The Chronicle Review
 
 
June 19, 2011 
Does Islam Stand Against Science?

 
 
By Steve Paulson 
We may think the charged relationship between science and religion is 
mainly  a problem for Christian fundamentalists, but modern science is also 
under 
fire  in the Muslim world. Islamic creationist movements are gaining 
momentum, and  growing numbers of Muslims now look to the Quran itself for 
revelations about  science. 
Science in Muslim societies already lags far behind the scientific  
achievements of the West, but what adds a fair amount of contemporary angst is  
that Islamic civilization was once the unrivaled center of science and  
philosophy. What's more, Islam's "golden age" flourished while Europe was mired 
 in 
the Dark Ages. 
This history raises a troubling question: What caused the decline of 
science  in the Muslim world? 
Now, a small but emerging group of scholars is taking a new look at the  
relationship between Islam and science. Many have personal roots in Muslim or  
Arab cultures. While some are observant Muslims and others are 
nonbelievers,  they share a commitment to speak out—in books, blogs, and public 
lectures—
in  defense of science. If they have a common message, it's the conviction 
that  there's no inherent conflict between Islam and science. 
Last month, nearly a dozen scholars gathered at a symposium on Islam and  
science at the University of Cambridge, sponsored by the Templeton-Cambridge  
Journalism Programme in Science & Religion. They discussed a wide range of  
topics: the science-religion dialogue in the Muslim world, the golden age 
of  Islam, comparisons between Islamic and Christian theology, and current 
threats  to science. The Muslim scholars there also spoke of a personal 
responsibility to  foster a culture of science. 
One was Rana Dajani, a molecular biologist at Hashemite University, in  
Jordan. She received her undergraduate and master's degrees in Jordan, then 
took  time off to raise four children before going to the University of Iowa on 
a  Fulbright grant to earn her Ph.D. Now back in Jordan, she is an 
outspoken  advocate of evolution and modern science. She has also set up a 
network 
for  mentoring women, and she recently started a read-aloud program for young 
 children at mosques around Jordan. 
As if that weren't enough, Dajani helped organize a committee to study the  
ethics of stem-cell research, bringing together Jordanian scientists,  
physicians, and Islamic scholars. (The traditional Muslim belief is that the  
spirit does not enter the body until 40 days after conception, which means 
many  human embryonic stem cells can be harvested for research.) 
"Being a Muslim, living in a Muslim world, Islam plays a big role in our  
everyday lives," she says. "We need to understand the relationship between 
Islam  and science in order to live in harmony without any contradictions." 
For these scholars, the relationship between science and Islam is not a 
dry,  academic subject. Many of the hottest topics in science—from the origins 
of the  universe and the evolution of humans to the mind/brain problem—
challenge  traditional Muslims beliefs about the world. 
"Remember, these are human issues," says Nidhal Guessoum, an Algerian-born  
astrophysicist at the American University of Sharjah, in the United Arab  
Emirates, who was also at the Cambridge symposium. "It's not an experiment in 
 the lab. I'm talking about my students, my family members, the media 
discourse  that I hear every day on TV, the sermons I hear in the mosque every 
Friday." 
With his blend of charisma and keen sense of how to navigate the tricky  
terrain between modern science and Muslim faith, Guessoum is emerging as one 
of  the key figures in public debates about Islam and science. He has a new 
book,  Islam's Quantum Question: Reconciling Muslim Tradition and Modern  
Science (I.B. Tauris), and this month his university will host an  
international conference called "Belief in Dialogue: Science, Culture and  
Modernity." 
This new breed of scholar also shares a sense of urgency, which is partly a 
 matter of demographics. Sixty percent of the world's 1.6 billion Muslims 
are  under the age of 30, and there's a major push to educate the next 
generation.  It's certainly a welcome development, but the stakes have never 
been 
higher.  Religion looms over all of Muslim life, so there could be 
devastating  consequences for the future of science if certain fields of study 
come 
to be  seen as antireligious. 
"If evolution gets associated with atheism, you could alienate an entire  
generation of Muslims," says Salman Hameed, a native of Pakistan who directs 
the  new Center for the Study of Science in Muslim Societies, at Hampshire 
College.  Another key player in the Islam-science dialogue (who was not at 
the Cambridge  symposium), Hameed runs the science-and-religion blog_ Irtiqa_ 
(http://sciencereligionnews.blogspot.com/) . He believes that  the popular 
narrative about science and religion is now being formulated in the  Muslim 
world, and that the verdict could be rendered within the next 15 to 20  
years. 
