You are twisting my words. I am suggesting that Islam as a religion is not a primary motivating factor for success in the search for knowledge. In support of this I would point to the fact that Islamic scholars are most certainly not at the forefront of expanding our knowledge today. They seem to have enjoyed a heyday of learning some centuries ago, then kind of tailed off. Perhaps them conquering places where people happened to know more than average was a factor?
Forgive my ignorance then because when you said "Islamic scholars deserve little to no credit" I presumed that you meant a polite version of "Islamic scholars deserve no credit". Where did I twist your words?
All I am suggesting is that perhaps the peoples responsible for the credit should get it. And that perhaps there are other factors that should be assessed when implying that people who make discoveries/ perform scientific research shouldn't be credited simply because they are a part of a religion which you disagree with.
Your argument was "so what if they contributed to science if the whole religion is bad news?" (A gross oversimplifying again I'll admit but still) predicated on the pretense that you believe that people were giving Islam special treatment.
My argument is, perhaps the people who were giving Islamic scholars special treatment were, in fact, giving them equal treatment to every other religious order?!
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