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1001 Islamic Inventions

pev writes "There's a new traveling exhibition in the UK entitled 1001 inventions. It contains some of the most interesting inventions from the past few thousand years. The common theme, however, is that they all came from the Islamic world and not the west. In some cases [the list is] quite surprising. For the lazy, the Independent newspaper in the UK printed their top 20 from the exhibition."

40 of 1,034 comments (clear)

  1. It's sad . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    . . . when a group of people lets all of their scientific achievements throughout history become overshadowed by religious fundamentalism. Let's hope we don't end up going down the same route here in the States.

    (It's even more sad when I have to post anonymously for fear that people who disagree with my post might interpret it to be against their version of Islam and harm myself and my family).

    1. Re:It's sad . . . by teslar · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Let's hope we don't end up going down the same route here in the States.
      What, like ending up with leaders who claim that God told them to go to War with other countries?
    2. Re:It's sad . . . by chill · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What, like ending up with leaders who claim that God told them to go to War with other countries?

      Yes, but in the United States we can vote him out because a U.S. President is limited to two four-year terms. Contrast that with those in power in most of the Middle East and Africa, not to mention several places in Asia, Cuba and S. America. How long was Saddam in power? How many countries in Asia, the M.E. and Africa have had peaceful transitions of governments?

      At least with G.W. Bush you know he'll be gone after 2008.

        -Charles

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    3. Re:It's sad . . . by dfgchgfxrjtdhgh.jjhv · · Score: 3, Insightful

      yeah, but he'll be replaced by someone with the same policies, so its really no different.

    4. Re:It's sad . . . by gnuyarlathotep · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Less than 10 people in all of US history have been murdered by moronic anti-abortionists. Over 200 people were hacked to death when muslims in Nigeria were "offended" by a remark by a reporter about a beauty contest. (it was something like "Muhammed may have chosen a wife from the contestants.")

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/2671229.stm

      Plenty more died there after the Danish cartoon episode. Course Blair and Bush both sided with the Islamofascists saying how hurtful and wrong it was to print the cartoons!

      It's a sad day when the French and other continentals print the cartoons in solidarity with Denmark and free speech, but the UK and USA cower from the rage of Islamofascists. The French have to defend our honors because we are too scared too. Very sad. Hopefully this will end the stupid French surrender jokes.

    5. Re:It's sad . . . by NitsujTPU · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That was pretty much what he said. Sheesh, you know Slashdot's gone down the toilet when an anti-Bushism nagging that another Anti-Bushism wasn't quite anti-Bush enough gets modded insightful.

      I wonder if we'll ever talk about technology on this site again.

  2. Nothing after 1300 by LeonGeeste · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nothing on the list came from after 1300 CE/AD. What does that tell you?

    --
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    1. Re:Nothing after 1300 by ednopantz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      >That the Crusades were rather effective at destroying a civilisation?

      You do realize that they won the crusades, don't you? It is inconvenient for the "blame the West for everything" worldview, but my ancestors got their asses kicked.

      The total failure of the Islamic world to produce any worthwhile contribution to human civilzation in the last 500 years is mostly a case of relative decline: what happens in Europe and America after 1500 is nothing short of amazing. Even if they didn't actually slow down their rate of cultural/technological production, they got blown out of the water by the competition. Still, it is striking how little that part of the world has been able to come up with in the last half-millenium.

      You can't read an Arab magazine without seeing a list like this once a week. The fact that the British press is now getting into the act of praising 1000 year old inventions and ignoring the last thousand years of stagnation is telling.

    2. Re:Nothing after 1300 by Valdrax · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wake me when the radical Islamic world demonstrates...
      -tolerance of others
      -respect for others
      -respect for human life


      Look back only 300 years in Western civilization to see people being burned at the stake for being accused of not being a faithful Christian. Look back only 200 years ago to see people brutally enslaved by Western civilization with plenty of people twisting the Bible to support it. Look back only 100 years ago to see large portions of the globe carved up in the name of bring "Christendom" to the heathens. Look back only 50 years ago to see the end of a European purge of members of a particular faith. Look back only 20 years ago to see the end of a war between Catholics and Protestants that included terrorist violence.

