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   | Science and  the Islamic World   Pervez Amirali HoodbhoyAugust 2007, page 49
 
 
   Internal causes led to the decline of Islam's scientific 
greatness long before the era of mercantile imperialism. To contribute once 
again, Muslims must be introspective and ask what went wrong.
 This article grew out of the Max von Laue Lecture that I delivered earlier this 
year to celebrate that eminent physicist and man of strong social conscience. 
When Adolf Hitler was on the ascendancy, Laue was one of the very few German 
physicists of stature who dared to defend Albert Einstein and the theory of 
relativity. It therefore seems appropriate that a matter concerning science and 
civilization should be my concern here.
 
 The question I want to pose—perhaps as much to myself as to anyone else—is this: 
With well over a billion Muslims and extensive material resources, why is the 
Islamic world disengaged from science and the process of creating new knowledge? 
To be definite, I am here using the 57 countries of the Organization of the 
Islamic Conference (OIC) as a proxy for the Islamic world.
 
 It was not always this way. Islam's magnificent Golden Age in the 9th–13th 
centuries brought about major advances in mathematics, science, and medicine. 
The Arabic language 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 with the end of that period, science in the 
Islamic world essentially collapsed. 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 and a growing 
sense of injustice and victimhood.
 
 Such negative feelings must be checked before the gulf widens further. A bloody 
clash of civilizations, should it actually transpire, will surely rank along 
with the two other most dangerous challenges to life on our planet—climate 
change and nuclear proliferation.
 First encounters
 
 Islam's encounter with science has had happy and unhappy periods. There was no 
science in Arab culture in the initial period of Islam, around 610 AD. But as 
Islam established itself politically and militarily, its territory expanded. In 
the mid-eighth century, Muslim conquerors came upon the ancient treasures of 
Greek learning. Translations from Greek into Arabic were ordered by liberal and 
enlightened caliphs, who filled their courts in Baghdad with visiting scholars 
from near and far. Politics was dominated by the rationalist Mutazilites, who 
sought to combine faith and reason in opposition to their rivals, the dogmatic 
Asharites. A generally tolerant and pluralistic Islamic culture allowed Muslims, 
Christians, and Jews to 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 Mutazilites. Thereafter, the 
open-minded pursuits of philosophy, mathematics, and science were increasingly 
relegated to the margins of Islam.1
 
 Ottoman Empire astronomers
 
 A long period of darkness followed, punctuated by occasional brilliant spots. In 
the 16th century, the Turkish Ottomans established an extensive empire with the 
help of military technology. But there was little enthusiasm for science and new 
knowledge (see figure 1). In the 19th century, the European Enlightenment 
inspired a wave of modernist Islamic reformers: Mohammed Abduh of Egypt, his 
follower Rashid Rida from Syria, and their counterparts on the Indian 
subcontinent, such as Sayyid Ahmad Khan and Jamaluddin Afghani, exhorted their 
fellow Muslims to accept ideas of the Enlightenment and the scientific 
revolution. Their theological position can be roughly paraphrased as, "The 
Qur'an tells us how to go to heaven, not how the heavens go." That echoed 
Galileo earlier in Europe.
 
 The 20th century witnessed the end of European colonial rule and the emergence 
of several new independent Muslim states, all initially under secular national 
leaderships. A spurt toward modernization and the acquisition of technology 
followed. Many expected that a Muslim scientific renaissance would ensue. 
Clearly, it did not.
 What ails science in the Muslim world?
 
 
 Muslim leaders today, realizing that military power and economic growth flow 
from technology, frequently call for speedy scientific development and a 
knowledge-based society. Often that call is rhetorical, but 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 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, and others have put aside some of their vast personal wealth for 
such causes (see figure 2 and the news story on page 33). No Muslim leader has 
publicly called for separating science from religion.
 
 Is boosting resource allocations enough to energize science, or are more 
fundamental changes required? Scholars of the 19th century, such as the 
pioneering sociologist Max Weber, claimed that 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 past, they said, makes progress difficult and even 
undesirable.
 
 In the current epoch of growing antagonism between the Islamic and the Western 
worlds, most Muslims reject such charges with angry indignation. They feel those 
accusations add yet another excuse for the 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. The Qur'an, being the 
unaltered word of God, cannot be at fault: Muslims believe that if there is a 
problem, it must come from their inability to properly interpret and implement 
the Qur'an's divine instructions.
 
