Fundamentalist Extremist Islamic Pakistan: A Huge Suicide-Bomb :
and it’s own worst enemy


A response to prof. Hoodbhoy, Islamabad

Introduction

What ails science in the neo-colonial Muslim states?

The state of science in the contemporary Islamic world :
Measuring Muslim scientific progress

1. Women in Muslim countries

2. Role of state and Govt

3. It's the thought that counts

How science can return to the Islamic world

Introduction

Islamic scholars often pass sleepless nights grumbling over their the decline of science and consequent under-development of the Muslim countries. What caused the earlier so-called great scientific culture in Muslim countries collapse, they often ponder. Many scientists in the Islamic countries like Prof. Hoodbhoy in Pakistan seem to burn a lot of midnight oil on this question. They often come to this, that the internal causes led to the decline of Muslim's scientific greatness long before the onslaught of the Christian mercantile imperialism under the Holy Roman British Empire. To contribute once again, they feel, Muslims must become introspective and ask themselves as to what went wrong.
With well over a billion Muslims and extensive material resources, why are the Muslim countries disengaged from reality, from science and from the process of creating new knowledge
Have Muslims always been so… ? A magnificent Golden scientific and cultural Age under some great Muslim kings in the 9th–13th centuries in Baghdad and the Islamic Spain brought about major advances in mathematics, science, architecture and medicine. The Arabic language, enriched with vast knowledge from the Islamic colonies, held sway in an age that created Algebra, Elucidated principles of optics, established the body's circulation of blood, named stars, and created universities. But the rise of Islamic mullahs and fundamentalism lead to the end of that period. Science in the Islamic world eventually collapsed under the dead weight of medieval Islamic theology and theocracy. However, at present it remains a fact that no major invention or discovery has emerged from the Muslim world for well over seven centuries now. That arrested scientific development is one important element—although by no means the only one—that contributes to the present marginalization of Muslims amidst growing sense of injustice and victimhood.

Such negative feelings must be checked before the gulf between enlightened Europe and the ignorant and backward Islam widens further. A bloody clash of Western Christian, religions between Catholics and Protestants, had destroyed Europe in 16th Century, and there is a real danger that the present religious war between Christianity and Islam as well as rise of the medieval-minded Islam in Europe might once again destroy Europe along with the evils Islamic and Christian cultures… !

Islam's earlier encounter with science surprised it and so had happy and unhappy consequences. There was no science in the pre-Islamic and early Islamic Bedouin Arab culture which was full of medieval superstition, ignorance and barbarity. The initial period of Islam, around 610 AD when Arab Bedouins overwhelmed Syrian Christian colony of Byzantine. But Science remained essentially a profession of Greek and Syrian slaves, while Umayyad Arabs aristocracy, in between the barbaric imperial wars of Arab Islamic colonization, usually busied themselves with slave markets, distribution of loot and plunder and in building big palaces where they lived with hundreds of women sex-slaves, these unfortunate women from the conquered and colonized nations whose men were either killed or sold as slaves in the Islamic slave-markets., and whose lands were snatched by the these barbaric Arab Islamic sword-wielding tribes

As Arabs Islam established itself politically and militarily in conquered areas, its territory started expanding belong the nearer frontiers. In the mid-eighth century, Bedouin Arab Muslim conquerors came upon the ancient treasures of Greek learning. Translations from Greek into Arabic were ordered by some liberal and enlightened kings and aristocrats, who filled their courts in Baghdad with visiting scholars from near and far. Baghdad saw a confect between the traditionalists and the rationalists. Politics was progressively being dominated by the rationalist and secular Mutability's, who sought the supremacy of reason over faith. In opposition to their rivals, the dogmatic Asharites, the traditionalists who would sacrifice solid reason for the incredible and feeble faith, became strong by the strength of the Bedouin swords. A generally tolerant and pluralistic culture allowed Muslims, Christians, and Jews create new works of art and science together. But over time, the theological tensions between liberal and fundamentalist interpretations of Islam—such as on the issue of free will versus predestination—became intense and turned bloody. A resurgent religious orthodoxy eventually inflicted a crushing defeat on the rationalist Mutazilites. Thereafter, the open-minded pursuits of philosophy, mathematics, and science were increasingly relegated to the margins of Islam.

