What branches of Western learning are considered most important to the writers (Specifically,  Jamal ad-Din al-Afghani)

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What branches of Western learning are considered most important to the writers (Specifically,  Jamal ad-Din al-Afghani)

Background:

Afghani on Science and Islam (1882)

The Europeans have now put their hands on every part of the world.  The English have reached Afghanistan; the French have seized Tunisia.  In reality this usurpation, aggression, and conquest has not come from the French or the English.  Rather it is science that everywhere manifests its greatness and power.  Ignorance had no alternative to prostrating itself humbly before science and acknowledging its submission.

In reality, sovereignty has never left the abode of science.  However, this true ruler, which is science, is continually changing capitals.  Sometimes it has moved from East to West, and other times from West to East.  More than this, if we study the riches of the world we learn that wealth is the result of commerce, industry, and agriculture.  Agriculture is achieved only with agricultural science, botanical chemistry, and geometry.  Industry is produced only with physics, chemistry, mechanics, geometry, and mathematics; and commerce is based on agriculture and industry. 

Thus it is evident that all wealth and riches are the result of science.  There are no riches in the world without science, and there is no wealth in the world other than science.  In sum, the whole world of humanity is an industrial world, meaning that the world is a world of science.  If science were removed from the human sphere, no man would continue to remain in the world.

Sine it is thus, science makes one man have the strength of ten, one hundred, one thousand, and ten thousand persons.  The acquisitions of men for themselves and their governments are proportional to their science.  Thus, every government for its own benefit must strive to lay the foundation of the sciences and to disseminate knowledge.  Just as an individual who has an orchard must, for his own profit, work to level the ground and improve its trees and plants according to the laws of agronomy, just so rulers, for their own benefit, must strive for the dissemination of the sciences.  Just as, if the owner of an orchard neglects to tend it according to the laws of agronomy, the loss will revert to him, if a ruler neglects the dissemination of the sciences among his subjects, the harm will revert to that government.

The strangest thing of all is that our ulema [experts in the Qur’an] these days have divided science into two parts.  One they call Muslim science, and one European science.  Because of this they forbid others to teach some of the useful sciences.  They have not understood that science is that noble thing that has no connection with any nation, and is not distinguished by anything but itself.  Rather, everything that is known is known by science, and every nation that becomes renowned becomes renowned through science.  Men must be related to science, not science to men.

How very strange it is that the Muslims study those sciences that are ascribed to Aristotle with the greatest delight, as if Aristotle were one of the pillars of the Muslims.  However, if the discussion relates to Galileo, Newton, and Kepler, they consider them infidels.  The father and mother of science is proof, and proof is neither Aristotle or Galileo.  The truth is where there is proof, and those who forbid science and knowledge in the belief that they are safeguarding the Islamic religion are really the enemies of the religion.  The Islamic religion is the closest of religions to science and knowledge and there is no incompatibility between science and knowledge and the foundation of the Islamic faith.

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