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How Much The World Owed To Muslim Scientists?  
  
Friday, November 9, 2007   
Abbas Ibn Firnas 
(810 - 887): He is an
aviator,
chemist,
inventor,
musician & physician. he design a water clock& invent glass from sand 
to produce quartz.In 875, at an age of 65 years, Ibn Firnas made the first 
attempt at controlled flight when he invented a hang glider with 
artifical wings, and launched himself from the Mount of the Bride (Jabal al-'arus) 
in the Rusafa Area, near
Córdoba. The flight was largely successful, and was widely observed by a 
crowd that he had invited. After Ibn Firnas jumped from the top of a wall at 
least "several times the height of a man," he had successfully manipulated the 
flight controls, made up of two sets of wings, in order to raise his altitute 
higher than the point from which he had taken off. After gliding for several 
hundred feet, Ibn Firnas  
 changed his direction and turned back to successfully return to the wall he had 
jumped from, though his landing was unsuccessful. 
 "Ibn Firnas was the first man in history to make a scientific attempt at 
flying."
 —Philip 
Khuri Hitti, 
History of the Arabs.
 
 As
Westerners teach their children about
Sir George Cayley,
Lilienthal,
Santos-Dumont and the
Wright Brothers, the
Islamic countries tell theirs about Ibn Firnas, a thousand years 
before the Wrights.The westerners also told us that around 1284 in Italy,
Salvino D'Armate is the one who invent the first eye glasses. But actually, 
it was Abbas Ibn Firnas who invent corrective glasses in the 9th century. He had 
devised a way to finish sand into glass; which until this time, was secret to 
the Egyptians. These glasses could be shaped and polished into round rocks used 
for viewing - known as
reading stones.
 
 Who created the first humanoid robot? Was it Leonardo Da Vinci who design a 
robot that looks like an armored knight, known as Leonardo's robot? No! He only 
design it on paper and get all the credit in Western world. they then make the 
model from his drawings and put it in muzium. The first person who design and 
then built the first humanoid robot was
Ibn Ismail Ibn al-Razzaz Al-Jazari 
who created the first recorded designs of a programmable humanoid robot 300 
years before Leornado da Vinci. Al-Jazari's robot was originally a boat with 
four automatic figures. His
mechanism had a programmable drum machine with pegs (cams) that bump 
into little levers that operated the percussion. The drummer could be made to 
play different rhythms and different drum patterns if the pegs were moved around 
musicians that floated on a lake to entertain guests at royal drinking parties. 
Not only that, he also the world's first inventor of mechanical clock. After 
that, he invented the first clock which incorporated a
closed-loop system, where the clock worked as long as it was loaded with 
metal ballswith which to strike a gong. He also the inventor of so many 
inventions that is widely use today. These included the
crank mechanism,
connecting rod,
programmable
automaton,
reciprocating piston engine,
suction pipe, suction
pump,
double-action pump,
valve,
combination lock,
cam,
camshaft,
segmental
gear, the first
mechanical clocks driven by water and weights, and especially the 
crankshaft, which is considered the most important mechanical invention in 
history after the wheel.
 
 Who found the Milky Way? Was it Galileo? No, it was 
Abu Rayhan al-Biruni,
500 years before Galileo. Who was the 
first to conduct elaborate experiments related to astronomical phenomena. He 
discovered the
Milky Way
galaxy to be a collection of numerous nebulous stars. In
Khorasan, he observed and described the solar eclipse on April 8, 1019, and 
the lunar eclipse on September 17, 1019, in detail, and gave the exact latitudes 
of the stars during the lunar eclipse. He also analysed the acceleration of the 
planets, and first states that the motions of the solar apoge and the precession 
are not identical. Biruni also discovered that the distance between the Earth 
and the Sun is larger than Ptolemy's estimate, on the basis that Ptolemy 
disregarded the annual solar eclipses.
 Where did Isac Newton get the Law of Motion? 700 years before him, Al-Biruni was 
the first to apply experimental scientific method to mechanics, especially the 
fields of statistics and dynamics, particularly for determining specific 
weights, such as those based on the theory of balances and weighing. In 
the dynamics and kinematics fields of mechanics, Biruni was the first to realize 
that acceleration is connected with non-uniform motion, which is part of 
Newton Second Law of Motion. Not only that, in Optics , Biruni was one of the 
first, along with
Ibn al-Haytham, to discover that the speed of light was finite. 
Biruni was also the first to discover that the speed of light is much faster 
than the speed of sound.
 
