M Alper Yalcinkaya’s research while affiliated with University of California, San Diego and other places

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Publications (1)


Science as an ally of religion: A Muslim appropriation of 'the conflict thesis'
  • Article

June 2011

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82 Reads

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21 Citations

The British Journal for the History of Science

M Alper Yalcinkaya

John W. Draper's History of the Conflict between Religion and Science (1874) is commonly regarded as the manifesto of the 'conflict thesis'. The superficiality of this thesis has been demonstrated in recent studies, but to read Draper's work only as a text on 'science versus religion' is to miss half of its significance, as it also involved evaluations of individual religions with respect to their attitudes towards science. Due to Draper's favourable remarks on Islam, the Ottoman author Ahmed Midhat translated his work into Turkish, and published it along with his own comments on Draper's arguments. Midhat interpreted Islam using the cues provided by Draper, and portrayed it as the only religion compatible with science. While his Christian readers condemned Draper for his approach to Islam, Midhat transformed the 'conflict thesis' into a proclamation that Islam and science were allies in opposition to Christian encroachment on the Ottoman Empire. This paper analyses Midhat's appropriation of Draper's work and compares it to the reaction of Draper's Christian readers. It discusses the context that made an alliance between Islam and science so desirable for Midhat, and emphasizes the impact of the historico-geographical context on the encounters between and representations of science and religion.

Citations (1)


... For instance, I argue that his discourses on Sufi subjectivity (insān al-kāmil) resonated with state ethics of "industrious, frugal, and obedient" citizens. 94 Whether they were Westernist, Islamist, or Turkist, most late Ottoman and early Republican bureaucrat-cum-intellectuals uniformly perpetuated the image of an ideal society collectively built by moral (seciyeli), hardworking, and cultured individuals equipped with modern knowledge and skills. 95 These nationalist vanguards embodied a conservative "moral elitism," portraying themselves as "moral servants of the nation… who displayed unconditional sacrifice, humility, and selflessness." ...

Reference:

The Portrait of an Alla Franca Shaykh: Sufism, Modernity, and Class in Turkey
Science as an ally of religion: A Muslim appropriation of 'the conflict thesis'
  • Citing Article
  • June 2011

The British Journal for the History of Science