Google does it again: sliding big history lessons into my idle internet surfing.
This week in Jordan, the Google image was of Middle Eastern pharmacist, physician and alchemist, Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi, the preeminent man of science of his time, and beyond. If Guinness doled out world records in Razi’s day, this 9th century Persian would best swimmer Michael Phelps in a stack of “firsts”: but Razi’s events were in the pool of medical research, clinical care and chemistry.
Razi dabbled in alchemy and discovered numerous compounds and chemicals, including kerosene. An early proponent of experimental medicine, he was one of science’s most prolific authors and arguably the most original of all the world’s physicians. The Encyclopedia of Islam said,”Razi remained up to the 17th century the indisputable authority of medicine.”
Educated in music, mathematics, philosophy, and metaphysics, Razi chose medicine as his day job. He differentiated smallpox from measles, and made distinctions between curable and incurable diseases.













Now that the kids are back at school, time to go green and continue the celebrations with this back-to-school tutorial. Parents will need to help with this one.

