İbrahim Özdemir

İbrahim Özdemir (born January 1, 1960), author of The Ethical Dimension of Human Attitude Towards Nature (1997) and co-editor of Globalization, Ethics and Islam (2005), is an environmentalist and professor of philosophy and ecology and religion at Ankara University, Turkey, and Director General of the Department of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of National Education, Turkey.[1]

Early life

Özdemir was born on January 1, 1960 in İslahiye, Gaziantep Province, Turkey. His father, Mustafa, was a farmer and illiterate man. His mother, Ayşe, was a housewife. He grew up in İslahiye and Mardin, where he attended a state boarding school (1974–78).

Education

In 1980 he entered Divinity School of Ankara University, where he studied Islamic Philosophy, Theology, Intellectual History, and graduated in 1985. He started graduate studies at METU (Middle East Technical University), Department of Philosophy, Ankara. He studied for eleven years at METU to complete his studies. He studied with Teo Grünberg, Ahmet İnam, Alparslan Açıkgenç, Yasin Ceylan, Akın Ergüden, and Cemil Akdoğan. During his studies he had to worked as a consultant to the Prime Ministry’s General Directorate of State Archives, (1987-1992).

He received his Ph.D. from METU in 1996. He presented his major paper, “Towards An Understanding Of Environmental Ethic From A Qur’anic Perspective”, to an International Conference on “Islam and Ecology” at Harvard University and later published as a chapter in Islam and Ecology, (Cambridge: Harvard Pres, 2003).

He has traveled widely in the Muslim world and the West. He was visiting professor of Islamic Studies at Hartford University and Hartford Seminary. He lectured with Mary E. Tucker, at a seminar on Religion and Ecology at Gadjah Mada University, Jogyakarta, Indonesia, August 9–16, 2005.

He gives many public lectures and workshops in Turkey, Europe, the United States and other countries. His father died in 1988, and his mother died in 2009. He addresses different audiences about topics related to the philosophy of religion, world religions, environmental philosophy, sustainable development, religion and the environment, interreligious and intercultural dialogue and education.

Ideas

Özdemir is known for his studies in environmental philosophy in general and Islamic environmentalism in particular. After finishing his dissertation, The Ethical Dimension of Human Attitude Towards Nature (1997), he focused on Religion and Ecology. He founded an elective course on Religion and Ecology at Ankara University, which was later accepted by many universities in Turkey. He presented papers on this topic and participated panel discussions and workshops at home and abroad. Discovering and understanding the meaning of biodiversity for a sustainable ecology, he comes to understand and appreciate the full implication of cultural diversity for a sustainable human society. Then, he began to study Rumis’s work, the greatest Muslim poet and Sufi of the 13th century. Rumî’s philosophy and ideas have made a profound impact on his perception of nature. For Rumî, a force—a secret energy—lies beneath the spiritual and material world, informing the invisible, progressive change in the universe (humanity included). This force is love, and it originates in God and moves towards God. The meaning of this understanding is clear for an environmentalist: Everything in the universe is interdependent and interconnected; everything’s well being is dependent on everything else.

In his first major work, The Ethical Dimension of Human Attitude Towards Nature, Özdemir suggested that there is a philosophical and ethical dimension to environmental problems. While the technological, scientific and other relevant dimensions of the problem are acknowledged, the main emphasis is given to the ethical dimension of the issue at hand. In addition, it is also argued that there is a direct and strong relationship between environmental problems and our understanding of nature. In other words, our treatment of and attitude towards natural objects mostly depend on how we understand and conceptualize the natural world as such. One of his major articles “The Development of Environmental Consciousness in Modern Turkey”, was published in Environmentalism in Muslim World, (ed. Richard Foltz, New York: Nova, 2005). He also contributed with three etnries, “The Prophet Muhammad”, “Rumi”, and “Said Nursi” to in Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature, ed. Bron Taylor and Jeffrey Kaplan (New York: Continuum, 2003). His other works mainly were in Turkish and primarily focused on environmental and cultural studies. After working at the Ministry of National Education as Director General, he also interested in education in a comprehensive way and represented the Ministry at International Conferences held by UNESCO, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Council of Europe, European Union, etc.

Özdemir is the founder President of Society for Intercultural Research and Friendship, (1995).

Bibliography

Books

Articles

»“Towards An Understanding Of Environmental Ethic From A Qur’anic Perspective”, ed. Richard Foltz (Harvard University Press, 2003), pp. 1–37.. PDF

»“The Development of Environmental Consciousness in Modern Turkey”, Environmentalism in Muslim World, ed. Richard Foltz, New York: Nova, 2005, pp. 17–36.

»“Science and Environment: Is Science Responsible for the Environmental Crisis?” The Journal of the Environment and Social Sciences, vol.1, no. 1-2, 1996. PDF

»“The Concept of Islamic Tradition in Fazlu Rahman’s Thought”, The American Journal of Social Sciences, vol. 9, no. 2, Summer 1992. PDF

»“Cevre-Ahlak Iliskisi”, (Environment and Ethics). Felsefe Dunyası, Kıs sayı: 14, 1994.

»"Islam Felsefesinin Gunumuzdeki Sorunlari". (The Problems of Contemporary Islamic Philosophy) Gunumuz Din Bilimleri Arastirmalari Sempozyumu. Samsun, 1989.

»"Postmodern Baglamda Bilim Din Iliskisi", (Religion and Science in the Postmodern Context) Kopru, No:53, Kis 1996.

»“Islam and the Environment”, Bridge (a forum on Christian-Muslim Relations), September 1998, New York. PDF

»“Çevre Hukukunun Antropocentik Karakteri” I. Ulusal Çevre Hukuku Kongresine sunulan tebliğ, 23 Kasım 1996, Ankara. PDF

»“Demokratik Eğtimi Üzerine”, (Internalizing Democratic Education), Paper presented to a Panel on Towards A Democratic Education, Nov., 11, 2000, Ankara. PDF

»Doğayı “evimiz” Olarak Algılamak: Neo-Konfüçyüsçülüğün Çevre Etiği Üzerine ODTU 1. Ulusal Uygulamalı Etik Kongresi 12-13 Kasım, 2001 PDF

»A.D. Knysh, Ibn'Arabi in the Later Islamic Tradition, (New York: State University of New York Press, 1999. the Muslim World, 2003.

»Intellectual Traditions in Islam, ed. Farhad Daftary, (London-New York: I.B. Tauris Publishers, 2001. xvii plus 252 pp. Forthcoming, the Muslim World, 2003. PDF

»The Problem of Evil: Ibn Sina's Theodicy, (Binghamton, N.Y.: Global Publications, 2000). ix plus 215 pp. the Muslim World, 2003. PDF

»“The Development of Environmental Consciousness in Modern Turkey”, Environmentalism in Muslim World, ed. Richard Foltz, New York: Nova, 2005. PDF

»"Religious Education in Turkey”, 22 Temmuz-2 Ağustos tarihlerinde ODTU Felsefe Bölümü-Hollanda Eğitim Bakanlığınca, Hollandalı Öğretmenler için Düzenlenen Seminere Sunulan Tebliğ.

»“Osmanlı Toplumunda Çevre Anlayışı” Türkler, edt. H.C. Güzel-K. Çiçek, Ankara: Yeni Turkiye Yayınları, c. 10. PDF

Translations

References

  1. Gabriel Ignatow (2007-07-28). Transnational identity politics and the environment. Lanham: Lexington Books. ISBN 0-7391-2015-8.

See also

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