Darwinism has already proved controversial. A prominent British imam in 
East  London received death threats this year after delivering a lecture at his 
mosque  about evolution. His offense? Saying there's no conflict between 
Darwinian  theory and Islam. In the uproar that followed, Usama Hasan, a 
senior lecturer in  business-information systems at Middlesex University and a 
fellow of the Royal  Astronomical Society, retracted his comments but also 
criticized Islamic  extremists; he later resigned from Middlesex. 
The furor over Hasan's comments reflects not just an argument over science  
but also the tensions within Muslim immigrant communities in the West. And 
for  scholars who study this subject, it's a lesson in how attacks on 
science may not  really be about science at all, but about the larger conflict 
between modernity  and a conservative brand of Islam. 
***** 
Islam has a long and tangled history with science, but there's one point 
that  nearly everyone acknowledges: Science in the Muslim world is now in a 
sorry  state. "It's dismal," says Taner Edis, a Turkish-American physicist at 
Truman  State University, in Missouri. "Right now, if all Muslim scientists 
working in  basic science vanished from the face of the earth, the rest of 
the scientific  community would barely notice." 
Guessoum agrees: "It's abysmal by all kinds of measures: how many books and 
 publications are written or translated in the Muslim world; how many 
patents  come from Muslim inventors; how Muslim students are performing in the  
international arena." 
Data collected by the World Bank and Unesco confirm this bleak assessment. 
A  study of 20 member states of the Organization of the Islamic Conference 
found  that these countries spent 0.34 percent of their gross domestic 
product on  scientific research from 1996 to 2003, which was just one-seventh 
of 
the global  average. 
Those Muslim countries have fewer than 10 scientists, engineers, and  
technicians for every 1,000 people, compared with the world average of 40, and  
140 for the developed world. And they contribute only about 1 percent of the  
world's published scientific papers. Another study of OIC nations found 
that  scientists in 17 Arabic-speaking countries produced a total of 13,444 
scientific  publications in 2005, which was 2,000 fewer than what just Harvard 
University  produced. 
Just where religion figures into this scientific black hole is a 
complicated  question, though anti-science pronouncements by Islamic clerics 
certainly 
 haven't helped. But even conservative Muslims recognize the problem. "If 
you're  a Muslim and you're worried about the military weakness of Muslim 
countries  compared to Western imperialistic powers, you're going to see that 
today's  warfare depends a lot on high-tech developments," says Edis, of 
Truman State.  Muslims envious of the juggernaut of Western capitalism also 
know 
that  technology and science fuel the modern economy. 
Some of the debates about Islam and science resemble American arguments 
over  science and religion, but there are also specific differences. For one 
thing,  the New Atheist critique of religion is virtually absent in the Muslim 
 world. 
And unlike Catholicism, which takes its cues from the Vatican, there is no  
central church in Islam and thus no "official" position on scientific  
controversies such as evolution or cloning. With no central authority to  
challenge, there has been no Islamic equivalent of the Protestant Reformation,  
which helped undercut the Vatican's authority over all kinds of intellectual  
inquiry, including science. 
Of course, it's risky to make sweeping generalizations about the Muslim  
world. Turkey, after all, is far more secular than Saudi Arabia, and Qatar is  
pouring money into new science institutions, while Somalia is just trying 
to  survive a civil war. 
But Islamic societies have their distinct challenges. There's no clear  
separation between church and state in most Muslim countries, so scientists 
lack  the autonomy that they enjoy in the West. Muslim scientists must 
frequently  contend with the scientific pronouncements of religious leaders, 
and in  
university classrooms, biology and physics professors often find themselves 
 responding to questions about specific Quranic verses that refer to the 
natural  world. 
Despite this minefield, few Muslims regard science itself as dangerous.  
"There's almost a consensus across the board that science is a good thing," 
says  Ahmad Dallal, a historian who left Georgetown University two years ago 
to return  to his native Lebanon, where he is now provost of the American 
University of  Beirut. 
If anything, many Muslims may be too eager to find convergences between  
religion and science. In the last few years, thousands of Islamic Web sites 
have  popped up claiming that the Quran proves scientific discoveries like the 
Big  Bang, black holes, and quantum mechanics. This new movement is "the 
entrance  gate to the Quran" for many young, educated Muslims, says Bruno 
Guiderdoni, an  astrophysicist and director of the Observatory of Lyon, in 
France, who converted  to Islam nearly 25 years ago. "They are fascinated by 
science," he says. 
