THE sleep has been long and deep. In 2005 Harvard University produced
more scientific papers than 17 Arabic-speaking countries combined. The
world’s 1.6 billion Muslims have produced only two Nobel laureates in
chemistry and physics. Both moved to the West: the only living one, the
chemist Ahmed Hassan Zewail, is at the California Institute of
Technology. By contrast Jews, outnumbered 100 to one by Muslims, have
won 79. The 57 countries in the Organisation of the Islamic Conference
spend a puny 0.81% of GDP on research and development, about a third of
the world average. America, which has the world’s biggest science
budget, spends 2.9%; Israel lavishes 4.4%.
Many blame Islam’s supposed innate hostility to science. Some
universities seem keener on prayer than study. Quaid-i-Azam University
in Islamabad, for example, has three mosques on campus, with a fourth
planned, but no bookshop. Rote learning rather than critical thinking is
the hallmark of higher education in many countries. The Saudi
government supports books for Islamic schools such as “The
Unchallengeable Miracles of the Qur’an: The Facts That Can’t Be Denied
By Science” suggesting an inherent conflict between belief and reason.
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