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http://cemnizamoglu.blogspot.com/2007/10/how-islam-invented-bright-new-world.html 
How Islam invented a bright new world  by 
CATE DEVINE (The Scottish 
Herald)  
October 24 2007  We all know that thousands of familiar items were invented, discovered or 
created by Scottish ingenuity. The television, Tarmac, penicillin, radar and, 
more recently, Dolly the sheep are just some of them.
 But how many of us realise that coffee, clocks, deodorant, the fountain pen, 
libraries, sofas, surgical instruments, toothpaste, chemistry, herbal medicine, 
town planning, vaccinations and even the crankshaft - among thousands of other 
inventions - have a claim to originate in the Muslim world between the seventh 
and seventeenth centuries?
 Too many of us in the west are unaware of the enormous contribution Islamic 
scholars have made to our cultural and social life. In an attempt to shed light 
on this largely ignored "golden age" of scientific innovation, Salim al Hassani, 
chairman of the Foundation for Science, Technology and Civilisation and emeritus 
professor at Manchester University, has created an interactive exhibition called 
1001 Inventions, which opened yesterday at the Glasgow Science Centre.
 The Greeks, Romans, Chinese and Babylonians also have claims to incredible 
creativity, but al Hassani's point is that the Islamic world's contribution is 
often sidelined. "If it had not been for Muslim inventions, we would not have 
had the Renaissance, nor present-day civilisation.
 "Western history books tend to jump from Greek times to Newton and Einstein, so 
there's a huge gap of knowledge that needs to be filled in the interests of 
social and cultural cohesion, and even world peace."
 This 1000-year gap is a fluke of history, not a conspiracy, he says. However, he 
believes the time has come for recognition and acknowledgment. "Because we have 
tended to see Islam as the enemy of the west, as an alien culture, society and 
belief system, we have tended to ignore or erase its great relevance to our own 
history."
 The exhibition has a message for non-Muslims and Muslims alike. "In the 
post-9/11 era there have been tensions in world relations," says al Hassani. "I 
want non-Muslims to recognise their neighbours, but there is also a message here 
for young Muslims in Britain: recognise the contribution of your ancestors. 
These people expressed their religiosity through beneficial contributions to 
society and humanity.
 "Young Muslims should also learn that great inventors were men and women, Muslim 
and non-Muslim, working in harmony together. This track record of co-operation 
over the centuries, although deeply rooted within early Muslim society, seems to 
have been forgotten. The 1001 Inventions project taps directly into that 
tradition by seeking to develop a better understanding between peoples and 
cultures."
 Professor Robert Hillenbrand, director of the Centre for the Advanced Study of 
the Arab World, based at Edinburgh University, also believes the exhibition is 
timely. "The Arab world is one of the big four global players today, along with 
Russia, China and Japan," he says. "Scottish students are still choosing to 
learn French, but who do you think is going to run the planet in 100 years' 
time? Not the French."
 Here, then, are 10 of the inventions for which we should thank the Muslim 
world
 Camera 
obscura  Although 
the Greeks had written treatises on optics, it was the ninth-century polymath al 
Kindi who first laid down the foundations of its modern study, discussing how 
light rays came in a straight line and the influence of distance and angle on 
sight.  This was built on by Ibn al Haitham in the tenth century, and his Book of Optics 
is still quoted by professors 1000 years on. During his practical experiments he 
used the term al Bayt al Muthlim, which was translated into Latin as "camera 
obscura". His Book of Optics was translated into Latin by the medieval scholar 
Gerard of Cremona, and this had a profound impact on the thirteenth-century big 
thinkers such as Roger Bacon and Witelo, and even on the later works of Leonardo 
da Vinci.
 Coffee
 More than 
1200 years ago, legend has it that coffee was discovered by Ethopian Arab 
goatherds when they noticed their goats became more lively after eating certain 
berries. These berries were boiled, and became known as al Qahawa. It was a 
Turkish merchant, Pasqua Rosee, who first brought coffee to the UK in 1650.  Clocks
 In 1206, 
the mechanical engineer al Jazari, working for the Urtuq kings of Diyarbakir in 
Turkey, was commissioned to write a book on engineering. It described 50 
mechanical devices, including the first water-powered astronomical clock, a 
programmable humanoid robot and the crankshaft.  Toothbrushes and toothpaste
 In the 
sixth century, the Prophet Muhammad is described as believing bad breath and 
food bits in your teeth were unhygienic, and scrubbing his teeth with a twig of 
miswak before each prayer. Although the Chinese can lay claim to a 
sixteenth-century version of the toothbrush, miswak is still used today - and a 
Swiss pharmaceutical company has since discovered that it has antibacterial 
properties.  Deodorants
 In his 
tenth-century medical encyclopaedia al Tasrif, the physician and surgeon al 
Zahrawi included a chapter devoted to "cosmetology" and elaborated on perfume 
and perfumed stocks, rolled and pressed in special moulds - like today's roll-on 
deodorants.  Libraries
 Although 
the Greeks and Romans had houses of scrolls open to the public, they were not 
lending libraries. Muslims began producing books in the eighth century because 
they knew how to make paper and were encouraged to record all their experiments. 
The Abbasid Caliph al Ma'mun paid translators the weight of each book in gold 
that they translated from Greek into Arabic. This produced a vast stack of 
books. Mosque libraries were called dar al-kutub, or the house of books.  Chemistry
 Many 
scholars give the title of the father of chemistry to Jabir, or Gerber, ibn 
Hayyan, born around 722, the son of a druggist from Iraq. His use of 
experimental method in alchemy is seen as influential to this day.  Fountain pens
 Before pens 
as we know them today came other writing instruments, including the qalam or 
reed pen. The most sought-after reeds came from the coastal lands of the Arabian 
Gulf. Each style of script required a different reed, cut at a specific angle. 
Calligraphers usually made their own inks and kept the recipes secret.  The language of Arabic calligraphy belongs to the family of ancient semitic 
languages, the most famous of which are Kufic and Naskh. The Kufic script comes 
from the city of Kufa, Iraq, where it was used by seventh- century scribes 
translating the Koran. Calligraphy is still used today for writing the Koran.
 Surgical instruments
 In his 
medical encyclopaedia, the aforementioned al Zahrawi introduced a staggering 
collection of more than 200 surgical tools. Their design was so precise that 
they have had only a few changes in 1000 years, and it was these illustrations 
that laid the foundations for surgery in Europe.  Post and mail
 In 
fourteenth-century India, couriers took messages to the Muslim sultan sitting in 
Delhi. A man carrying a rod with copper bells on the top would sprint as fast as 
he could for one-third of a mile, and on hearing the bells the next man would 
get ready to take the mail. It took only five days for a message to get from the 
eastern edge of India to the capital.  www.theherald.co.uk
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