Guiderdoni and Dallal also criticize an intellectual movement that calls 
for  a specifically "Islamic science." This phrase was coined by the 
influential  philosopher Seyyed Hossein Nasr, a native of Iran who teaches 
Islamic 
studies at  George Washington University. His effort to unify science and 
religion harks  back to the philosophers of Islam's golden age, but Nasr also 
dismisses modern  evolutionary theory as both bad science and flawed 
metaphysics. 
The banner for "Islamic science" has also been taken up by the London-based 
 social critic Ziauddin Sardar, though without Nasr's overtly religious 
emphasis.  Western science, Sardar has written, "is inherently destructive, and 
it does  not, and cannot, fulfill the needs of Muslim societies." 
While his critique has gained traction among some Muslim intellectuals, 
it's  widely dismissed by the scholars who embrace modern science. "There is 
nothing  inherently Islamic" about Sardar's model of Islamic science, which is 
based on  what Sardar terms basic Islamic values, Dallal writes in his book 
Islam,  Science, and the Challenge of History (Yale University Press, 
2010). "The  10 values of Sardar's model are completely arbitrary; they derive 
from his own  personal and unhinged understanding of Islam." For Dallal, the 
basic problem  with both Sardar and Nasr is that they use metaphysics to 
trample over science  and history. 
***** 
Many Muslims are especially bothered by evolution. By and large, Islamic  
culture is creationist, judging by a 2008 survey about evolution in six 
Muslim  countries: Egypt, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Pakistan, and 
Turkey. 
On  average, only about 15 percent of the respondents in five of those 
countries  considered evolution to be "true" or "probably true." In the sixth 
country,  Kazakhstan, roughly one-third of the respondents accepted evolution, 
but an  equal number also said they had "never thought about it." 
In some Muslim countries, evolution simply doesn't appear in science  
textbooks. "Evolution isn't on the top list of priorities," Dajani, of 
Hashemite  
University, says. "When people are thinking about what they're going to eat 
 tomorrow, evolution is a luxury." 
This rejection of evolution has a lot in common with American creationism,  
but there are also key differences. Young Earth Creationism, which claims 
that  the earth is 10,000 years old (or younger), is virtually absent in the 
Islamic  world. Muslims generally accept the earth's being 4.5 billion years 
old. 
The Quran does not have a detailed origins story like the six days of  
creation found in Genesis, so there's no need to fit the entire history of the  
earth into a few thousand years. Noah's flood is considered the major 
geological  event in world history by American creationists; in contrast, most 
Muslims  regard that flood as a local event. Many Muslims don't even have a 
problem with  the evolution of plants and animals. Human evolution, however, is 
an entirely  different story. According to the Quran, God created Adam out 
of clay, so the  idea that humans descended from apes is simply beyond the 
pale for the vast  majority of Muslims. 
The strongest creationist movement has emerged in Turkey, even though  
evolution has been taught in high schools for decades—a legacy of Atatürk's  
campaign to secularize Turkey's public culture. Harun Yahya (the pen name of  
Adnan Oktar) has built a sophisticated media empire that distributes 
creationist  books, articles, videos and Web sites around the Muslim world. 
Edis, the Truman State physicist who grew up in Turkey, has tracked Harun  
Yahya's group for years, and he's both alarmed and impressed by its reach. 
"When  I walk into an Islamic bookstore in London, it's very easy to find 
Harun Yahya  material because it's right in front of you. I get e-mail from 
people in  Pakistan, Indonesia, and all over the Islamic world pointing out 
that Harun  Yahya material has been used in their classrooms," Edis says. "In 
fact, it's  much more international, much more successful, and has a command 
of a much  larger financial base than any American creationist 
organization." 
Where Yahya's Science Research Foundation gets its money is a mystery, and  
Oktar himself is a shadowy figure who has faced a string of legal problems, 
 including charges of extortion. His diatribes against modern science can 
make  you wonder how he has managed to gain so much influence. When I 
interviewed  Oktar, in Istanbul in 2008, he claimed that the "Masons manage the 
world through  a scientific dictatorship" and called Darwinism "a Satanic plot" 
that nurtures  terrorism around the world, "like the development of 
mosquitoes in mud or in  ponds." 
Harun Yahya seems to tap into the fears and uncertainties of various Muslim 
 communities. But what do educated Muslims think about evolution? That's 
the  question Hampshire College's Hameed is asking in an ambitious three-year 
study  supported by the National Science Foundation. Now halfway through the 
survey,  Hameed is interviewing physicians and medical students in five 
Muslim countries  and three Muslim diasporas in the West. 