 In defending the compatibility of science and Islam, Muslims argue that Islam 
had sustained a vibrant intellectual culture throughout the European Dark Ages 
and thus, by extension, is also capable of a modern scientific culture. The 
Pakistani physics Nobel Prize winner, Abdus 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. Perhaps the most widely used argument 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.
 
 Such arguments have been and will continue to be much debated, but they will not 
be pursued further here. Instead, let us seek to understand the state of science 
in the contemporary Islamic world. First, to the degree that available data 
allows, I will quantitatively assess the current state of science in Muslim 
countries. Then I will look at prevalent Muslim attitudes toward science, 
technology, and modernity, with an eye toward identifying specific cultural and 
social practices that work against progress. Finally, we can turn to the 
fundamental question: What will it take to bring science back into the Islamic 
world?
 Measuring Muslim scientific progress
 
 The metrics of scientific progress are neither precise nor unique. Science 
permeates our lives in myriad ways, means different things to different people, 
and has changed its content and scope drastically over the course of history. In 
addition, the paucity of reliable and current data makes the task of assessing 
scientific progress in Muslim countries still harder.
 
 I will use the following reasonable set of four metrics:
 
 * The quantity of scientific output, weighted by some reasonable measure of 
relevance and importance;
 * The role played by science and technology in the national economies, funding 
for S&T, and the size of the national scientific enterprises;
 * The extent and quality of higher education; and
 * The degree to which science is present or absent in popular culture.
 
 Scientific output
 
 A useful, if imperfect, indicator of scientific output is the number of 
published scientific research papers, together with the citations to them. Table 
1 shows the output of the seven most scientifically productive Muslim countries 
for physics papers, over the period from 1 January 1997 to 28 February 2007, 
together with the total number of publications in all scientific fields. A 
comparison with Brazil, India, China, and the US reveals significantly smaller 
numbers. A study by academics at the International Islamic University Malaysia2 
showed that OIC countries have 8.5 scientists, engineers, and technicians per 
1000 population, compared with a world average of 40.7, and 139.3 for countries 
of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. (For more on the 
OECD, see
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.) 
Forty-six Muslim countries contributed 1.17% of the world's science literature, 
whereas 1.66% came from India alone and 1.48% from Spain. Twenty Arab countries 
contributed 0.55%, compared with 0.89% by Israel alone. The US NSF records that 
of the 28 lowest producers of scientific articles in 2003, half belong to the 
OIC.3
 
 The situation may be even grimmer than the publication numbers or perhaps even 
the citation counts suggest. Assessing the scientific worth of 
publications—never an easy task—is complicated further by the rapid appearance 
of new international scientific journals that publish low-quality work. Many 
have poor editorial policies and refereeing procedures. Scientists in many 
developing countries, who are under pressure to publish, or who are attracted by 
strong government incentives, choose to follow the path of least resistance 
paved for them by the increasingly commercialized policies of journals. 
Prospective authors know that editors need to produce a journal of a certain 
thickness every month. In addition to considerable anecdotal evidence for these 
practices, there have been a few systematic studies. For example,4 chemistry 
publications by Iranian scientists tripled in five years, from 1040 in 1998 to 
3277 in 2003. Many scientific papers that were claimed as original by their 
Iranian chemist authors, and that had been published in internationally 
peer-reviewed journals, had actually been published twice and sometimes thrice 
with identical or nearly identical contents by the same authors. Others were 
plagiarized papers that could have been easily detected by any reasonably 
careful referee.
 
 The situation regarding patents is also discouraging: The OIC countries produce 
negligibly few. According to official statistics, Pakistan has produced only 
eight patents in the past 43 years.
 
 Islamic countries show a great diversity of cultures and levels of modernization 
and a correspondingly large spread in scientific productivity. Among the larger 
countries—in both population and political importance—Turkey, Iran, Egypt, and 
Pakistan are the most scientifically developed. Among the smaller countries, 
such as the central Asian republics, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan rank considerably 
above Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan. Malaysia—a rather atypical 
Muslim country with a 40% non-Muslim minority—is much smaller than neighboring 
Indonesia but is nevertheless more productive. Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the 
UAE, and other states that have many foreign scientists are scientifically far 
ahead of other Arab states.
 National scientific enterprises
 
