Did I say it was the only or sole reason?
It was the only reason of any significance you mentioned, what am I supposed to conclude from that?
But indeed the Ottoman Empire is a good example of an Islamic society in the late medieval period that had significant advances in science and technology. But now I'm supposed to explain why their achievements were not on par with the most significant discoveries you can find in all Europe, I'm sure
Of course you are. You claimed the development of the Islamic world was critically stunted by the Mongol and Timurid invasions of 13th and 14th centuries, to the point it was unable to compete with Europe in 17th and 18th centuries and beyond.
Now explain how come an Islamic nation, whose power base was in no small part in affected areas, was able to compete with Europe on
at least equal terms during 15th and 16th centuries, but wasn't able to continue the streak into 17th and 18th centuries and beyond. The assertion it was due to devastation in centuries prior to Ottomans (out) competing Europe for about two hundred years seems rather thin.
Fine: Continuous land empires throughout history have generally not been responsible for the greatest advances in science and technology. Something about the social organization of an empire appears to cause stagnation in the development of new ideas.
Either that or else states that were good in developing new ideas were the ones were also able to build and maintain overseas empires. It's the same thing, just with reversed cause and effect. If I'm correct I can find maritime empires which fell into decay and I'll be able to find states which were advanced before or even without significant maritime empires, whereas if you're correct maritime empires were fine for at least as long as they maintained overseas colonies and only decayed afterwards.
Spain and Portugal are examples of maritime empires who fell into decay and eventually lost their empires.
United Kingdom is an example of a state which was advanced without a maritime empire and actually lost a good proportion of it's colonies at one point, and still surged on to become the worlds' largest empire of all time after that.
Germany/Prussia is an example of a state which was advanced without a maritime empire and never had a significant maritime empire, only a few small colonies of very limited importance. Yet it still became one of the most powerful states in Europe or the world. It still is, even though it lost all of her colonies about a century ago and suffered from two devastating defeats.
This seems to fly in the face of your assertion and support my hypothesis. Will your response again be that one shouldn't test hypothesis of history?
Here's one more, Switzerland is highly advanced, even though it doesn't have a coastline, much less a maritime empire. It's also too small to have a major empire to begin with. It doesn't even have natural resources to speak of. How does your hypothesis explain Switzerland?
The conditions that resulted in Europe being densely populated with smaller states, is, I believe, the most significant distinguishing factor in spurring the development of ideas. But those conditions have their roots in contingencies (e.g. wars, climate, disease) and conditions (e.g. climate, agricultural conditions).
Didn't you say earlier that tribal conflict was devastating to the Middle East? What Europe experienced was little different, especially in Germany, which not only didn't fall behind, it overtook major maritime empires by late 19th century. How come the same thing that allegedly crippled the Islamic world also helped Europe? Can you explain this discrepancy in your claims?
I'm not going to bother with your insistence that history relies on testability, or that the kind of "tests" you suggest are useful. History is the study of the past. We can't do experiments on past events. We can, however, attempt to explain them through examination of the historical record.
Nonsense. Are you familiar with the phrase "
History repeats itself"? Where do you think it originates from, anyway?
History is valuable because we can learn from it. If we can learn from it we can make predictions from it. Without that ability history would be a useless waste of time. Pardon me for having a significantly better opinion about the study of history than you do.
McHrozni