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Jenova's Witness
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He probably meant that you were looking at the result and inferring causes from it: you were talking about Islamic history as if all the things that happened over the generations were put into place so that a certain goal would be reached. He was saying that you were looking at things with too much hindsight and this hindsight was influencing your interpretation too much. Hindsight can be a dangerous enemy when you're looking at the past.When I mentioned this idea to an academic, they called it teleology and then tuned me out. I can't quite figure out what the hell that means; wikipedia isn't helping. There isn't a single sentence which clearly states what teleology is in the entire article. Apparently none of the English majors don't hang out with Philosophy majors, at least not with the ones who edit wikipedia.
Sounds like a questionable theory of Rome's decline to me, but I'll answer your question about where all the classically educated people went: a few of them fled to Byzantium, but most just died of old age and no-one replaced them.Why was Europe such a mess? I heard an argument that Rome declined in three phases: first when it degenerated from republic to empire, again when Christianity became the norm for the ruling class, and lastly when East and West split in two. The guy who made this argument said that the newly powerful Christians drove the pagans out and, in doing so, deprived their nation of it's classically educated classes. So where did these people go? Many of them were killed, but he guessed that they went east to Byzantium and to the (I'm not gonna try to spell what he said) rival empire in what's now Iran.