Rodrigo Bivar:
. But let us not kid ourselves that the foundation of science is Muslim. It is not. Muslims are but a link in the chain, and a link now long past.
Mr. Rodrigo,
First of all you are talking nonsense because Arabs/Muslims did develope a lot and gave due credit to all those previous sources wherever and whenever they used them.
If you say that Arabs/Muslims’ scientific/intellectual/philosophical contribution was merely “little” and all they did was propagation of Greek, Roman, Persian, Indian and Egyptian science, then why the West bothered to translate Arab/Muslim heritage from Arabic to Latin and then into other West’s languages, instead of translating/utilizing directly from the Greek, Roman, Persian, Indian and Egyptian science? Why West had to even retain Arabic words given by Arabs/Muslim such as Algebra and Algorithm etc. instead of using some other Greek/Indian terms if their science/math was indeed in existence and developed? Did Arabs?Muslims invade Greece and Rome too? Even when they expand their rule to Iran/India did they destroy non-Muslims’ scientific heritage like how Pagans destroy the Original copies of the Bible? Who destroy the Library of Alexandria?
Now, why Avicenna’s (Ibn Sina’s) most famous medical book "Al-Canon was translated from Arabic into European languages and taught in the Western Universities for centuries? And still his principles are being taught in American Medical Universities. Are you telling me that very few biased people like you, aware of true history of Arabs/Muslims/European more than those renowned experts/historians/professors even of the West?
What you are doing is merely making fool out of yourself by uttering nonsense.
Here is a qoute from Catholic Encyclopedia:
Avicenna
"(ABN ALI AL HOSAIN IBN ABDALLAH IBN SINA, called by the Latins AVICENNA).
**Arabian physician and philosopher, born at Kharmaithen, in the province of Bokhara, 980; died at Hamadan, in Northern Persia, 1037. [Note: Avicenna was actually Persian, not Arabian.]
From the autobiographical sketch which has come down to us we learn that he was a very precocious youth; at the age of ten he knew the Koran by heart; before he was sixteen he had mastered what was to be learned of physics, mathematics, logic, and metaphysics; at the age of sixteen he began the study and practice of medicine; and before he had completed his twenty-first year he wrote his famous “Canon” of medical science, which for several centuries, after his time, remained the principal authority in medical schools both in Europe and in Asia.
He served successively several Persian potentates as physician and adviser, travelling with them from place to place, and despite the habits of conviviality for which he was well known, devoted much time to literary labours, as is testified by the hundred volumes which he wrote. Our authority for the foregoing facts is the “Life of Avicenna,”, based on his autobiography, written by his disciple Jorjani (Sorsanus), and published in the early Latin editions of his works."**
Note: The above passage is taken from Online Catholic Encyclopedia:
newadvent.org/cathen/02157a.htm