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  1. Globalizing ‘science and religion’: examples from the late Ottoman Empire.M. Alper Yalçınkaya - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Science 55 (4):445-458.
    This article brings together insights from efforts to develop a global history of science and recent historical and sociological studies on the relations between science and religion. Using the case of the late Ottoman Empire as an example, it argues that ‘science and religion’ can be seen as a debate that travelled globally in the nineteenth century, generating new conceptualizations of both science and religion in many parts of the world. In their efforts to counter arguments that represented Islam as (...)
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  • An Ottoman response to Darwinism: İsmail Fennî on Islam and evolution.Alper Bilgili - 2015 - British Journal for the History of Science 48 (4):565-582.
    The Scopes trial fuelled discussion in the United States on the social and political implications of Darwinism. For the defenders of the 1925 Tennessee law – which prohibited the teaching of Darwinism in schools – Darwinism was, amongst other things, responsible for the German militarism which eventually led to the First World War. This view was supported by İsmail Fennî, a late Ottoman intellectual, who authored a book immediately after the trial which aimed to debunk scientific materialism. In it, he (...)
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  • Retrospectives: Uses of history of science in the late Ottoman Empire and early republican Turkey.Alper Bilgili - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Science 53 (1):109-117.
    I am a Turkish student of [the] History of Science and have been working on the subject within the last six years for the preparation of a History of Science [book] in Turkish.
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  • “Science,” “Religion,” and “Science‐and‐Religion” in the Late Ottoman Empire.M. Alper Yalçinkaya - 2019 - Zygon 54 (4):1050-1066.
    Many intellectuals wrote texts on the relations between Islam and science in the nineteenth‐century Ottoman Empire. These texts not only addressed the massive social and cultural changes the Empire was going through, but responded to European authors’ claims about the extent to which Islam was compatible with the modern world. Focusing on several texts written in the second half of the nineteenth century by the influential Muslim Ottoman authors Namik Kemal, Ahmed Midhat, and Şemseddin Sami, this article shows the influence (...)
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