Top 5 Things for Which We Should be Grateful to Arabic Writing
When a teacher in rural Augusta County, Virginia, decided to expose her students to the Arabic script (a piece of calligraphy writing out the Muslim profession of faith), the backlash from some furious parents so hinted at the violence that county schools had to be closed for a day.
I guess that Script Rage was based on a lack of knowledge of the gifts European and New World cultures received from those who wrote in Arabic or the script. Among them was the great medieval Jewish thinker Maimonides. The prominent Christian theologian Thomas Aquinas was influenced by philosophers writing in Arabic. The fact that Americans are in America has something to do with Christopher Columbus's dependence on the calculations of al-Farghani, who recognized that the earth is spherical.
Here are some gifts of Arabic-language science and creativity for which we might be more grateful.
1. Arabic numerals. These originally come from Sanskrit. The Arabs adapted them and passed them on to Europe. Imagine dividing CLXII by XLIV. The Indians also invented the concept of the zero, but our circular zero comes from the Iranian scholar Muhammed ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi, 780 -850, who wrote in early Abbasid Baghdad.
2. Algebra. Al-Khwarizmi laid the foundations for algebra, and the word algorithm corrupts his name. So, if any children in Augusta County, Virginia, are taught algebra, they will benefit from breakthroughs originally expressed in Arabic script.
3. Muslim scientists were the first to separate pharmacology from medicine and to professionalize the former.
4. Nasir al-Din Tusi invented trigonometry.
5. Muslims invented the modern hospital.