 Conventional wisdom suggests that bigger science budgets indicate, or will 
induce, greater scientific activity. On average, the 57 OIC states spend an 
estimated 0.3% of their gross national product on research and development, 
which is far below the global average of 2.4%. But the trend toward higher 
spending is unambiguous. Rulers in the UAE and Qatar are building several new 
universities with manpower imported from the West for both construction and 
staffing. In June 2006, Nigeria's president Olusegun Obasanjo announced he will 
plow $5 billion of oil money into R&D. Iran increased its R&D spending 
dramatically, from a pittance in 1988 at the end of the Iraq–Iran war, to a 
current level of 0.4% of its gross domestic product. Saudi Arabia announced that 
it spent 26% of its development budget on science and education in 2006, and 
sent 5000 students to US universities on full scholarships. Pakistan set a world 
record by increasing funding for higher education and science by an immense 800% 
over the past five years.
 
 But bigger budgets by themselves are not a panacea. The capacity to put those 
funds to good use is crucial. One determining factor is the number of available 
scientists, engineers, and technicians. Those numbers are low for OIC countries, 
averaging around 400–500 per million people, while developed countries typically 
lie in the range of 3500–5000 per million. Even more important are the quality 
and level of professionalism, which are less easily quantifiable. But increasing 
funding without adequately addressing such crucial concerns can lead to a null 
correlation between scientific funding and performance.
 
 The role played by science in creating high technology is an important science 
indicator. Comparing table 1 with table 2 shows there is little correlation 
between academic research papers and the role of S&T in the national economies 
of the seven listed countries. The anomalous position of Malaysia in table 2 has 
its explanation in the large direct investment made by multinational companies 
and in having trading partners that are overwhelmingly non-OIC countries.
 
 
 
 Although not apparent in table 2, there are scientific areas in which research 
has paid off in the Islamic world. Agricultural research—which is relatively 
simple science—provides one case in point. Pakistan has good results, for 
example, with new varieties of cotton, wheat, rice, and tea. Defense technology 
is another area in which many developing countries have invested, as they aim to 
both lessen their dependence on international arms suppliers and promote 
domestic capabilities. Pakistan manufactures nuclear weapons and 
intermediate-range missiles. There is now also a burgeoning, increasingly 
export-oriented Pakistani arms industry (figure 3) that turns out a large range 
of weapons from grenades to tanks, night-vision devices to laser-guided weapons, 
and small submarines to training aircraft. Export earnings exceed $150 million 
yearly. Although much of the production is a triumph of reverse engineering 
rather than original research and development, there is clearly sufficient 
understanding of the requisite scientific principles and a capacity to exercise 
technical and managerial judgment as well. Iran has followed Pakistan's example.
 Higher education
 
 According to a recent survey, among the 57 member states of the OIC, there are 
approximately 1800 universities.5 Of those, only 312 publish journal articles. A 
ranking of the 50 most published among them yields these numbers: 26 are in 
Turkey, 9 in Iran, 3 each in Malaysia and Egypt, 2 in Pakistan, and 1 in each of 
Uganda, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Kuwait, Jordan, and Azerbaijan. For the 
top 20 universities, the average yearly production of journal articles was about 
1500, a small but reasonable number. However, the average citation per article 
is less than 1.0 (the survey report does not state whether self-citations were 
excluded). There are fewer data available for comparing against universities 
worldwide. Two Malaysian undergraduate institutions were in the top-200 list of 
the Times Higher Education Supplement in 2006 (available at http://www.thes.co.uk). 
No OIC university made the top-500 "Academic Ranking of World Universities" 
compiled by Shanghai Jiao Tong University (see http://ed.sjtu.edu.cn/en). This 
state of affairs led the director general of the OIC to issue an appeal for at 
least 20 OIC universities to be sufficiently elevated in quality to make the 
top-500 list. No action plan was specified, nor was the term "quality" defined.
 
 An institution's quality is fundamental, but how is it to be defined? Providing 
more infrastructure and facilities is important but not key. Most universities 
in Islamic countries have a starkly inferior quality of teaching and learning, a 
tenuous connection to job skills, and research that is low in both quality and 
quantity. Poor teaching owes more to inappropriate attitudes than to material 
resources. Generally, obedience and rote learning are stressed, and the 
authority of the teacher is rarely challenged. Debate, analysis, and class 
discussions are infrequent.
 