  
George Sarton, , the father of the history of science, described Biruni as:
 "One of the very greatest scientists of 
Islam, and, all considered, one of the greatest of all times." 
A. I. Sabra desribed Biruni as: 
"One of the great scientific minds in all history."
 And what does this great scientist said about the Quran and science?
 "[the Qur'an] does not interfere in the business of science nor does it 
infringe on the realm of science." (Al-Biruni)
 
 Who invented camera? Can't guess! It was 
Ibn al-Haytham (965-1039), the Father Of 
Optics. he has not only the first person who built camera, but also studied 
binocular
   
 vision and the moon illusion, speculated on the finite speed, rectilinear 
propagation and electromagnetic aspects of light, and argued that rays of light 
are streams of energy particles travelling in straight lines. Due to his 
quantitative, empiricaland experimental approach to physics and science, he is 
considered the pioneer of the modern scientific method and of experimental 
physics, and some have described him as the "first scientist" for this reason. 
He is also considered by some to be the founder of psychophysics and his 
experimental approach of psycology of visual perception, and a pioneer of the 
philosophical field of phenomenology. He also discovered
Fermat's principle of least time and the law of
inertia (known as
Newton's first law of motion), discovered the concept of momentum(part of
Newton's second law of motion), described the attraction between masses and 
was aware of the magnitude of acceleration due to gravity at a distance 
and in his optical research laid the foundations for the later development of 
telescopic astronomy, as well as for the microscope and the use of optical aids 
in Renaissance art.. His reformed empirical model was the first to reject the 
equant and eccentrics separate natural phylosophy from astronomy, free celestial 
kinematics from cosmology, and reduce physical entities to geometrical entities. 
The model also propounded the earth's rotation about its axis, and the centres 
of motion were geometrical points without any physical significance. His model 
comes centuries earlier than the famous Johannes Kepler's model.
 Ibn al-Haytham 
described his search for truth and knowledge as a way of leading him closer to 
God: 
"I constantly sought knowledge and truth, and it 
became my belief that for gaining access to the effulgence and closeness 
to God, there is no better way than that of searching for truth and knowledge."
 And how about Ibnu Sina 
or Avicenna (980-1037), the Father of 
All Doctors? About 100 treatises were ascribed to Ibn Sina. Some of them are 
tracts of a few pages, others are works extending through several volumes. The 
best-known amongst them, and that to which Ibn Sina owed his European 
reputation, is his 14-volume 
The Canon of Medicine, which was a standard medical text in Europe and 
the Islamic world up until the 18th
 
 century. 
The book is known for its introduction of systematic experimentation and 
quantification into the study of physiology, the discovery of contagious 
diseases, the introduction of quarantine to limit the spread of infectious 
diseases, the introduction of experimental medicines and clinical trials and the 
first descriptions on bacteria and viral organisms. It classifies and describes 
diseases, and outlines their assumed causes. Even the term Medi-cenna 
or Ibnu Sina's healings is being used in English language as Medicine 
until today and many people don't realize it. The Arabic text of the Qanun was translated into Latin as Canon 
medicinae by Gerard of cremona in the 12th century and into Hebrew in 1279. 
Henceforth the Canon served as the chief guide to medical science in the 
West and is said to have influenced Leonardo Da Vinci. Its content, its 
systematic arrangement and philosophical plan soon worked its way into a 
position of pre-eminence in the medical literature of Europe, displacing the 
works of Galen and becoming the text book for medical encyclopeadic education
in the schools of Europe. The text was read in the medical schools at 
Montpeller and Leuven as late as 1650, and Arnold C. Klebs 
described it as "one of the most significant intellectual phenomena of all 
times." In the words of Dr. William Osler, the Qanun has remained "a 
medical bible for a longer time than any other work".
 
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