A long period of Islamic darkness followed, punctuated by occasional secular and liberal brilliant spots. In the 16th century, the Turkish Ottomans Theocratic Khilafat established an extensive empire with the help of military technology and religious brainwashing. But there was little enthusiasm for science and new knowledge. In the 19th century, the European Enlightenment inspired a wave of modernist secular Muslim reformers: Mohammed Abdul of Egypt, his follower Rashid Rida from Syria, and their counterpart on the Indian subcontinent, such as the liberal Muslim Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan, exhorted their fellow Muslims to accept ideas of the European Enlightenment and the scientific revolution. Their theological position can be roughly paraphrased as, "The Qur'an tells us how to go to heaven which may not be places but just illusions ; and not how the heavens : the sun, moon, stars and galaxies go." That echoed Galileo earlier in Christianity-ridden medieval Europe.
The 20th century witnessed the change of the instruments of the Holy Roman British Empire, the Europeans Christians were replaced by the local Christian which was in parallel with the emergence of several neo-colonial Muslim, Hindu and Christian states which were nominally independent, though officially British dominions. All these new states initially came under the Europe-influenced and educated secular national leaderships. A spurt toward modernization and the acquisition of technology followed. Many expected that a Third world scientific renaissance would ensue. Clearly, it did not.

What ails science in the neo-colonial Muslim states?

Muslim leaders today, realizing that military power and economic growth flow from technology, frequently call for speedy scientific development and a knowledge-based but medieval-faith society. Although that call is rhetorical, in some Muslim countries—Qatar, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Pakistan, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Nigeria among others—official patronage and funding for science and technology education have grown sharply in recent years. Enlightened individual rulers, including Sultan ibn Muhammad Al-Qasimi of Sharjah, Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani of Qatar, President Gen Ayub Khanand President Gen.Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan and others have put aside some of their vast personal wealth or state money for such causes. However, no Muslim leader has publicly called for releasing the
Science from the grip of medieval Islamic religion.
Are the increasing resource allocations for technology, enough to energize science, or are more fundamental changes required in scientific attitude and enlightened behaviors? Scholars of the 19th century, such as the pioneering sociologist Max Weber, rightly claimed that medieval-style-religion of Islam lacks an "idea system" critical for sustaining a scientific culture based on innovation, new experiences, quantification, and empirical verification. Fatalism and an orientation toward the medieval past, they said, makes progress difficult and even undesirable.
In the current epoch of growing antagonism between the Islamic fundamentalism and the European rationalist worlds, most Muslims reject such charges with angry indignation and self righteousness. They feel those accusations are yet another excuse for the Christian West to justify its ongoing cultural and military assaults on Muslim populations. Muslims bristle at any hint that Islam and science may be at odds, or that some underlying conflict between Islam and science may account for the slowness of progress. They believe that their Qur'an-the supposed word of the Arabian deity Allah-cannot be at fault: however, Muslims do believe that if there is a problem, it must come from their inability to properly interpret and implement the Qur'an's divine instructions ; although thousands of scholars and Islamic universities have failed to find any such divine inspiration for scientific mental and material development.
In defending the compatibility of science and Islam, Muslims argue that Muslim kingdoms had sustained a vibrant intellectual culture throughout the Dark Ages of the Western Christianity in European Continent and thus, by extension, we are still capable of a modern scientific culture. However, they forget to analyse if the blessing were the result of the institution of kingship or the medieval and ignorant-of-Science Islam… !The Pakistani-exiled physics Nobel Prize winner, Abduls Salam, would stress to audiences that one-eighth of the Qur'an is a call for Muslims to seek Allah's signs in the universe and hence that science is a spiritual as well as a temporal duty for Muslims….although Quran’s calling it mere theological and not at all for science….Of course, this makes it clear that PhD or even Noble Prize in Physics doesn’t automatically means a rational and scientific mind ;even a Noble Prize winner Physicist could have a medieval, superstitious and irrational religious thinking, and a PhD physicist may be totally blank about dynamics of sociology, philosophy and political science… ! Perhaps the most widely used argument about Islam and Science that one hears is that the Prophet Muhammad had exhorted his followers to "seek knowledge even if it is in China," which implies that a Muslim is duty-bound to search for secular knowledge ; although it is not clear whether the Prophet himself knew what was science, if at all… !

The state of science in the contemporary Islamic world :
Measuring Muslim scientific progress