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Nature General

Nature as Landscape

Dwelling and Understanding

by (author) Kraft E. Von Maltzahn

Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Initial publish date
Oct 1994
Category
General, Environmental Science
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780773565029
    Publish Date
    Oct 1994
    List Price
    $110.00

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Description

Von Maltzahn focuses on how we experience aspects of nature in terms of their outer appearance, such as landscape, and contends that the naturalistic scientific tradition has taught us to divorce ourselves from the natural world, to become impartial observers rather than participants. He examines the nature of the human life-world and describes the process of self-deception that has led to the contemporary dismissal of that life-world as merely subjective. Drawing on phenomenology, semiotics, visual thinking, gestalt psychology, and Polanyi's arguments about tacit knowing, he offers an alternative way of perceiving the natural world that would reunite humans and nature. Given the current state of the global environment, it is crucial that the debate on the relationship of human beings and nature take place on many levels.

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Editorial Reviews

"Conventional approaches to conservation have not been satisfactory, and works such as von Maltzahn's which raise alternative ways of understanding human relations with nature are critically important." Neil Evernden, Faculty of Environmental Studies, York University.
"An especially strong synthesis of diverse ideas about nature and environment, ideas which have not, to my knowledge, been combined in this way before." Ted Relph, Department of Geography, University of Toronto.

"Conventional approaches to conservation have not been satisfactory, and works such as von Maltzahn's which raise alternative ways of understanding human relations with nature are critically important." Neil Evernden, Faculty of Environmental Studies, York University. "An especially strong synthesis of diverse ideas about nature and environment, ideas which have not, to my knowledge, been combined in this way before." Ted Relph, Department of Geography, University of Toronto.