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Forgotten your password? Subscriber? Activate now,Office Professional Plus 2007 Product Key! Register now Subscribe now Institutional Subscribers Athens login close Log in Home |Science in Society | Opinion Time to acknowledge science's debt to Islam? 25 February 2009 by Jo Marchant Magazine issue 2696. Subscribe and save For similar stories, visit the Histories and Books and Art Topic Guides WHEN Roman civilisation fell in the early centuries AD, the light of scholarship was extinguished. It was shut to a thousand years before civilisation recovered,Cheap Microsoft Office 2010, thanks to European scholars who rediscovered classical Greek learning and ushered in the new dawn of the Renaissance. At least,Office Standard 2010 Product Key, this is how history is taught. Now two books argue that this view ignores the crucial role of Islamic scholars. In the first part of Science and Islam, a fascinating and clearly written book,Key Office 2010, Ehsan Masood tells how Islam spread rapidly from the 7th century onward, from the west of China to the south of Spain. As Europe slumbered in the Dark Ages, science-friendly caliphs such as al-Mamun, who ruled Baghdad in the 9th century, sponsored the translation of scientific texts from lands they had conquered. Among them were the works of scholars such as 8th-century mathematician Musa al-Khwarizmi,Office Professional Plus Product Key, who popularised the Indian number system ... |
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