I thought it might be boring, but I didn't expect it to look so good. The narration is very smooth, the picture is very beautiful, and the male coach is out of the sky.
These may be second. It may not be perfect in terms of artistic depth and historical reality, but what really touches people is the characters, the curiosity and exploration of the relationship between oneself and the universe passed down by human beings. How many people Aristotle inspired! Whether Jews, Christians, or Islam, there is a spark of science inspired by him.
Ben Kingsley, the actor of Ibn Shina, may be the most thoughtful actor today. Starting from "The Biography of Gandhi", he has shown us the most noble part of mankind.
This may not be a story for everyone. Perhaps only a few people will empathize with this feeling. It will be annihilated and interrupted, but it will happen again and again from the bottom of my heart without prompting, and it will last for thousands of years.
But we also see the fragility of civilization. Its prosperity is sudden, and its death is also sudden. In the time of Ibn-Shinah, the Islamic world had the most advanced science and civilization in the world, but what will it be like a thousand years later? Does it have anything to do with external forces?
The progress of human civilization as a whole is of course unstoppable, but if we count all civilizations that have appeared, statistically speaking, perhaps the regression of civilization is even more unstoppable. Although it is the destiny, isn't it a matter of personnel?
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