Sat 7 Nov 2009
Saliba on Islamic Science and the Renaissance
Posted by tabsir under Books You Should Read , Islamic Sciences
[Note: The cover interview of Rorotoko has an essay by historian of Islamic science George Saliba on his fascinating study entitlted Islamic Science and the Making of the European Renaissance. Here is the start of the essay, the whole of which can be read at Rorotoko.]
This book started almost ten years ago. Initially, I wanted to know what were the conditions under which a civilization could produce science afresh.
I was trained in ancient Semitics, and mathematics, but I was always interested in these rumors that the general reader knows about, that the great invention of science was a really Greek project. And that everything else is either a shadow or a continuation of the classic antiquity.
Growing up, you assimilate these paradigms. You begin to think that these are the normal things. But then, trained in mathematics, and beginning to read a little bit of what was produced in the Islamic civilization, in science, I grew curious. I grew curious because I began to note that some of the science produced was not a shadow of the Greek project. It was more re-focusing of light, a new way of looking at things, which the Greeks did not know.
I began to also wonder about a fact that many a student of history and general reader would know. That there was this period of fantastical effervescence in the classical Greek tradition, say from the 4th century BC to the 2nd century AD. All the major names that we can think of happen to be in this period, all the major classics, in every discipline you can think of, from Plato to Aristotle to Ptolemy to Euclid to Diophantus to Galen to Dioscorides. And all comes to an end by the 2nd century. Then nothing happened. And then, all of a sudden, we begin to hear, in the 9th century, of the crazy caliphs of Baghdad who are spurring this and that, translating this and that, incorporating all of the Greek material.
To me, this sounds totally ahistorical. Politicians that I know, or that I read about, usually do not do that. Why would the rulers of Baghdad in the 9th century be any wiser than any of today’s politicians? I wanted to know what triggered that interest in Greek science, after a lapse of seven hundred years. What were the social, economic, the political and personal motivations of the scientists who produced this modern science?
For the rest of this essay, click here.
November 11th, 2009 at 5:23 am
Saliba’s essay is fascinating. Many people wonder why Muslim societies had such a splendid period of development in their history, to be followed by a period of deep decline.
Those who attribute the development of Muslim civilization to the teachings of Islam clearly miss something. Because Islam continues to exist, so it can’t be an explanatory factor.
Saliba’s explanations of why some people became interested in translating Greek works into Arabic are interesting, but do not provide the whole explanation, in my view.
The sudden accumulation of wealth within Muslim courts certainly made it possible for all kinds of intellectual, artistic, scientific and architectural endeavours to flourish. The same thing happened with the Medicis in Florence.
In the same way, I think the personal interest of some caliphs and important people in the caliphate made it possible to encourage the development of specific activities (whether in translation, or in original research, etc.).
But, like in all human questions (or scientific ones), it is rarely a single factor which explains a complex situation. It is more often a multiplicity of factors which combine to produce the situation.
November 12th, 2009 at 8:55 am
I’ve posted an Arabic translation of the interview.