Born to a renown family of Urfa in southeastern Turkey, Celâl Saraç
(1906-1998) studied physics and mathematics at the Faculty of Sciences of
Dijon University. Following his return, in 1933 he was nominated “Dozent”
(associate professor) to Prof. Marcel Fouché in the Department of Physics of
Istanbul University. A decade later he moved to Ankara University and was
appointed professor and head of the Physics Department of the newly founded Faculty of Science. During his tenure in both universities, Celâl Saraç
undertook the translation of numerous physics textbooks from French. These
greatly aided studies in physics in post-war Turkey. From 1962 on he served as
the director of the Physics Department of Ege University’s Faculty of Science in
Izmir, until his retirement in 1973. He also held the chair of the rector of Ege
University between 1963-65.
During his academic life and especially after his retirement, Celâl Saraç
was keenly interested in researching history of science. Saraç’s interest seems to
have been kindled during his undergraduate studies in France, where he
attended courses given by Prof. Gaston Bachelard who taught history and
philosophy of science at the Dijon University in the early 1930s. C.Saraç’s first
publications in the history of science were short articles on European physics in
the 17th-19th centuries. These were published in Istanbul in 1940-41 in the
popular Turkish journal Fen ve Teknik (Science ad Technique). He was also
interested in the history of exact sciences in the medieval Islamic world. Thus,
with his articles and communiques compiled or translated from various sources,
he endeavoured to introduce history of physics to Turkish readership. He was
also a pioneer in introducing history of science into the curriculum of
mathematical sciences in his universities. Unfortunately, his efforts were not
pursued, and at present history of science is being taught exclusively to students
of social sciences in Turkey. The two books he published
İyonya Pozitif Bilimi
(Positive Sciences in Ionia, 1971, 2003) and Bilim Tarihi (History of Science,
1983) are expanded versions of his history of science courses. Prof. Celâl
Saraç’s later studies focused on the works of the Turkish historian of science
and mathematician Salih Zeki (1864-1921), acclaimed for his research on
medieval Islamic mathematicians and astronomers.
Celâl Saraç history of science physics textbooks Istanbul University Ankara University Ege University Gaston Bachelard
Born to a renown family of Urfa in southeastern Turkey, Celâl Saraç (1906-1998) studied physics and mathematics at the Faculty of Sciences of Dijon University. Following his return, in 1933 he was nominated “Dozent” (associate professor) to Prof. Marcel Fouché in the Department of Physics of Istanbul University. A decade later he moved to Ankara University and was appointed professor and head of the Physics Department of the newly founded Faculty of Science. During his tenure in both universities, Celâl Saraç undertook the translation of numerous physics textbooks from French. These greatly aided studies in physics in post-war Turkey. From 1962 on he served as the director of the Physics Department of Ege University’s Faculty of Science in Izmir, until his retirement in 1973. He also held the chair of the rector of Ege University between 1963-65.
During his academic life and especially after his retirement, Celâl Saraç was keenly interested in researching history of science. Saraç’s interest seems to have been kindled during his undergraduate studies in France, where he attended courses given by Prof. Gaston Bachelard who taught history and philosophy of science at the Dijon University in the early 1930s. C.Saraç’s first publications in the history of science were short articles on European physics in the 17th-19th centuries. These were published in Istanbul in 1940-41 in the popular Turkish journal Fen ve Teknik (Science ad Technique). He was also interested in the history of exact sciences in the medieval Islamic world. Thus, with his articles and communiques compiled or translated from various sources, he endeavoured to introduce history of physics to Turkish readership. He was also a pioneer in introducing history of science into the curriculum of mathematical sciences in his universities. Unfortunately, his efforts were not pursued, and at present history of science is being taught exclusively to students of social sciences in Turkey. The two books he published İyonya Pozitif Bilimi (Positive Sciences in Ionia, 1971, 2003) and Bilim Tarihi (History of Science, 1983) are expanded versions of his history of science courses. Prof. Celâl Saraç’s later studies focused on the works of the Turkish historian of science and mathematician Salih Zeki (1864-1921), acclaimed for his research on medieval Islamic mathematicians and astronomers
Celâl Saraç bilim tarihi fizik kitapları İstanbul Universitesi Ankara Üniversitesi Ege Üniversitesi Gaston Bachelard
Primary Language | Turkish |
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Journal Section | Research Articles |
Authors | |
Publication Date | December 1, 2006 |
Published in Issue | Year 2006 Volume: 8 Issue: 1 |