MATTER and SPIRIT IN NURETTIN TOPCU’S
IDEALISM
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Abstract (2. Language):
Idealism, material and soul are three concepts on the focus of
discussions in the history of thought. It is difficult to maintain a discussion in
the history of philosophy by leaving out either the material or the soul in
particular. When we talk about philosophers, we categorize them as
materialists or spiritualists from time to time. This categorization contains a
reference to the philosopher’s ontology and epistemology.
Idealism in its general sense is the attitude of holding the mind’s
design, ideas and ideals right against the material, coarse reality and of
attributing them a major role and position within the spectrum of human
values. Philosophically, it is a doctrine which is right opposite to skepticism,
positivism and atheism, which prioritizes human reality or spirituality,
which claims that the world or reality essentially exists as a spirit, and that
abstraction and laws are more fundamental realities than sensory things and
which is against materialism more than realism.
Sent abroad as a researcher in the first years of the republic, Nurettin
Topçu wrote a dissertation titled Conformisme et Révolte (Conformity and
Revolt) as part of his doctorate studies in the field of philosophy in Sorbonne.
This was translated into Turkish titled Ethics of Revolt. He grasped the notion
of revolt in a paradoxical way throughout his forty‐five‐year literary life from
this book, which was his first work, until the last line of his last writing. Revolt
is one of the basic concepts of his philosophy; since he also possessed a
philosophy of will peculiar to himself, the will that he had was “a will of
revolt”.
In his thoughts, Nurettin Topcu also allocated a special place for the
concept of motion which cannot be considered independently of revolt and defined his philosophy as “a philosophy of motion”. Topcu is a proponent of
motion, with his background capitalizing on M. Blondel’s sentence: “Motion
is a combination of God and human.” This sentence underlies the
comprehension of Ethics of Revolt.
Nurettin Topcu is an idealist thinker with his thoughts and actions.
According to Topcu, idealism always attains victory at the hands of a real
idealist and the thing that is most abhorred by idealism is economy; a great
idealist is the one that has turned sacrifice into ecstasy and worship. In his
opinion, an ideal is a motion of soul and requires soul energy which will
become love in the end; the opposite of this idea, on the other hand, is enmity
against all values revealed by the soul, which is enmity against ideals.
According to Topcu, idealism is not sufficing with a reality that is in
contact with finite and limited existence but it is aiming at eternity after
extending to many realities within the framework of plans put on top of each
other. According to Topcu, although religion is entirely such an ideal system,
so‐called man of religion reduced it to a narrowest and sterile realism and
this deficient realism is struggling with contradictions. Indeed, the feeling of
reality is cooperation of our intellect with our capabilities of vision, hearing,
smell, taste, and touch.
We see such an example of realism in Antique Greek for the first time;
born of the love for nature, attaining the secrets of natural forces, juxtaposing
the human’s capabilities and forces with the nature, the Greek civilization
eventually raised humanity up to the final step of progress in the world of
spiritual values and to metaphysics and morality. Having its inception largely
in realism, the Greek philosophy was given by Christianity a soul‐oriented
idealism in the following stage. The western thought was shaped by this
idealism until the eighteenth century. Topcu thinks that the idealism in Islam
developed within the meaning of verses descending during the years when
the Prophet Muhammad lived in Mecca prior to the hegira (emigration), that
a thriving realism born with a desire to become a perfect man of the earth in
line with the practical requirements of life stopped the spirit of life from
motion in later centuries and subjected it to interests and accomplishments
and that the demise of the Islamic world within itself occurred as a result of
this realism. Thus, the love felt towards the human was gradually replaced
by the love for things. In Topcu’s opinion, such admiration for things
coarsens the human and the human being a slave to things causes a situation
that is even more coarse and primitive than a human being a slave to another human. Being a slave to a human reveals an oppressed and suffering but a
tender human soul and life of morality.
It is necessary to correctly understand what Topcu understands from
material and soul in order to accurately analyze the idea of Anatolianism in
Topcu, his conceptualization of a nation and nationality, his terminology of
politics that we will incorporate into the notions of socialism and
authoritarian administration, his interpretation/criticism of religiousness
and educational system. Topcu is against all reflections of materialism in all
areas of life. In particular, he vehemently criticized conceptualization of
religion in separation from the soul and as a form of belief consisting only of
formality and saw this as a positivist approach. It is necessary to repeatedly
think about this interpretation of Topcu today, as well. Indeed, religiousness
and positivism are not concepts that can coexist. However, as pointed out by
Topcu, if it is attempted to understand religion only with rituals and
formality, this will not go beyond a positivist approach since it will eventually
be positivistic to move from the objective and factual reality of worship.
His emphasis on the unity of material and soul in spite of his view of
the soul before the matter reveals that he categorically has a dualist
understanding. Objecting to materialism in his system of thoughts in general,
Topcu is not an immaterialist in the sense of a Berkeleyist. We think that this
understanding appears to have formed the general framework of Topcu’s
ideas.
Having reflected his ideas onto all areas of his life, Topcu is a person
who should be repeatedly dealt with as an actionist thinker, a philosopher of
ethics full of a will of revolt, a defender of an educational system that focuses
on the soul.
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Abstract (Original Language):
İdealizm, madde ve ruh düşünce tarihindeki tartışmaların odağında yer alan
kavramlardır. Özellikle madde ve ruhtan birini dışarıda tutarak felsefe tarihini
anlayabilme imkânımız yoktur. Filozoflardan bahsederken, zaman zaman onları
materyalist ya da spiritualist şeklinde kategorize ederiz. Bu kategorizasyon,
filozofun düşünce sistematiğini, varlık tasavvurunu ve problemlere bakışını
yansıtır. Nurettin Topçu’nun varlık, din, sanat, millet ve siyaset konusundaki
görüşlerini dikkate aldığımızda onun fikir örgüsünü oluşturan kavramların
bütününde ruhçu söylemin içkinliği karşımıza çıkar. Ruhçu bir idealizm
savunusu yapan Topçu, ele aldığı meseleleri bir felsefeci/filozof kimliği ile analiz
edip kritik etmektedir. Düşüncesindeki ruhçu içkinliğe rağmen o, immateryalist
bir düşünür de değildir; maddenin varlığı ile ruhun gerçekliğini bir arada
düşündüğünden dolayı onu düalist olarak da görmek mümkündür. Bütün bunları
göz önünde bulundurarak konuyu ele alıp tartışmaya çalıştık.
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