Physical earth and its sciences in Istanbul: a journey from pre-modern (Islamic) to modern times

<p>Researching, compiling and analysing geophysical ideas and measurements in historical periods will contribute to the historical development of earth science. Also, this is important for geophysicists working on time-dependent (historical) data and revealing the physical properties of the ea...

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Main Author: F. Ozcep
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2020-08-01
Series:History of Geo- and Space Sciences
Online Access:https://hgss.copernicus.org/articles/11/173/2020/hgss-11-173-2020.pdf
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spelling doaj-75a0a96e53c54adcaa4e48b1c2d4f7442020-11-25T03:41:11ZengCopernicus PublicationsHistory of Geo- and Space Sciences2190-50102190-50292020-08-011117319810.5194/hgss-11-173-2020Physical earth and its sciences in Istanbul: a journey from pre-modern (Islamic) to modern timesF. Ozcep0F. Ozcep1Department of Geophysical Engineering, İstanbul University-Cerrahpaşa, Istanbul, Turkeyvisiting scholar at: Department of the History of Science, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA<p>Researching, compiling and analysing geophysical ideas and measurements in historical periods will contribute to the historical development of earth science. Also, this is important for geophysicists working on time-dependent (historical) data and revealing the physical properties of the earth. This paper is focused on the earth and its sciences (with concepts, ideas and measurements) in classical Islamic science in the Ottoman Empire and the evolution of these thoughts and concepts in the context of the transition to modern science. The pre-modern period of science in Islamic geographies is represented by Aristotelian science and some original contributions. In the geophysical sciences of the Ottoman Empire, earthquakes and weather events are explained by his views and ideas. Modern concepts and scientific measurements of geophysical events such as magnetic, seismologic and meteorologic events were systematically begun by observatories. Before this, there are some individual measurements.</p>https://hgss.copernicus.org/articles/11/173/2020/hgss-11-173-2020.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
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author F. Ozcep
F. Ozcep
spellingShingle F. Ozcep
F. Ozcep
Physical earth and its sciences in Istanbul: a journey from pre-modern (Islamic) to modern times
History of Geo- and Space Sciences
author_facet F. Ozcep
F. Ozcep
author_sort F. Ozcep
title Physical earth and its sciences in Istanbul: a journey from pre-modern (Islamic) to modern times
title_short Physical earth and its sciences in Istanbul: a journey from pre-modern (Islamic) to modern times
title_full Physical earth and its sciences in Istanbul: a journey from pre-modern (Islamic) to modern times
title_fullStr Physical earth and its sciences in Istanbul: a journey from pre-modern (Islamic) to modern times
title_full_unstemmed Physical earth and its sciences in Istanbul: a journey from pre-modern (Islamic) to modern times
title_sort physical earth and its sciences in istanbul: a journey from pre-modern (islamic) to modern times
publisher Copernicus Publications
series History of Geo- and Space Sciences
issn 2190-5010
2190-5029
publishDate 2020-08-01
description <p>Researching, compiling and analysing geophysical ideas and measurements in historical periods will contribute to the historical development of earth science. Also, this is important for geophysicists working on time-dependent (historical) data and revealing the physical properties of the earth. This paper is focused on the earth and its sciences (with concepts, ideas and measurements) in classical Islamic science in the Ottoman Empire and the evolution of these thoughts and concepts in the context of the transition to modern science. The pre-modern period of science in Islamic geographies is represented by Aristotelian science and some original contributions. In the geophysical sciences of the Ottoman Empire, earthquakes and weather events are explained by his views and ideas. Modern concepts and scientific measurements of geophysical events such as magnetic, seismologic and meteorologic events were systematically begun by observatories. Before this, there are some individual measurements.</p>
url https://hgss.copernicus.org/articles/11/173/2020/hgss-11-173-2020.pdf
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