ages?
What lead to the demise of an Empire once so vast, illustrious and open to new knowledge?
The translations were almost all done by Syriac speaking Christians, and Christians and Jews also made other significant contributions.
You make it sound as if the Arabs had little to do with it. Of course there were many Arabs involved in the translation work, as well as Persians and even pagans. However it was the Abbasid rulers who commissioned the translation work and especially the Muslim scientists who most importantly had the vision and drove it.
Don't know. Never heard of it. I'm not an expert on history but based on what Islam is doing in the world today, I would highly doubt that it ignited the Renaissance or "encouraged the pursuit of knowledge." But what do I know?
The church was the biggest funder of the sciences, and was instrumental in translating Greek and Arabic sources. It created the university system, and installed greek and natural philosophy in the curricula.
Not at all, I thought the role of the Islamic figures went without saying. Was just pointing out the essential contributions of non-Muslims too.
1)The first university in the world was that of Fès in Morocco...and it developed the teaching of math, science, geography, philosophy.
What was the first, then?Anachronism