      "Western civilization" has only been out of the grips of madness and poor civilization for a very short time itself. Give the Middle East a couple of centuries to sort themselves out too. I'm not saying that we should give up on holding them to a higher standard but that we should be a little more honest about how much effort it took us to get here and to be careful about our own recent backsliding.

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  3. Those inventions aren't Islamic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Those inventions were created by people, not by Islam. Islam is merely a religion, and hence useless and incapable of anything at except stroking peoples emotions (for good or bad).

    Those are human inventions.

    1. Re:Those inventions aren't Islamic by uradu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > Christianity and Judaism speak to morality and salvation, but do not specify
      > the political system. Islam does, and specifies crimes, punishments, etc.

      I beg your pardon? I guess you haven't read the Bible much, especially the Old Testament. It does very much outline the framework of a political and social system, complete with excruciating detail regarding crimes and their punishment. That we choose not to structure our societies according to those rules ANYMORE is an entirely different matter. Christianity and Islam are a lot similar than you would like to think, and were even more so before the Reformation. Islam merely haven't had their Martin Luther (yet).

    2. Re:Those inventions aren't Islamic by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Those inventions were created by people, not by Islam.

      The point is merely that these were created by a society in which Islam was the predominant religion. That's historically and sociologically interesting, demonstrating that in the general case Islam is not incompatible with an inventive society, and raising questions like "How the hell did things get so screwed up over there?", "Can the same sort of screwing-up happen to societies where Christianity is the predominant religion?", and "What is the world going to look like if and when the Islamic world gets un-screwed-up?"

      There's a common unspoken belief that somehow Christian-dominant Eurpoean/North American culture has "won" history and "ended up" on top and therefore proven superior. But if you asked a guy in Persia five or six centuries ago, he might have told you how Islam-dominant Arabic/Persian culture had "won" history. In five or six centuries you might have to ask that question in Chinese.

      Islam is merely a religion, and hence useless and incapable of anything at except stroking peoples emotions (for good or bad).

      A proper religion is a means of enhancing our relationships with ourselves and with the universe. In all the mess of dogma, superstition, political corruption, and worthless metaphysics, there remain a few threads of actual wisdom teachings; worthwhile inspiration can be found in some forms of Buddhism, Sufism, Quakerism, Hinduism, the more philosophical strains of Judaism and Taoism, in some of the various "primitive" or "ahistorical" nature religions, and in some parts of the Neopagan revivial. Yes, you have to sift a lot of crap to find the diamonds.

      --
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      You cannot wash away blood with blood
  4. Not Surprising At All by briancarnell · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Odd that the person who submitted this is surprised that the inventions are from the Islamic world. Anyone who knows anything about the history of the regions whose inventions are included here knows there were a lot of innovations created in the first 500-600 years after the founding of Islam.

    The problem is that such inventiveness and scholarly pursuits largely stopped/stagnated as Muslim countries and culture turned inward.

  5. Islamic? by thenetbox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't know why the word "Islamic" is attached to this article.

    Just like terrorism isn't "Islamic", these inventions aren't necessarily Islamic either.

    The religion of the inventor had nothing to do with these inventions.

    1. Re:Islamic? by radtea · · Score: 3, Insightful


      The religion of the inventor had nothing to do with these inventions.

      The religion of the inventor doesn't matter so much as the culture they lived in, which is completely unrelated to the predominant religion. This can easily be demonstrated empirically.

      Culture in the sense I mean it has far more to do with the specific beliefs and institutions that dominate a given society, not the abstract generalizations that a word like "Islam" or "Christianity" captures. There have throughout history been "Christian" nations that have been violent, oppressive, belligerant totalitarian states (consider the England of Elizabeth I), and "Christian" nations that have been peaceful, enlightened and liberal (consider modern Denmark). Islam has been the dominant religion in a similarly diverse set of cultures, from the relatively enlightened caliphates of the middle ages to dark age tribal societies like Afghanistan under the Taliban.