He has found that attitudes about evolution vary greatly from country to  
country. For instance, most Pakistani doctors accepted evolution, even human  
evolution. "But in Malaysia, we were really surprised to find a major 
rejection  of not only human evolution but evolution in general," he says. 
Hameed expected to find more acceptance of modern science because Malaysia  
has a sophisticated high-tech industry. He and his colleagues now speculate 
that  Muslims are trying to carve out a cultural niche that's distinct from 
the more  educated Indians and Chinese in Malaysia. "We think the rejection 
of evolution  has become part of their Muslim identity," he says. 
Hameed was also surprised by another finding. One-third of the respondents 
in  Pakistan and Turkey said, "I accept evolution scientifically but reject 
it  religiously." Apparently, even educated Muslims still struggle to 
reconcile  their faith with their knowledge of science. 
For all the hand-wringing over evolution, it's not a taboo subject for  
academic study. The historicity of the Quran itself is "a far more explosive  
topic than evolution," says Hameed. It takes a courageous—or perhaps  foolish—
Muslim scholar to examine the specific historical circumstances in which  
the Quran was written, or to criticize the Prophet Muhammad. 
"For Muslims, this is the word of God," Guessoum says. "The Quran is the  
revelation. It was written down as revealed to Muhammad. This is dogma, so 
it's  harder to claim that everything is open for interpretation." 
***** 
Not surprisingly, the Quran frequently spills over into the professional  
lives of Muslim scientists. Professors who teach in the Middle East may find  
themselves dealing with questions that almost never come up in a science 
class  at a major American university. Dajani, the molecular biologist in 
Jordan, is  often asked about specific Quranic verses when she teaches a course 
on  evolution, and she points to other verses which she interprets as 
supporting  natural selection. She also emphasizes that the Quran is a guide 
for 
how to  live, not a book of science, so certain passages—like the story of 
Adam and  Eve—must be read metaphorically. "Religion plays a big role in our 
lives," says  Dajani, who wears a hijab. "So talking about scripture in the 
classroom is very  normal. We're not a secular state. We talk about religion 
all the time." 
She says the biggest challenge for Arab professors is to get their students 
 to think critically. "I challenge my students to rethink their opinions, 
to  challenge their preconceived opinions, to be in their uncomfortable zone. 
To me,  that's the objective of education." 
Some Muslim scientists also devote a significant amount of their scholarly  
work to questions that concern only the Islamic world. "Science, and 
astronomy  in particular, intervenes on a daily basis in the lives of Muslims," 
says  Guessoum. Determining how and when to pray, what day Ramadan starts, and 
the  beginning of Haj (the pilgrimage to Mecca) are all based on 
astronomical  observations or mathematical calculations. 
For instance, Muslims are expected to face Mecca during their five daily  
prayers, and all mosques are supposed to be oriented toward Mecca. Figuring 
out  the qiblah, the direction of Mecca, was one reason medieval Muslim  
astronomers did such groundbreaking work, as it forced them to develop 
spherical 
 trigonometry and complex mathematics. 
Today the direction of Mecca isn't a big problem for Muslims, unless you're 
 an astronaut spinning around in a spaceship. But working out the precise 
time  for each prayer and for fasting times is more complicated. Take the 
first  prayer, which is supposed to begin when the night turns to dawn, when 
fasting  also starts. Astronomers say this happens when the center of the sun 
is some 18  degrees below the horizon. This wasn't hard to determine when 
the Muslim  population was concentrated in the Middle East, but where does 
that leave the  growing numbers of Muslims now living in Sweden or Canada, 
where the sun may  never set during the summer? 
As Guessoum points out, only half-joking, some Muslims are panicking about  
when to pray and fast. Now, he and other astronomers are proposing a  
science-based method of calculating prayer times. When Guessoum was asked at 
the  
Cambridge symposium if all this wasn't slightly ridiculous—wouldn't his 
time be  better spent on basic research?—he responded by saying 99 percent of 
the Muslims  you ask would say it's more important to study prayer times than 
dark  matter. 
Muslim faith has probably always been bound up with science. In fact, many  
Muslims point to Islam's golden age—which lasted roughly 500 years—as 
proof that  there's no conflict between Islam and science. What started as a 
movement to  translate the scientific and philosophical texts of ancient Greece 
and India led  to a remarkable flowering of science, philosophy, and 
theology. The golden age  emerged in Baghdad in the 8th century, spread to 
Cairo, 
Damascus, and other  Middle Eastern cities, and later flourished in 
Andalusian Spain. 