 Academic and cultural freedoms on campuses are highly restricted in most Muslim 
countries. At Quaid-i-Azam University in Islamabad, where I teach, the 
constraints are similar to those existing in most other Pakistani public-sector 
institutions. This university serves the typical middle-class Pakistani student 
and, according to the survey referred to earlier,5 ranks number two among OIC 
universities. Here, as in other Pakistani public universities, films, drama, and 
music are frowned on, and sometimes even physical attacks by student vigilantes 
who believe that such pursuits violate Islamic norms take place. The campus has 
three mosques with a fourth one planned, but no bookstore. No Pakistani 
university, including QAU, allowed Abdus Salam to set foot on its campus, 
although he had received the Nobel Prize in 1979 for his role in formulating the 
standard model of particle physics. The Ahmedi sect to which he belonged, and 
which had earlier been considered to be Muslim, was officially declared 
heretical in 1974 by the Pakistani government.
 
 
 As intolerance and militancy sweep across the Muslim world, personal and 
academic freedoms diminish with the rising pressure to conform. In Pakistani 
universities, the veil is now ubiquitous, and the last few unveiled women 
students are under intense pressure to cover up. The head of the 
government-funded mosque-***-seminary (figure 4) in the heart of Islamabad, the 
nation's capital, issued the following chilling warning to my university's 
female students and faculty on his FM radio channel on 12 April 2007:
 
 The government should abolish co-education. Quaid-i-Azam University has become a 
brothel. Its female professors and students roam in objectionable dresses. . . . 
Sportswomen are spreading nudity. I warn the sportswomen of Islamabad to stop 
participating in sports. . . . Our female students have not issued the threat of 
throwing acid on the uncovered faces of women. However, such a threat could be 
used for creating the fear of Islam among sinful women. There is no harm in it. 
There are far more horrible punishments in the hereafter for such women.6
 
 The imposition of the veil makes a difference. My colleagues and I share a 
common observation that over time most students—particularly veiled females—have 
largely lapsed into becoming silent note-takers, are increasingly timid, and are 
less inclined to ask questions or take part in discussions. This lack of 
self-expression and confidence leads to most Pakistani university students, 
including those in their mid- or late-twenties, referring to themselves as boys 
and girls rather than as men and women.
 Science and religion still at odds
 
 Science is under pressure globally, and from every religion. As science becomes 
an increasingly dominant part of human culture, its achievements inspire both 
awe and fear. Creationism and intelligent design, curbs on genetic research, 
pseudoscience, parapsychology, belief in UFOs, and so on are some of its 
manifestations in the West. Religious conservatives in the US have rallied 
against the teaching of Darwinian evolution. Extreme Hindu groups such as the 
Vishnu Hindu Parishad, which has called for ethnic cleansing of Christians and 
Muslims, have promoted various "temple miracles," including one in which an 
elephant-like God miraculously came alive and started drinking milk. Some 
extremist Jewish groups also derive additional political strength from 
antiscience movements. For example, certain American cattle tycoons have for 
years been working with Israeli counterparts to try to breed a pure red heifer 
in Israel, which, by their interpretation of chapter 19 of the Book of Numbers, 
will signal the coming of the building of the Third Temple,7 an event that would 
ignite the Middle East.
 
 In the Islamic world, opposition to science in the public arena takes additional 
forms. Antiscience materials have an immense presence on the internet, with 
thousands of elaborately designed Islamic websites, some with view counters 
running into the hundreds of thousands. A typical and frequently visited one has 
the following banner: "Recently discovered astounding scientific facts, 
accurately described in the Muslim Holy Book and by the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) 
14 centuries ago." Here one will find that everything from quantum mechanics to 
black holes and genes was anticipated 1400 years ago.
 
 Science, in the view of fundamentalists, is principally seen as valuable for 
establishing yet more proofs of God, proving the truth of Islam and the Qur'an, 
and showing that modern science would have been impossible but for Muslim 
discoveries. Antiquity alone seems to matter. One gets the impression that 
history's clock broke down somewhere during the 14th century and that plans for 
repair are, at best, vague. In that all-too-prevalent view, science is not about 
critical thought and awareness, creative uncertainties, or ceaseless 
explorations. Missing are websites or discussion groups dealing with the 
philosophical implications from the Islamic point of view of the theory of 
relativity, quantum mechanics, chaos theory, superstrings, stem cells, and other 
contemporary science issues.
 