      Empirically, religion has literally nothing to do with culture.

      But culture certainly has something to do with intellectual achievement. 20th century Russia was a major force in mathematics not so much because Russians had a genetic proclivity for mathematical prowess (as certain crazed pseudo-evolutionists might want to argue) but because it was a lot harder to get into trouble with Communist Party doctrine as a pure mathematician than as a physicist (who might wind up using "Jewish physics" like relativity or quantum mechanics) or as a biologist (who might run afoul of Lysenko).

      And all that "Jewish physics" was done by Jews in part because it was easier for them to get chairs in theoretical physics in early 20th century Europe than in experimental physics, because theoretical physics just wasn't seen as being all that important or interesting.

      On the more positive side, I've always felt that Newton was archetypally English, for his time--he had the grandiose sweep of Contential intellectuals combined with the practical, detail-oriented, hair-splitting obsessiveness of the great medieval English logicians and experimentalists. And the world he grew up in was one where all the walls had been torn down, where a king had been beheaded in living memory, where any kind of radically intellectual restructuring must have seemed possible.

      But while culture and poltics can contribute to an inventor's success, it is the individual who matters in the end.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
  6. Anything in the last 30 years??? by mikejz84 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I looked over the sites, and i find something intresting: The complete lack of any modern innovations. This project has completely backfired, instead of trying to promote Islamic society, it has proven the harsh reality that the middle-east is centeries behind the developed world.

  7. Re:Shouldn't these be called... by thenetbox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not Arabic because lots of these inventions are Persian, Indian, Chinese etc.

    These inventions were created by intelligent, open minded people who happened to be Muslim and weren't living under oppresion of crazed power hungry lunatics who consider technology to be the tool of satan.

    I lived in Pakistan for a few years and all the so called "muslim scholars" of today are uneducated trash who happened to brain-wash enough poverty stricken people in order to get power. These morons are the face of Islam these days and that's sad.

    Hopefully, the few remaining educated sane muslims will be able to over turn this growing trend.

  8. Odd, shows how little I know about the world by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Because I could have sworn that Islam isn't thousands of years old.

    While it is difficult to spot exactly where the islamic fate starts in history most people seem to assume it starts with the prophet Muhammad.

    Who came a good 700 years after Jesus Christ who himself came from a fate even older. If you go back several thousand years the only bible fate around that is still around (as far as I know) are the Jews.

    Wich means that most of the inventions claimed here are in fact not made by muslims but either by their predecessors (christians or jews) OR one of the many other fates that used to exist in the world.

    It always suprises me when people talk about the rich history of the middle east and attribute it to Islam when in fact islam had next to nothing to do with it. Just check islamic attitudes to the great pyramids.

    When an article already makes a basic mistake by attributing achievements to a fate that happened hundreds of years earlier I smell propoganda. Would be like attributing the Great Wall to the Chinese Communist Party.

    Same region, same ethnic people but totally different nonetheless.

    Basically this whole things sound to me like, thousands of years ago when the world was totally different some guy invented a thing wich was kinda of usefull so now a whole group of religious freaks must be liked despite the fact that everything they say and do is exactly against the believes of that guy thousands of years ago.

    No thanks. I just judge muslims by the ones I meet in daily life.

    My greatest problem with the muslims in general is that they never seem to have heard of the saying "what is good for the goose is good for the gander" (what goes for you goes for me). Take the recent riots over those danish cartoons. Arab media have spouted hate for decades but that is alright. One rule for the muslims, another for the rest of the world. No thank you.

    The only thing I know that in holland a mere 3-4% of the population seems to be in the news 80% of the time. You can turn on the tv without some program about them. Enough already.

    Oh, and those who think that hatred against muslims is extreme right. Consider this. What do nazi's hate? Homosexuals, equal rights for women, jews, etc. What do muslims hate?

