One of the UKās leading physicists will urge the countries of the Arab world to address āa general apathy towards science and freedom of thinkingā ā a mood he believes is far too prevalent in the region.
On 7 November, Jim Al-Khalili, professor of physics and public engagement in science at the University of Surrey, will deliver the inaugural Science and Civilisation lecture, launched this year by the Council for Assisting Refugee Academics in celebration of its 80th anniversary and planned as an annual event. The address will offer his āpersonal and historical perspectiveā on āScience, Rationalism and Academic Freedom in the Arab Worldā.
Born in Baghdad to an Iraqi father and an English mother, Professor Al-Khalili was educated in Iraq until 1979. The accession to power of Saddam Hussein spurred his family to move to England when he was 16. Now a high-profile writer and broadcaster, his three-part BBC Four series Science and Islam fed into a 2010 book, Pathfinders: The Golden Age of Arabic Science, which has recently been published in Arabic.
In the medieval āgolden ageā that reached its peak in the 11th to 13th centuries, said Professor Al-Khalili, Arab scientists āreally started to look up and question the world around them. Back then, their faith was telling them, āGod has given you brains, go and understand His wonders and then come and better understand the words in the Koran,ā as opposed to saying: āI donāt need to do any investigation, itās all there, mate, anything worth knowing is already written down.āā
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A better understanding of this history, in Professor Al-Khaliliās view, might help the region to move beyond the idea of science as āaĀ Western construct imposed on the Islamic and Arabic worldā¦They were the top academics in the world a thousand years ago, so letās celebrate the fact that there was a time of freedom of thought and rational thinking, intermingled with their faith but not conflicting with it. Itās something we see the Arab world struggling with these days.ā
Personal experience underpins this historical analysis. Growing up under Iraqās savage but secular Baath regime, Professor Al-Khalili experienced an educational system based on rote learning but not ādriven by any religious ideology. IĀ certainly remember having a discussion with mates about evolutionary theory. They said, āGod made us out of clay and blew life into Adam and Eve,ā so we traipsed off to our biology teacher to adjudicate and he said, āNo, no, evolutionary theory has been proven. Thatās just religious superstition.āā
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Today, however, Professor Al-Khalili sees āa general apathy towards science and freedom of thinking, which really does prevail in broad swathes of the Islamic worldā. He intends to use the lecture to explore āthe climate that needs to change to allow for academic freedomā.
The most obvious effect of this malaise is in the poor quality of research being conducted in the region. He said: āI get to review papers from the Middle East submitted to physics journals. And on the whole, because they donāt have the resources and infrastructure, the quality is not like those from North American or European universities. So what do you do? Do you try to encourage the science by allowing this work to be published? You canāt! There has to be a level playing field and quality threshold for publication in top journals.ā
On a more positive note, Professor Al-Khalili has seen signs in the Arab world of a greater āacknowledgement that something is missing, and that science is more than just a driver for the defence industry or economic prosperityā.
He pointed to developments such as the co-educational King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, built in the desert near Jeddah in Saudi Arabia, where many Western scientists have been parachuted in to teach. However, he added that KAUST was āan isolated bubble within a very conservative societyā¦Itās no good having these institutions for the select few if you donāt engage the wider community.ā
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When it comes to developing trust in science, Professor Al-Khalili said that he puts great faith in science festivals and other forms of public engagement, which are exceptionally well developed in the UK but are only slowly beginning to take off in the Arab world. Initiatives such as a satellite Cheltenham Festival, scheduled to take place in Doha next year, were promising straws in the wind, he argued.
Cara, the charity being supported at the later this month, was set up in 1933 as the Academic Assistance Council to help scholars facing discrimination and violence under the Nazis. It continues to support refugee academics from across the world, including those threatened with murder in Iraq and others forced to flee the continuing violence in Syria, while also trying to build long-term academic capacity in countries where persecution has led to a brain drain.
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