¶ … cultural advances made Islamic world tenth fifteenth centuries? Reference Book: A History World Societies, Eighth Edition, Vol1 by: McKay, Hill, Buckler, Ebrey, Beck, Crowston, & Wiesner-Hanks
The apogee of the Islamic world when considering cultural and scientific innovations took place between the tenth and fifteenth centuries A.D. Islamic art flourished during this period, as Muslims started to experience significant progress in creating artwork using ceramics, glass, and metals. Similarly, the intellectual segment experienced great developments as individuals started to write more and more manuscripts and as calligraphy progressed. In spite of the fact that philosophy was a field that Muslims were generally reluctant to address because it was believed to be accountable for inducing unorthodox thinking in individuals, many Muslims did not hesitate to express philosophical thought and were actually very successful in doing so.
A great deal of Muslims focused on philosophical thought expressed during Antiquity and adapted it to more modern Islamic thinking with the purpose of improving conditions in their societies. Their enterprise made it possible for the Muslim community to be consolidated and for Muslims to generally gain a better understanding of how society works. This era is remembered for having produced some of the most notable Islamic thinkers and for having assisted Islam in improving the theories that it put across.
The Muslim world became one of the leading centers of trade, knowledge, and affluence during the time-period spanning from the tenth to the fifteenth century. In addition to this, many individuals believe that Islamic thought is responsible for having caused a great deal of reforms throughout Europe, considering that European philosophy is largely based on Muslim thinking expressed during the era. One of the most intriguing concepts about Islamic thought during the time period was that Muslims were not the only ones who thrived as a result of exploiting the state's intellectual and material riches. Virtually any individual who interacted with Islamic thinking and trading during this era could take advantage of the situation and could experience intellectual and material progress as a consequence.
It is only safe to assume that a significant sector of the culture present in the contemporary society is owed to the progress experienced by the Islamic world during the 10th-15th centuries time-period. The fact that the Empire spread throughout the era made it possible for cultural values belonging to a diverse range of societies to enter the Islamic society and to influence thinking throughout it. The fact that Muslims did not hesitate to accept foreign influences also played a major role in their success, as they managed to filter positive information and eventually ended up constructing a society that was rich both from a cultural and from a material point-of-view.
In spite of the fact that Muslims experienced progress in culture and science, they did not express much interest in technology and this made it difficult for them to fight countries that were technologically advanced. Even though Europeans were less successful when considering their cultural and scientific advances, their technological and military progress was impressive. This is one of the principal motives for which the Muslim world experienced significant resistance when it tried to spread its influence on the European continent.
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