    Those lefties defending muslims bashing gays and supressing womens mystify me. Sometimes the enemy of your enemy is your enemy as well. Just because your against Bush doesn't mean you have to be pro muslim.

    --

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  9. Re:Discrimination by GauteL · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "The truth, of course, is that the vast majority of all historical accomplishments were achieved by straight, white, Christian males"

    The vast majority of all historical accomplishments? You even use terms like "the truth" and "of course", making it sound ridiculously assumptious.

    If I was to believe such a claim, I would require proof. European and American history is Eurocentric, so we know far more about European history than we do of Chinese, Arabian, Japanese, Indian, African or native american history. The Chinese and Japanese have for instance an extremely rich history full of accomplisments, lots of which are not well known by westeners. The same goes for most other civilisations.

    Also, just because the white, christian male conquered large parts of the world, does not mean we were culturally superiour. We just happened to better at killing than them.

  10. The earth is round! (and the greeks knew it) by l2718 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    At #18, the Guardian notes that by the 9th century Muslim astronomers knew the Earth was round and had measured the circumference. The writer conveniently omits to mention that more than a thousand years before, the greek philosopher Eratosthenese has already done that. Certainly Muslim astronomy of the 9th century was far more advanced than European astronomy of the same time, but this article smacks to me of an attempt to say "everything was invented by a Islam". This is strengthed by #14 where they say "the zero was invented in India, but we use arabic numerals". I submit that the shape of the numerals is not very important, while the decimal notation and especially the concept of zero are the major invention here.

  11. Noticed also. by alexhs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For one it is yet another misleading headline, briefly checking in TFA those inventions came later than Mahomet.

    However it doesn't make sense to me to associate those inventions from Arabs, Persians, Ottomans, ... to some religion, especially as these articles do not seem to cover other culture and civilization aspects and influences at all.

    It's just about a book with fancy colours illustrating inventions from parts of the world where Islam is the main religion now.

    --
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    1. Re:Noticed also. by eck011219 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Agreed. However, I suspect what's happening here is that the exhibit curators are trying desperately to remind people that now-Muslim peoples are not just terrorist monsters. I think it's probably a quite sloppy and amateurish but very well-meant attempt by academics to use what they have at their fingertips (a bunch of antiquities and information) to prove to the western world that people we now think of as Muslims are not all simply religious fundamentalists or zealots.

      Again, I do think it's sloppy and misleading. But if we (the West) are in a fight to prove or disprove the validity of a category of millions of individuals with a religion and region in common, is it any less valid to paint with a broad brush in response to broad-brush racism and discrimination? I know they're academics and should stick to ONLY facts (don't get me started about the Hollywood-inspired silliness that even invades the exhibits at the Field Museum here in Chicago), but we're at a bit of a turning point in the relationship between the West and the Middle East. Maybe the thought was that in the current climate it couldn't hurt to pump up the beauty of a region of people.

      It's still dumb and kind of lazy, but I think the idea behind it may well be good. In the U.S., we're living in completely irrational fear of nineteen hijackers who are already dead (and one apparent moron who is currently on trial). In the UK, they/you are living in somewhat irrational fear of a relatively small number of past and future subway and bus bombers. The fear is real (as much as I want to be dismissive of it, I would be lying if I said I didn't think about September 11 every time I go downtown to the tall buildings or go to the airport), and perhaps the curators are simply trying to tap into something interesting and thought-provoking to counter it. I know I'd be tempted to if I had a basement full of things that proved that Muslims aren't fundamentally bad people.

      It would be even better if they had put more thought and energy into the angle taken by the name of the exhibit (and maybe they have - it's too far [eight hours by plane] for me to go see it). But the semantics of the exhibit may simply be a combination of what will draw people to the exhibit and what will explain (if a bit clumsily) one global value of a VERY large and diverse group of people.

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    2. Re:Noticed also. by jedidiah · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yup. Then these enlightened people promptly subject themselves to their own dark ages.

      At least Xianity can blame the Germans.

