“Science,” “Religion,” and “Science‐and‐Religion” in the Late Ottoman Empire

Zygon 54 (4):1050-1066 (2019)
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Abstract

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 of these exigencies on arguments on Islam and science. In order to represent Islam as a respectable religion in harmony with science, these intellectuals defined a “pure Islam” that was a set of basic principles that could be found in the Qur'an. Rather than an embedded way of life, Islam in these texts was an objectified, delimitable entity that could be imagined as having relations with other entities, such as science.

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The idea of an anthropology of Islam.Talal Asad - 1996 - Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 48:381-406.
Religion, religions, religious.Jonathan Z. Smith - 1998 - In Mark C. Taylor (ed.), Critical Terms for Religious Studies. University of Chicago Press. pp. 269–284.

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