Science without Leisure Science without Leisure

Science without Leisure

Practical Naturalism in Istanbul, 1660-1732

    • CHF 25.00
    • CHF 25.00

Beschreibung des Verlags

Science in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Istanbul, Harun Küçük argues, was without leisure, a phenomenon spurred by the hyperinflation a century earlier when scientific texts all but disappeared from the college curriculum and inflation reduced the wages of professors to one-tenth of what they were in the sixteenth century. It was during this tumultuous period that philosophy and theory, the more leisurely aspects of naturalism—and the pursuit of “knowledge for knowledge’s sake”—vanished altogether from the city. But rather than put an end to science in Istanbul, this economic crisis was transformative, turning science into a practical matter, into something one learned through apprenticeship and provided as a service. In Science without Leisure, Küçük reveals how Ottoman science, when measured against familiar narratives of the Scientific Revolution, was remarkably far less scholastic and philosophical and far more cosmopolitan and practical. His book explains why as practical naturalists deployed natural knowledge to lucrative ends without regard for scientific theories, science in the Ottoman Empire over the long term ultimately became the domain of physicians, bureaucrats, and engineers rather than of scholars and philosophers.

 

GENRE
Wissenschaft und Natur
ERSCHIENEN
2019
31. Dezember
SPRACHE
EN
Englisch
UMFANG
234
Seiten
VERLAG
University of Pittsburgh Press
GRÖSSE
18.8
 MB