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   | Reviving 
Science in Muslim Countries Posted 
by HZR   
Sunday, December 02, 2007
 I have been an admirer of Dr. Pervez Hoodbhoy’s writings on bringing 
about a scientific renaissance among modern-day Muslims. His 1991 book, Islam 
and Science – Religious Orthodoxy and the Battle for Rationality, was an 
eye-opener for me. The Quran is a book of moral guidance and not a book of 
science, he wrote. In one clear sentence, he exposed the inadequacy of Muslims 
who would do away with the scientific method and install revelation (as they 
understood it) as the source of scientific progress and discovery. His 
subsequent writings on the topic only deepened my admiration.
 
 Which was why, in an otherwise incisive
article in Physics Today, I was 
disappointed by a solution he proposed for Muslim renaissance in science. Dr. 
Hoodbhoy recommends behavioral changes among Muslims to excel in a ruthlessly 
global marketplace dominated by science and technology. Such changes would allow 
Muslims to develop intense “social work habits” that “are not easily 
reconcilable with religious demands made on a fully observant Muslim’s time, 
energy, and mental concentrations. The faithful must participate in five daily 
congregational prayers, endure a month of fasting that taxes the body, recite 
daily from the Quran, 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.”
 
 Dr. Hoodbhoy is suggesting that daily prayers, recitation of the Quran and 
month-long Ramadan fasting are hindrances to a Muslim’s attaining scientific 
excellence, since they disrupt sustained concentration of the mind. Although he 
does not spell out the details of “a more balanced approach,” the implication is 
clear: Do away with these religious demands, or, at the very least, reduce their 
frequency. How about praying only once at the end of the day, recite the Quran 
once a week perhaps, and forego fasting altogether?
 
 I am surprised by the obvious errors Dr. Hoodbhoy has made in his argument. 
While it is commendable for Muslims to offer the five daily prayers in 
congregations, it is not a must. The prayers (with the exception of the Friday 
noon prayer) can be offered in private, taking no more than a few minutes and 
very little space. In fact, that is how most observant Muslims meet the 
requirements of their faith during workdays in their professional lives. If, for 
some reason, they cannot offer the daily prayers in time, they can make them up 
later.
 
 His use of the word “endure” for the month of fasting is also perplexing. Most 
Muslims do not “endure” fasting but look forward to it as a time of physical 
cleansing and heightened spirituality.
 
 The major flaw in Dr. Hoodbhoy’s suggestion is that religious practices prevent 
observant Muslims from focusing and maintaining the continuity of their 
thoughts, particularly in science. In fact, the opposite is true. Properly 
practiced (a challenge for many Muslims for whom religious observances have 
become rituals without meaning), prayers and fasting instill discipline, a 
prerequisite for concentration. His mentor, Nobel physicist Abdus Salam, is an 
obvious example. Salam was one of the great theoretical physicists of the 
twentieth century but he was also a devout Muslim, punctilious about the demands 
of his faith. In numerous essays and articles, Salam explained how his faith 
inspired his science and vice-versa. While most Muslim scientists of our times 
can hardly match Salam’s achievement, the science of many of them is also 
informed by the awe and wonder inspired by their faith.
 
 So why are Muslim nations so far behind in science compared to the West? Why 
does the observation of Turkish-American physicist Taner Edis1 that “if all 
Muslim scientists working in basic science vanished from the face of the earth, 
the rest of the scientific community would barely notice” ring so true? Why is 
creationist literature unleashed by a Turkish clergy named Harun Yahya sweeping 
the Muslim world?
 
 One reason is the lack of separation of mosque and state, and consequently, 
separation of mosque and science, in many Muslim countries. Science thrives on 
unfettered inquiry. If the clergy can impose religious limits on free inquiry 
and threaten dire consequences if the limits are transgressed, science can never 
advance.
 
 Another related reason is the lack of quality education. Take the case of Dr. 
Hoodbhoy’s own country, Pakistan. As William Dalrymple noted recently in The 
Guardian on the occasion of Pakistan’s 60th independence anniversary2, only 1.8% 
of Pakistan's GDP is spent on government schools. 15% of these government 
schools are without a proper building; 52% without a boundary wall; 71% without 
electricity. Many of the barely functioning schools cram children of all grades 
into a single room, often sitting on the floor because of lack of desks. While 
65% of India’s population is literate and rising, the figure for Pakistan is 49% 
and falling. Out of a population of 162 million, 83 million adults of 15 years 
and above are illiterate. It is worse for women: 65% of all female adults are 
illiterate. The absence of quality government schooling has compelled poorest 
Pakistanis to place their vulnerable children in the madrasa system. Madrasas 
offer free education but can turn their young wards into ideologues under the 
tutelage of fiery preachers, as the recent red mosque showdown in Islamabad 
demonstrated.
 When one adds to this grim status quo the general lack of accountability and 
respect for law by the leaders of many Muslim countries, it is easy to see why 
engaging in genuine scientific research can become hazardous to one’s health.
 
 Yet there is hope. Even conservative Muslims, like liberal Muslims, are becoming 
aware of the central role of science in defining the destiny of modern nations. 
Slowly but surely, they are beginning to see that science does not undermine 
religion but enriches it. The critical mass for change will occur sooner or 
later. One hopes, of course, that it will occur sooner rather than later.
 
 REFERENCES
 
 1. Steve Paulson, The Religious State of Islamic Science: An interview with 
Turkish-American physicist Taner Edis, Online Salon magazine, August 13, 
2007(http://www.salon.com/books/feature/2007/08/13/taner_edis/index.html)
 
 2. William Dalrymple, The ‘poor’ neighbor, The Guardian (UK), August 14, 2007
 Labels:
Abdus Salam,
Education,
Islam,
Madrasa,
Pervez Hoodbhoy,
Quran,
Schools,
science posted 
by HZR @
6:22 PM 
  
  
http://reachforsky.blogspot.com/2007/12/reviving-science-in-muslim-countries-i.html |