 Similarly, in the mass media of Muslim countries, discussions on "Islam and 
science" are common and welcomed only to the extent that belief in the status 
quo is reaffirmed rather than challenged. When the 2005 earthquake struck 
Pakistan, killing more than 90 000 people, no major scientist in the country 
publicly challenged the belief, freely propagated through the mass media, that 
the quake was God's punishment for sinful behavior. Mullahs ridiculed the notion 
that science could provide an explanation; they incited their followers into 
smashing television sets, which had provoked Allah's anger and hence the 
earthquake. As several class discussions showed, an overwhelming majority of my 
university's science students accepted various divine-wrath explanations.
 Why the slow development?
 
 Although the relatively slow pace of scientific development in Muslim countries 
cannot be disputed, many explanations can and some common ones are plain wrong.
 
 For example, it is a myth that women in Muslim countries are largely excluded 
from higher education. In fact, the numbers are similar to those in many Western 
countries: The percentage of women in the university student body is 35% in 
Egypt, 67% in Kuwait, 27% in Saudi Arabia, and 41% in Pakistan, for just a few 
examples. In the physical sciences and engineering, the proportion of women 
enrolled is roughly similar to that in the US. However, restrictions on the 
freedom of women leave them with far fewer choices, both in their personal lives 
and for professional advancement after graduation, relative to their male 
counterparts.
 
 The near-absence of democracy in Muslim countries is also not an especially 
important reason for slow scientific development. It is certainly true that 
authoritarian regimes generally deny freedom of inquiry or dissent, cripple 
professional societies, intimidate universities, and limit contacts with the 
outside world. But no Muslim government today, even if dictatorial or 
imperfectly democratic, remotely approximates the terror of Hitler or Joseph 
Stalin—regimes in which science survived and could even advance.
 
 Another myth is that the Muslim world rejects new technology. It does not. In 
earlier times, the orthodoxy had resisted new inventions such as the printing 
press, loudspeaker, and penicillin, but such rejection has all but vanished. The 
ubiquitous cell phone, that ultimate space-age device, epitomizes the 
surprisingly quick absorption of black-box technology into Islamic culture. For 
example, while driving in Islamabad, it would occasion no surprise if you were 
to receive an urgent SMS (short message service) requesting immediate prayers 
for helping Pakistan's cricket team win a match. Popular new Islamic cell-phone 
models now provide the exact GPS-based direction for Muslims to face while 
praying, certified translations of the Qur'an, and step-by-step instructions for 
performing the pilgrimages of Haj and Umrah. Digital Qur'ans are already 
popular, and prayer rugs with microchips (for counting bend-downs during 
prayers) have made their debut.
 
 Some relatively more plausible reasons for the slow scientific development of 
Muslim countries have been offered. First, even though a handful of rich 
oil-producing Muslim countries have extravagant incomes, most are fairly poor 
and in the same boat as other developing countries. Indeed, the OIC average for 
per capita income is significantly less than the global average. Second, the 
inadequacy of traditional Islamic languages—Arabic, Persian, Urdu—is an 
important contributory reason. About 80% of the world's scientific literature 
appears first in English, and few traditional languages in the developing world 
have adequately adapted to new linguistic demands. With the exceptions of Iran 
and Turkey, translation rates are small. According to a 2002 United Nations 
report written by Arab intellectuals and released in Cairo, Egypt, "The entire 
Arab world translates about 330 books annually, one-fifth the number that Greece 
translates." The report adds that in the 1000 years since the reign of the 
caliph Maa'moun, the Arabs have translated as many books as Spain translates in 
just one year.8
 It's the thought that counts
 
 But the still deeper reasons are attitudinal, not material. At the base lies the 
yet unresolved tension between traditional and modern modes of thought and 
social behavior.
 
 That assertion needs explanation. No grand dispute, such as between Galileo and 
Pope Urban VIII, is holding back the clock. Bread-and-butter science and 
technology requires learning complicated but mundane rules and procedures that 
place no strain on any reasonable individual's belief system. A bridge engineer, 
robotics expert, or microbiologist can certainly be a perfectly successful 
professional without pondering profound mysteries of the universe. Truly 
fundamental and ideology-laden issues confront only that tiny minority of 
scientists who grapple with cosmology, indeterminacy in quantum mechanical and 
chaotic systems, neuroscience, human evolution, and other such deep topics. 
Therefore, one could conclude that developing science is only a matter of 
setting up enough schools, universities, libraries, and laboratories, and 
purchasing the latest scientific tools and equipment.
 