      The fact that those parts of the world were civilized 500 years ago doesn't tell you much about what to expect out of them now. Rather than publishing these sorts of stories in english language newspapers, perhaps Al-jazeera should be at this. Then perhaps modern Egyptians will be more prone to take up civil engineering.

      --
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    3. Re:Noticed also. by The+Cydonian · · Score: 4, Insightful
      There's a huge tract of scientific literature out there that credits a pan Greco-Chaldean (that's Greeks, Romans, Bactrians, ancient Persians, Indo-Greeks some of who may or may not have been Muslim; the Indo-Greeks of Gandhara, or Kandhahar, as the city is now known, were Buddhist, for instance) tradition with most of the astronomic contributions lately. For instance, it was the Greco-Chaldeans who introduced solar measurements into Indic astronomy, with the result that South Asians stopped following a five-year yuga-cycle, and instead started following the solar-yearly samvatsara instead.

      As such, to account for Al Kharismi's genius and Omar Khayyam's literary talent to their religion is as short-sighted as saying Einstein was brilliant because he was a Jew. At their respective zeniths, Islamic centers of excellence such as Istanbul, Baghdad or Kabul weren't solely Muslim; they were uniquely multi-cultural unlike the west European centers of power then. Civilizational excellence knows no religion, only regional decay does.

  12. This is not an Islamic discovery by Hays · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From their list:
    18) By the 9th century, many Muslim scholars took it for granted that the Earth was a sphere. The proof, said astronomer Ibn Hazm, "is that the Sun is always vertical to a particular spot on Earth". It was 500 years before that realisation dawned on Galileo. The calculations of Muslim astronomers were so accurate that in the 9th century they reckoned the Earth's circumference to be 40,253.4km - less than 200km out. The scholar al-Idrisi took a globe depicting the world to the court of King Roger of Sicily in 1139.

    But as I understand it, the Egyptian Eratosthenes had discovered this same thing 11 centuries earlier:
    http://outreach.as.utexas.edu/marykay/assignments/ eratos1.html

    Galileo was responsible for many great discoveries, but I've never seen anyone claim that he discovered the Earth was round. Many argue that a round world was common knowledge in Europe, despite what their maps might make us believe.

  13. Re:Discrimination by kniLnamiJ-neB · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As a fellow straight white male, I salute you. It's like reverse racism... rather than putting another race down, it's now appropriate to glorify one's own by celebrating "holidays". It still accomplishes the same purpose... one is viewed as exalted over the other(s). Pride in one's race/orientation/wtf-ever is still racism, no matter how you cut it. Whether you're a limey white or the darkest black, it doesn't matter at all... it's about what you do with the time you're given to live. Geez, everybody, just be "human" and get over yourselves.

    --
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  14. Seventy-two, rather. by Grendel+Drago · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's seventy-two houris, according to the Hadith (kinda like the Islamic Talmud--commentary that they take quite seriously, but it's not The Book). On the other hand, "houri" might mean "white raisin" or "juicy fruit". So it's really a hilarious toss-up.

    --
    Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
  15. Re:Discrimination by mdwh2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    but I wonder if I'll live to see the day when it's considered "acceptable" to be proud of straight, male, caucasian heritage. That's not to say I think there's anything to be proud of, but rather that it's interesting how we have all these parades, celebrations, "history" months, and special exhibits for the accomplishments of all the various configurations of gender, race, and religion, except straight, white, Christian male.

    Did I wake up in some parallel universe today where there's a stigma attached to being straight or Christian? Last time I looked, there was still stigma attached to homosexuality, and bisexuality is mostly ignored or assumed not to exist. Atheists are often thought of as immoral, and given none of the protections and exceptions that religious people - yes, including Christians - get.

    There may be no "parades" and so on, but that's because your types are celebrated, or even forced upon us, all the time anyway. In the UK, even though I went to a state school, we had to celebrate your religion every morning. In most countries, same sex couples are not permitted to have legal recognition for their relationship. Perhaps there'd be less parades if they were allowed to celebrate in the same way that heterosexuals can?

