Freewill, Predestination and the Fate of the Ottoman Empire

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Thursday, November 12th, 2015

DateTimeLocation
Thursday, November 12, 20154:30PM - 6:00PMExternal Event, Natalie Zemon Davis Conference Room
Sidney Smith Hall 2098
100 St. George Street
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Series

Seminar in Ottoman and Turkish Studies

Description

Although early modern European travelers to the Ottoman Empire often noted its inhabitants’ “fatalism,” to the point of making it an Orientalist stereotype, little has been done to study this fatality as an intellectual phenomenon. In fact, contemporary accounts point to robust debate over fate, freewill, and predestination. What was behind these debates? What issues were at stake? This talk looks at European, Turkish, and Arabic sources from the 17th and 18th centuries and explores the wider significance of freewill in the Ottoman universe–particularly over the concept of political reform–in the hope of shedding light on a milieu that was asking anxious, searching questions about the human condition, the empire, and its ultimate fate.


Speakers

Ethan L. Menchinger


Sponsors

Department of History

Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

Department of Near and Middle Eastern Civilizations


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