 But the above reasoning is superficial and misleading. Science is fundamentally 
an idea-system that has grown around a sort of skeleton wire frame—the 
scientific method. The deliberately cultivated scientific habit of mind is 
mandatory for successful work in all science and related fields where critical 
judgment is essential. Scientific progress constantly demands that facts and 
hypotheses be checked and rechecked, and is unmindful of authority. But there 
lies the problem: The scientific method is alien to traditional, unreformed 
religious thought. Only the exceptional individual is able to exercise such a 
mindset in a society in which absolute authority comes from above, questions are 
asked only with difficulty, the penalties for disbelief are severe, the 
intellect is denigrated, and a certainty exists that all answers are already 
known and must only be discovered.
 
 Science finds every soil barren in which miracles are taken literally and 
seriously and revelation is considered to provide authentic knowledge of the 
physical world. If the scientific method is trashed, no amount of resources or 
loud declarations of intent to develop science can compensate. In those 
circumstances, scientific research becomes, at best, a kind of cataloging or 
"butterfly-collecting" activity. It cannot be a creative process of genuine 
inquiry in which bold hypotheses are made and checked.
 
 Religious fundamentalism is always bad news for science. But what explains its 
meteoric rise in Islam over the past half century? In the mid-1950s all Muslim 
leaders were secular, and secularism in Islam was growing. What changed? Here 
the West must accept its share of responsibility for reversing the trend. Iran 
under Mohammed Mossadeq, Indonesia under Ahmed Sukarno, and Egypt under Gamal 
Abdel Nasser are examples of secular but nationalist governments that wanted to 
protect their national wealth. Western imperial greed, however, subverted and 
overthrew them. At the same time, conservative oil-rich Arab states—such as 
Saudi Arabia—that exported extreme versions of Islam were US clients. The 
fundamentalist Hamas organization was helped by Israel in its fight against the 
secular Palestine Liberation Organization as part of a deliberate Israeli 
strategy in the 1980s. Perhaps most important, following the Soviet invasion of 
Afghanistan in 1979, the US Central Intelligence Agency armed the fiercest and 
most ideologically charged Islamic fighters and brought them from distant Muslim 
countries into Afghanistan, thus helping to create an extensive globalized jihad 
network. Today, as secularism continues to retreat, Islamic fundamentalism fills 
the vacuum.
 How science can return to the Islamic world
 
 In the 1980s an imagined "Islamic science" was posed as an alternative to 
"Western science." The notion was widely propagated and received support from 
governments in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and elsewhere. Muslim ideologues 
in the US, such as Ismail Faruqi and Syed Hossein Nasr, announced that a new 
science was about to be built on lofty moral principles such as tawheed (unity 
of God), ibadah (worship), khilafah (trusteeship), and rejection of zulm 
(tyranny), and that revelation rather than reason would be the ultimate guide to 
valid knowledge. Others took as literal statements of scientific fact verses 
from the Qur'an that related to descriptions of the physical world. Those 
attempts led to many elaborate and expensive Islamic science conferences around 
the world. Some scholars calculated the temperature of Hell, others the chemical 
composition of heavenly djinnis. None produced a new machine or instrument, 
conducted an experiment, or even formulated a single testable hypothesis.
 
 A more pragmatic approach, which seeks promotion of regular science rather than 
Islamic science, is pursued by institutional bodies such as COMSTECH (Committee 
on Scientific and Technological Cooperation), which was established by the OIC's 
Islamic Summit in 1981. It joined the IAS (Islamic Academy of Sciences) and 
ISESCO (Islamic Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization) in serving 
the "ummah" (the global Muslim community). But a visit to the websites of those 
organizations reveals that over two decades, the combined sum of their 
activities amounts to sporadically held conferences on disparate subjects, a 
handful of research and travel grants, and small sums for repair of equipment 
and spare parts.
 
 One almost despairs. Will science never return to the Islamic world? Shall the 
world always be split between those who have science and those who do not, with 
all the attendant consequences?
 