    The truth, of course, is that the vast majority of all historical accomplishments were achieved by straight, white, Christian males.

    Emphasis on the word historical. The number of Christian scientific developments is far less in the last century.

    Having said that - I agree that it's silly to start rating which-group-of-people-did-what (although you yourself fall into this trap with the above paragraph). But for the most part, things like "parades" are not about this anyway, they're about raising awareness against discrimination. I disagree with your claim that it's not acceptable to be proud of straight, male, caucasion or Christian heritage.

    while straight white males stand at the sidelines with their mouths shut, lest they be considered racist, sexist, homophobic, or just generally discriminatory.

    No one is stopping you from celebrating achievments of straight white males. The problem is that you seem to want to also say "...and we're better than all the rest".

  16. Re:But... by v0x0j · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Mohammed didn't 'found' Islam, he is merely the last Prophet and perfected it.
    Yeah, like Bobby Henderson did not 'found' Flying Spaghetti Monster - FSM actually found Bobby Henderson. Or L. Ron Hubbard did not start scientology, it started when Xenu thrown thetans into hawaiian volcanos or did something equaly fscked up.
  17. Re:Lots of innovation (a long time ago) by Frangible · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The reason is the relative age differences in each religion; Islam right now is about the same relative age of Christianity during the Dark Ages. Teachings have strayed far from what the prophet Mohammad wrote, and the various formal organizations have placed their word above that of the Koran and prophet. Much was the same in the case of the Catholic church, at the same point in Christianity's relative age, until Martin Luther worked to change that by denouncing the Church's "interpretive" teachings, returning to a more Biblical viewpoint, aiding the understanding of the common man with the small catechism, and those of the clergy with the large catechism.

    And unfortunately I think the fallout of this is becoming all too appearent. The Koran records Mohammad as stating:

    Only argue with the People of the Book in the kindest way - except in the case of those of them who do wrong - saying, 'We have Faith in what has been sent down to us and what was sent down to you. Our God and your God are one and we submit to Him. (Surat al-`Ankabut; 29:46).

    Islam at various points in history was actually much more tolerant than Christianity during its day. Mohammad did indeed show tolerance to Christians and Jews, and for a while even Jews were shown acceptance, reversing a long conflict that began over land before Islam existed. Saladin during the Crusades was not only a brilliant commander, but a very reasonable and tolerant guy, and those kind of values actually spurred the rise of chivalry in Europe.

    Unfortunately it seems the "people of the book" are still a long ways off from following it, but the British have done good work here and it is exactly these type of things that can help reverse the dehumanization of our fellow man that has taken place lately. Hopefully as Islam ages, they will abandon many of the precepts created by man as was the case during the great schism in Christianity, but it is a two-way street, and more Christians will also have to think more like Jesus and Tom Fox than we have been. I think that within each religion of the "people of the book" lies a path to peace, the question is how many more deaths it will take before we can all find it.

  18. Re:Discrimination by phlegmofdiscontent · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "If you wanna be proud of anything, be proud of the fact that you are part of a race, sexuality, gender, and religion that has not been publicly ridiculed, tortured, eradicated, and had their ass kicked six ways from sunday for the past x-hundred years."

    Yeah, tell that to the Irish, and the Italians, and the Poles, and the Dutch, and the Scots etc, etc. Being straight, white, Christian, and male is no proof against discrimination. Being straight, "white", agnostic and male myself, I can vouch for the fact that it's not a guarantor of wealth, either.

  19. Re:But... by c_forq · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Jesus didn't really create Christianity

    I would have to disagree with this. Jesus's teachings went beyond the messiah prophesied by Isiah, and he did start a new religion (you know those stories about new wine and old wine skins, and you know that whole this third cup is a new cup now thing).

    rest of the Jews decided that he was just another prophet and the true son of God hadn't come yet.

