Question
An investigation of medieval European science would reveal which of the following?(1 point)
Responses
that both Christian and Muslim scholars saw the study of nature as “unholy” and therefore forbidden
that both Christian and Muslim scholars saw the study of nature as “unholy” and therefore forbidden
that little scientific progress had been made since the days of the Roman Empire
that little scientific progress had been made since the days of the Roman Empire
that Muslim scholars made crucial contributions to the rebirth of philosophy and science in Europe
that Muslim scholars made crucial contributions to the rebirth of philosophy and science in Europe
that European scholars were far more advanced than their Middle Eastern counterparts
Responses
that both Christian and Muslim scholars saw the study of nature as “unholy” and therefore forbidden
that both Christian and Muslim scholars saw the study of nature as “unholy” and therefore forbidden
that little scientific progress had been made since the days of the Roman Empire
that little scientific progress had been made since the days of the Roman Empire
that Muslim scholars made crucial contributions to the rebirth of philosophy and science in Europe
that Muslim scholars made crucial contributions to the rebirth of philosophy and science in Europe
that European scholars were far more advanced than their Middle Eastern counterparts
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The correct response is:
**that Muslim scholars made crucial contributions to the rebirth of philosophy and science in Europe**
Medieval European science was significantly influenced by the works of Muslim scholars, who preserved and expanded upon ancient texts and made original contributions in various fields such as medicine, mathematics, and astronomy, which later played a crucial role in the European Renaissance.
**that Muslim scholars made crucial contributions to the rebirth of philosophy and science in Europe**
Medieval European science was significantly influenced by the works of Muslim scholars, who preserved and expanded upon ancient texts and made original contributions in various fields such as medicine, mathematics, and astronomy, which later played a crucial role in the European Renaissance.