 Figure 5
 Bleak as the present looks, that outcome does not have to prevail. History has 
no final word, and Muslims do have a chance. One need only remember how the 
Anglo–American elite perceived the Jews as they entered the US at the opening of 
the 20th century. Academics such as Henry Herbert Goddard, the well-known 
eugenicist, described Jews in 1913 as "a hopelessly backward people, largely 
incapable of adjusting to the new demands of advanced capitalist societies." His 
research found that 83% of Jews were "morons"—a term he popularized to describe 
the feeble-minded—and he went on to suggest that they should be used for tasks 
requiring an "immense amount of drudgery." That ludicrous bigotry warrants no 
further discussion, beyond noting that the powerful have always created false 
images of the weak.
 
 Progress will require behavioral changes. If Muslim societies are to develop 
technology instead of just using it, the ruthlessly competitive global 
marketplace will insist on not only high skill levels but also intense social 
work habits. The latter are not easily reconcilable with religious demands made 
on a fully observant Muslim's time, energy, and mental concentration: The 
faithful must participate in five daily congregational prayers, endure a month 
of fasting that taxes the body, recite daily from the Qur'an, and more. Although 
such duties orient believers admirably well toward success in the life 
hereafter, they make worldly success less likely. A more balanced approach will 
be needed.
 
 Science can prosper among Muslims once again, but only with a willingness to 
accept certain basic philosophical and attitudinal changes—a Weltanschauung that 
shrugs off the dead hand of tradition, rejects fatalism and absolute belief in 
authority, accepts the legitimacy of temporal laws, values intellectual rigor 
and scientific honesty, and respects cultural and personal freedoms. The 
struggle to usher in science 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.
 
 Respected voices among believing Muslims see no incompatibility between the 
above requirements and true Islam as they understand it. For example, Abdolkarim 
Soroush, described as Islam's Martin Luther, was handpicked by Ayatollah 
Khomeini to lead the reform of Iran's universities in the early 1980s. His 
efforts led to the introduction of modern analytical philosophers such as Karl 
Popper and Bertrand Russell into the curricula of Iranian universities. Another 
influential modern reformer is Abdelwahab Meddeb, a Tunisian who grew up in 
France. Meddeb argues that as early as the middle of the eighth century, Islam 
had produced the premises of the Enlightenment, and that between 750 and 1050, 
Muslim authors made use of an astounding freedom of thought in their approach to 
religious belief. In their analyses, says Meddeb, they bowed to the primacy of 
reason, honoring one of the basic principles of the Enlightenment.
 
 In the quest for modernity and science, internal struggles continue within the 
Islamic world. Progressive Muslim forces have recently been weakened, but not 
extinguished, as a consequence of the confrontation between Muslims and the 
West. On an ever-shrinking globe, there can be no winners in that conflict: It 
is time to calm the waters. We must learn to drop the pursuit of narrow 
nationalist and religious agendas, both in the West and among Muslims. In the 
long run, political boundaries should and can be treated as artificial and 
temporary, as shown by the successful creation of the European Union. Just as 
important, the practice of religion must be a matter of choice for the 
individual, not enforced by the state. This leaves secular humanism, based on 
common sense and the principles of logic and reason, as our only reasonable 
choice for governance and progress. Being scientists, we understand this easily. 
The task is to persuade those who do not.
 
 
 
 Pervez Hoodbhoy is chair and professor in the department of physics at 
Quaid-i-Azam University in Islamabad, Pakistan, where he has taught for 34 
years.
 References
 
 1. 1. P. Hoodbhoy, Islam and Science—Religious Orthodoxy and the Battle for 
Rationality, Zed Books, London (1991).
 2. 2. M. A. Anwar, A. B. Abu Bakar, Scientometrics 40, 23 (1997).
 3. 3. For additional statistics, see the special issue "Islam and Science," 
Nature 444, 19 (2006).
 4. 4. M. Yalpani, A. Heydari, Chem. Biodivers. 2, 730 (2005).
 5. 5. Statistical, Economic and Social Research and Training Centre for Islamic 
Countries, Academic Rankings of Universities in the OIC Countries (April 2007), 
available at [LINK].
 6. 6. The News, Islamabad, 24 April 2007, available at [LINK].
 7. 7. For more information on the red heifer venture, see [LINK].
 8. 8. N. Fergany et al., Arab Human Development Report 2002, United Nations 
Development Programme, Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development, New York 
(2002),
     
http://www.worldaffairsboard.com/science-tech/40641-science-islamic-world-quest-rapprochement.htmlavailable 
at [LINK]. |