    This is very telling. One of the main reasons that Jesus was dismissed by many as the messiah is because of his claim to be the son of God. The prophesies of the messiah say nothing about it being God's son. The jews are waiting for the messiah, not for God's son.

    Christianity traces its roots to before Christ, just as Islam traces its roots to a time before Mohammed.

    Christianity traces its roots to Christ. Before Christ it is judaism, and it is not Christian history but Jewish history. Now Jewish history is important to Christianity, but labeling it as christian roots is a bit like labeling British history as American roots (which while is important to America there are many more influences then just the British).

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  20. vote him out?? by Comboman · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Yes, but in the United States we can vote him out because a U.S. President is limited to two four-year terms.

    What do term limits have to do with voting someone out? I agree, term limits are a good thing and unfortunately the only thing that will get rid of Bush (since he has been able to fix the last two elections), but they have nothing to do with voting. That's why they work so well; they require no effort on the part of the lazy, uninformed electorate.

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  21. Re:But... by NitsujTPU · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm surprised that you're informative rather than funny.

    Just think of all of the Slashdot readers who don't realize that a year from now, they'll be a year older.

  22. Agreed by Billly+Gates · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Look at his name? It sounds kind of arabic so my guess is he could be a muslim.

    I am not a muslim but I do hear them talk about allah being with mohammed with x, and then with noah with y, just as he was with adam.

    Its part of their belief structure to incorporate islam as the extension of judiasm after it became corrupt(muslim belief).To a muslim its the truth and mohammed came to be set the true faith again.

  23. Re:"qamara" obscura by martian265 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "And all words in Arabic, Latin, Greek, and English are all ultimately derived from some Indo-European root language group. Languages don't grow in a petri dish son."

    You really should've researched this before blathering on. While Latin, Greek and English are all derived from the Indo-European root language group, Arabic is not. It is of course a member of the Afro-Asiatic root language group, which of course is not related to the Indo-European group. While they may share some pre-historic parent language, most linguists are reluctant to accept this theory (as are most arabs interestingly enough).

    The original term was camera obscura, which is of course latin in origin (obscura of course being entirely latin). This is easily explained as latin was already in use in the "scientific" fields as the language of choice. Which explains why an Arab man like Ibn al-Haitham would use latin to describe his invention.

    Also the text in the article is completely ridiculous. It was not the common theory that eyes emitted light, that was a theory of 2 Greek scientists. And it was refuted by Aristotle, which became the common theory.

    The article is an obvious Arab apologistic treatise. Several of the "inventions" mentioned are not inventions at all. And the vast majority are actually inventions from other lands and peoples.

  24. What about India and China? by teetam · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It is amazing how many of these "inventions" are of following form - "Even though such-and-such was probably invented in India or China, it was the muslims who [wrote it down/polished it/revealed it to the west].

    The truth is, until Vasco De Gama discovered the sea route to India, Arabs were the conduit for all communication and trade between the West and India. Hence, many inventions and goods that are actually Indian are often misnamed as Arabic. The so-called "Arabic numeric system" is an excellent example.

    One would think, after all these years, there would be more clarity on this issue.

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  25. Islam (the religion) did not invent by mhollis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have read a lot of history about the Islamic empire that stretched from India to Iberia. This is largely an extension of my desire to understand Spanish history.

    To say that Islam created these wonders is to ignore what was actually happening in the society that was the Islamic empire. The empire was tolerant of all religions and beliefs, including people "not of the book," which would include persons that were not Jews and Christians. This empire preached tolerance and benefitted from having non-believers because the government taxed non-believers more (which may have influenced the less-firm in their beliefs to convert).

    The end result was a polycultural society that valued innovation, high art and wonderful architecture. And I would argue that it's not the dominant religion that was responsible but the society.

    If you look at the last century, you'll see lots of Nobel Prize winners in the sciences coming from America (that would be The Great Satan to many Islamic societies -- especially Iran). Could it be that a polycultural society with vast natural resources is what helps in the creation of these innovations?