"If you talk to Muslims today, very often they will bring up history," says 
 Guessoum. "We are fascinated and to some degree obsessed about the history 
of  science. One reason is that most Muslims feel that Islamic civilization 
was not  given its due." This collective chip on the shoulder may be a 
response to what  Dallal calls the Orientalist views of previous generations of 
scholars. In this  older narrative, according to Dallal, the scientific 
advances of the golden age  were credited to outside influences rather than 
Muslim culture itself. 
Then rigid Islamic thinkers took hold, culminating with the 11th-century  
theologian al-Ghazali, whose orthodox views sent science tumbling into a  
downward spiral from which it has never recovered. "But historians of science  
realize this theory makes no sense," says Dallal. "It might sound logical, 
but  the actual historical record shows there's no decline of science. The 
actual  golden age of the sciences in the Muslim world is somewhere in the 
13th and 14th  centuries." 
***** 
By now a new generation of scholars has concluded that the Muslim world did 
 more than simply save and transmit Greek knowledge to the Europeans who 
later  launched the Scientific Revolution. "Whole fields needed to be invented 
from  scratch, such as algebra and the science of optics," says Guessoum. 
"Medicine  and astronomy were also greatly pushed forward." 
Edis, author of An Illusion of Harmony: Science and Religion in  Islam 
(Prometheus Books, 2007), agrees that Muslim thinkers did more than  just 
preserve Greek science, but he calls their work "proto-scientific." 
"It's a mistake to think of this as analogous to modern science," he says.  
"What Muslims were doing back then was still a medieval, prescientific  
intellectual enterprise. They never quite made the breakthrough, the Scientific 
 Revolution, that took place in Europe." Edis believes the Muslim world's  
continuing obsession with its fabled past gets in the way of developing a 
living  scientific culture. 
Why, then, did the Scientific Revolution break out in Europe and not the  
Islamic world? Or, to put it another way, what caused the decline of science 
in  the Muslim world? For the scholars who study Islam and science, it's the 
one  question that often elicits a sigh, then a long pause and a weary 
look, as if to  say, Do I really need to answer that? 
There's no simple answer, though there are myriad explanations: the absence 
 of universities in the Muslim world, the slow adoption of the printing 
press,  the relative poverty of Muslims compared with Europeans, increasing 
deference to  religious leaders, and more recently, the legacy of colonialism 
and the  squelching of democracy. 
Today's scholars don't blame Islam itself for the decline of science, but  
point instead to the culture of authority that pervades all aspects of the  
Muslim world, including science and religion. They suggest that the real 
story  may be less about Islamic decline than about the rise of a newly 
prosperous and  capitalist Europe. As Guessoum says, "Money always plays a role 
in 
science." 
Now, the deeper question may be whether science can ever flourish in Muslim 
 countries without complete independence from religion. Edis, who is an 
atheist,  considers this the defining quality of Europe's Scientific 
Revolution, what  allowed science to develop without constraints. Other 
scholars agree 
that  scientific autonomy is needed, even though an entirely naturalistic  
understanding of the world cuts deeply against the grain of Muslim culture. 
Some scientists who are practicing Muslims have adopted intellectual  
positions similar to those of prominent Christian scientists in the United  
States, such as Francis S. Collins and Kenneth R. Miller. They say science has  
its own rigorous methodology, but they still find intellectual space to 
believe  in revelation and perhaps even miracles. 
The French astrophysicist Guiderdoni, who studies galaxy formation, talks  
about finding meaning and beauty in the world of stars and planets, which he 
 considers a manifestation of God's will. Guessoum jokes about being one of 
the  few Muslims who does not believe in miracles, and he invokes his own 
hero, the  12th-century philosopher Ibn Rushd (who became known in the West 
as Averroës):  "He developed a model of harmony between philosophy and 
religion, which I have  adopted for my own views on science and Islam." 
It's quite possible that the Muslim world will still carve out a scientific 
 domain that is completely separate from religion. "The category of science 
is a  product of modernity," says Hameed. And Muslim religious authorities, 
who for so  long were the most educated people in their communities and 
thus the scientific  authorities as well, are now playing catch-up with a new 
generation of  technocrats and doctors. "That is the tension today as Muslims 
are getting  educated," says Hameed. "They are trying to understand where 
they fit in. What  does it mean to be a Muslim?" 
Steve Paulson is executive producer of Wisconsin Public  Radio's nationally 
syndicated program To the Best of Our Knowledge. He is author  of Atoms and 
Eden: Conversations on Religion and Science,

published last  year by Oxford University Press.

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