Originally posted by: Electric Amish
Originally posted by: dmw16
I was under the impression that a lot of knowledge that was had by the Romans was lost during this period. Books burned and so forth...no?
There weren't many books around back then and the vast majority of them were the Bible.
amish
That's not quite true.
Towards the latter days of the Roman Empire, vast amounts of documentation were lost as they were not christian enough for the people there. The remainers of the documents were kept by the church, but weren't put to much use in europe until the 12th century.
That said, I don't think we would be farther ahead of where we are now if the fall of the classical age never happened. First off, as Vic said, the "dark ages" only happened in europe. During this time, China and the Middle East actually went through an intellectual boom. China had expanded on the realm of mathematics, created paper, and developed ingenious navigational tools (such as the astrolabe and compass). Middle East inherited much of Greek culture, and greatly developed philosophy and medicine. (On an interesting side note, Islam only became so conservative after the arabs started to prove many facets of the religion wrong, such as finding indications that the solar system was heliocentric.)
Second, from the second century on, the Roman empire bacame stagnant, both politically and intellectually. Had the Empire lived on (in fact, it sorta did as the Byzantine Empire), it would have been an impediment to progress even though they seem more advanced than the proceeding middle age cultures.