    I look at these monocultural and intolerant societies as non-creators of advancements. For examples, one merely needs to look at Afghanistan under the Taliban, Iran and China under the Cultural Revolution.

    I agree that it is important to look to history and appreciate those innovations and inventions that came before but to suggest that a religion created these is to ignore what really happened.

    I should note that, when Iberia turned monocultural and intolerent under the Kings of Castile and Aragon, they created and innovated such wonderous examples as the Spanish Inquisition, the expulsion and forced conversion (and further persecution) of Jews and the encomienda system of tributory labor that was used to enslave and destroy Native American nations and civilizations. [sarcasm]It's a shame these innovations happened so long ago; they surely would have been awarded Nobel prizes for them.[/sarcasm]

    I do not wish to detract from the religion that is Islam. I know a great number of practicing muslims and they are good people with whom I have very good friendships. I believe that people should get along with their neighbors and appreciate them more by striving to understand them. But the article seems to gloss over the fact that the culture probably begat the advancements rather than the religion.

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  26. Re:But... by enjerth · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Your faith (Islam) claims foundation upon the faith of Abraham. Islam, as a recognized religion, does not preceed Christianity and Judaism, which both make the same claim. But Islam does claim that it's progression is even from Judaism and Christianity, and that Judaism and Christianity (as a general rule) have fallen away. Right? Therefore, in the era when Islam considered Judaism as pure, it would be equally correct to claim that Adam and Eve were Jewish? And when Christianity was considered pure, it would also be correct to claim that Adam and Eve were Christians? Therefore, Adam & Eve were just as jewish and christian as they were muslim.

    That was only one critical aspect of my post. The other critical aspect is that it's dishonest to credit something prior to it's appearance in history. Islam does not appear in history prior to Muhammad.

    The Quran commends those "people of the book" (christians and jews) who do not stray from the purity of monotheism or something to that effect, right? Would you also say that those faithful "people of the book" are truly muslims? You'd have to, if you wish to claim that Adam, Even, Abraham and Jesus were muslim. To include one for reason of faithfulness and exclude another despite faithfulness is dishonest.

    That's the jist of it.

  27. Re:Christian definition of Jewish Messiah by burndive · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "The Jewish Messiah is just a mortal man and not divine."

    The issue in question is not whether the Jews think that their Messiah is divine. We are talking about your statement, "By Christians' definitions, Jesus _cannot_ be the Jewish messiah." We are therefore using Christian definitions both for the Jewish Messiah and the Christian Christ.

    You have argued that becuase Jews don't believe that their Messiah is God-become-man (i.e., he is no less God for becoming human, and no less human for being God--as Christians believe) that this makes the Christian belief internally inconsistent. However, Christians do not arrive at their idea of a Jewish Messiah from the Talmud, or any other account of Jewish beliefs, apart from the Scriptures contained in the Old and New Testaments.

    The idea of Christ in Christian theology is a superset of the idea of Messiah _in Christian theology_. Jewish theology did not anticipate that the Messiah would also be God himself in human form. This is not to say that the evidence is not there in the scriptures: upon reading the Scriptures, a Christian concludes that Jewish theology _should have_ anticipated (or at least allowed for) a divine Messiah, but did not.

    You quoted an expert who stated, "The Talmud nowhere indicates a belief in a superhuman Deliverer as the Messiah." That is a statement about what the Jews believe, not the Christians. Even then, it does not approach your assertion that "The Jewish Messiah is just a mortal man and not divine." Your quoted expert provided us no information useful to answer the question, "Is the Messiah divine?"--except to say that the Talmud is not the place to look. If "the Talmud nowhere indicates a belif in a superhuman Deliverer as Messiah," then we learn nothing from the Talmud about the divinity of the Messiah, we only gain information about the authors of the Talmud.

    If what you're saying is that the Christian's idea of Christ is inconsistent with the Jew's idea of Messiah, then, depending on which Christians and Jews you ask, you might be right, but this would not, as you try to do, prove that Messiah Jesus is an oxymoron.

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