Islam and the death of invention

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Guy links to, and distills, a list of notable Muslim inventions throughout history. What is telling, I think, is that most of the entries on the list all date back several hundred years:

Astrolabes: 9 inventions. The last one in the 12th century. Not 21, but 12!!!

Analog computers: 8 inventions, last one in the 15 century.

Globes: 3 inventions, last one in the 16 century.

Mural Instruments: 7 inventions, the last one is in the 11 or 12 century.

Other instruments: 6 inventions, the last one in the 11 century.

Aviation: 4 inventions, the last one in the 17 century. Two research projects were in the 20th century. Think about that one: of the tens of thousands of aviation research projects during the 20th century, they participated in only two and neither one is particularly notable.

Camera technology: 2 inventions, both many centuries ago.

Chemistry: 10 inventions, all during the 8 and 9 centuries.

Laboratory apparatus: 9 inventions, the last one in the 12th century.

Chemical industries: 21 inventions, the last one in the 9th century.

Industry: 27 inventions, the last one in the 12th century, except for shampoo in the 18th century.

Civil Engineering: 7 inventions, including one in the 16th century and, holy cow, one actually in the 20th century. We got one! Yes! There really IS an Islamic invention in the 20th century. Where’s the champaign?!

Clock technology: 16 inventions, including one in the 16th century and all the rest before the 12 century ended.

Industrial Milling: 14 inventions, all before the end of the 10th century.

Mechanical Technology: 18 inventions, and only one after the 12 century (it was in the 16 century).

Other Mechanical Devices: about 40, all invented centuries ago.

Medicine: 26 inventions, all centuries ago.

Military: 13 inventions, the last in the 16 century.

Navigation: 10 inventions (including such greats like “Mecca-centered map), the last one in the 17th century.

There are about a dozen other inventions listed, all of which are centuries ago.

may be, as Shaukat Khawja (the blogger at RehmatPedia) assures us, “nothing but nature,”, but evidently that nothingness also applies to genuine intellectual and academic achievement. What technological sophistication seems to exist in predominantly Muslim nations is not the product of years or decades of intense, successful research as much as it is a demonstration of people rather parasitically living off of the academic capital of Western nations.
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Miley vs. Lindsay - compare and contrast

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GetReligion is following an interesting story that compares two teen (or just barely post-teen) superstars and (a.k.a. ) — and the actions of their parents. It is, to say the least, interesting to note what role a firm parent who is willing to draw a line somewhere plays in the lives of the latter of these two young women, and how destructive a parent who is just trying to buddy-up and go along with her daughter’s fame can be in the case of the former.

One cites Bible verses and grounds his daughter when she misbehaves; the other drinks cocktails and goes club-hopping into the wee hours with her celebrity daughter. Says celebrity gossip blogger (aka ): “ actually sets boundaries… is an enabler, a parasite…The Lohans are role models for dysfunction.”

The effect on the kids? Well, make your own judgment — but one of the girls has been in and out of rehab and has an arrest record; the other recited :10-11 on “The Winfrey Show.” Parenting just might be a factor…

Chicago-based coach (childminded.com) says the latter might be easier for Ms. Lohan than the former.

“I think to Dina Lohan, Lindsay is primarily a friend, a playmate,” Ms. Pieters says. “She leans on her kids for emotional support, and in the end, Lindsay and her sister are probably saying, ‘Who’s taking care of me if my mother’s not?’ ” she says, adding, “If she wants to give her children support, she should give them advice and bring them their favorite sandwiches ” not go out for shots at two in the morning.”

On one hand, that this sort of thing is newsworthy speaks volumes about how low our supposedly enlightened post-Christian culture has really sunk. On the other hand, it’s nice to see yet another affirmation that demonstrates just what an effect a Christian approach to parenting can have on the life of a a young woman who, before even reaching the legal drinking age, has already found fame and fortune that most of us can only dream of. Too often has it been the case that such a turn of events has led many a young star, male or female, down the path that Lindsay Lohan is walking.

The guys at GR also note the text of the verses that Miley Cyrus cited to Oprah (concerning being strong in the Lord, and putting faith in on as armour), and wonder if perhaps young Ms. Cyrus wasn’t making a pointed comment about the temptations of life.

Update: It’s been brought to my attention, however, all is not roses. Still, it serves to note that in a certain sense, while Miley’s self-portraits — complete with pulling back her shirt a bit to show off the colour of her bra — aren’t in good taste, and aren’t exactly in keeping with the Christian ideals she has elsewhere articulated, they aren’t exactly the worst we’ve seen coming out of young stars these days. I seem to recall a scandal involving recently that put Miley’s bra flash to shame. And to be fair, she certainly isn’t pregnant like a certain Spears sister of nearly the same age is.

Update Saves Christmas: Welcome, WebElf readers!

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What do you call a woman who had a sex-change operation and then got pregnant?

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A woman.

To the consternation of the Left, biological realities matter more than personal whims, and while I’m sure everyone is all in a flutter* that — who was born a woman and who underwent a sex change to “become” male — is now pregnant, in the end his confirms what most sane people could have deduced from the start: sex changes are bogus.

* Mrs**. Beatie was even featured on .

** As has been established, Mrs. Beatie is a woman, so I refuse to call her ‘Mr.’ despite what she might think her actual is.

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Charity is the new narcissism

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Me generation puts the ‘I’ in charity

may begin at home, but it only counts if there’s an audience. That’s the implied message of what some are calling “competitive compassion,” a trend quickly turning into an exercise in self-congratulation.

Putting the “I” in charity, ’s Causes application allows Canadians to flaunt their benevolence with all the subtlety of a Pride parade, displaying everything from the money they’ve personally raised to the number of friends they’ve recruited for their preferred charity or non-profit.

On TV, and ’s have transformed philanthropy into a game show, with players competing as teams but being judged as individuals in the fight to be the ultimate altruist.

Of the latter show, the writes: “Shallow as a bird bath, the program would appear to exist less as a true philanthropic exercise than yet another self-aggrandizing vehicle in Oprah’s divine quest to become synonymous with all that is virtuous and good on Earth.

Our secular world really has sunk to depths uncharted — turning helping out the needy into a vehicle for self-aggrandizement and preening.

Myself, I tend to prefer this sort of thing.

“So when you give to the needy, do not announce it with trumpets, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets, to be honored by men. I tell you the truth, they have received their reward in full. But when you give to the needy, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, so that your giving may be in secret. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you.

Aren’t you so glad, O Reader, that our post-modern society has shed the last trappings of Christian mythology and mysticism in favour of hard empiricism and the pursuit of the almighty self?

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