But there were still significant Islamic achievements in science after The Incoherence of the Philosophers was published- e.g. Ibn Zuhr’s experimental scientific surgery, Ibn al-Nafis’s discovery of pulmonary circulation, etc. And The Incoherence of the Philosophers probably didn’t have much of an impact, at least immediately, on Islamic science- Al-Ghazali only critiqued Avicenna’s philosophy, while expressing support for science.
I think a more persuasive reason for the decline of Islamic science is the repeated invasions by outsiders (Crusaders, Mongols, Beduins, and the Reconquista, plus the Black Plague), which pretty much ended the golden age of Islamic civilization. But today, as I said earlier, there are no powerful yet unknown barbarian hordes around today.
(Though yes, I agree wrt Black Swans like the Black Plague.)
But there were still significant Islamic achievements in science after The Incoherence of the Philosophers was published- e.g. Ibn Zuhr’s experimental scientific surgery, Ibn al-Nafis’s discovery of pulmonary circulation, etc. And The Incoherence of the Philosophers probably didn’t have much of an impact, at least immediately, on Islamic science- Al-Ghazali only critiqued Avicenna’s philosophy, while expressing support for science.
I think a more persuasive reason for the decline of Islamic science is the repeated invasions by outsiders (Crusaders, Mongols, Beduins, and the Reconquista, plus the Black Plague), which pretty much ended the golden age of Islamic civilization. But today, as I said earlier, there are no powerful yet unknown barbarian hordes around today.
(Though yes, I agree wrt Black Swans like the Black Plague.)