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Elemental Philosophy: Earth, Air, Fire, and Water as Environmental Ideas [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 449 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x25 mm, kaal: 699 g, Total Illustrations: 0
  • Sari: SUNY series in Environmental Philosophy and Ethics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Sep-2010
  • Kirjastus: State University of New York Press
  • ISBN-10: 1438432453
  • ISBN-13: 9781438432458
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 449 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x25 mm, kaal: 699 g, Total Illustrations: 0
  • Sari: SUNY series in Environmental Philosophy and Ethics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Sep-2010
  • Kirjastus: State University of New York Press
  • ISBN-10: 1438432453
  • ISBN-13: 9781438432458
Teised raamatud teemal:
"Bachelard called them "the hormones of the imagination." Hegel observed that, "through the four elements we have the elevation of sensuous ideas into thought." Earth, air, fire, and water are explored as both philosophical ideas and environmental issues associated with their classical and perennial conceptions. David Macauley embarks upon a wide-ranging discussion of their initial appearance in ancient Greek thought as mythic forces or scientific principles to their recent reemergence within contemporary continental philosophy as a means for understanding landscape and language, poetry and place, the body and the body politic. In so doing, he shows the importance of elemental thinking for comprehending and responding to ecological problems. In tracing changing views of the four elements through the history of ideas, Macauley generates a new vocabulary for and a fresh vision of the environment while engaging the elemental world directly with reflections on their various manifestations."--BOOK JACKET.

Bachelard called them "the hormones of the imagination." Hegel observed that, "through the four elements we have the elevation of sensuous ideas into thought." Earth, air, fire, and water are explored as both philosophical ideas and environmental issues associated with their classical and perennial conceptions. David Macauley embarks upon a wide-ranging discussion of their initial appearance in ancient Greek thought as mythic forces or scientific principles to their recent reemergence within contemporary continental philosophy as a means for understanding landscape and language, poetry and place, the body and the body politic. In so doing, he shows the importance of elemental thinking for comprehending and responding to ecological problems. In tracing changing views of the four elements through the history of ideas, Macauley generates a new vocabulary for and a fresh vision of the environment while engaging the elemental world directly with reflections on their various manifestations.

Arvustused

"...David Macauley tries to combat our overly simplistic view of nature by recovering a nuanced understanding of the four elements: earth, air, fire, and water a thoughtful, serious, and engaging work." Environmental Ethics

"Macauley's immense book Elemental Philosophy, is an homage to a different and seemingly unfamiliar sensibility in which earth, air, fire and water animate human thought and action. It is, at times, a beautiful, informative and transformative meditation on how to interpret and live with the natural world Macauley lovingly infuses the text with elements beyond and between the four, and provides readers with an opportunity to look anew at the connections among the elements themselves and our own lives intertwined with them. These interstices are gems." Essays in Philosophy

"Macauley enriches his text by including passages from appropriate poems [ and] demonstrates a thorough knowledge of ancient philosophy." Philosophy in Review

"Stimulating and provocative An inspiring addition to the book is a series of 'interstices'shorter meditations on various manifestations of the elements, like stone, wood, ice, and cloud, among others." CHOICE

"Freighted with erudition yet buoyant with spirited wordplay, Macauley's intellectual history of the four elements is a delightful tour de force of environmental philosophy." Seven Pillars House of Wisdom

"The book is a multidisciplinary achievement which attests to the author's thorough acquaintance with, inter alia, ancient Greek cosmology, contemporary environmental philosophy, and literary and artistic traditions." Environmental Values

"a very serious book of philosophy. It's also wonderfully comprehensive, impressively resourceful and superbly imaginativeyet down-to-earthin bringing the loftiest philosophical thoughts about earth, air, fire, and water together with the excrement, breezes, stoves, and water fountains we live with." Carlin Romano, Chronicle of Higher Education

"A stunning piece of grounded philosophy. A perception-changing book that begins with elemental things and grows into a profound meditation on humans in nature." David W. Orr, author of Down to the Wire: Confronting Climate Collapse

"One might suppose, in these days of quarks and black holes, that ancient Greek reflections on the elements of their landscapefire, air, earth, and waterwere too elementary to be worth recalling. Not so. David Macauley demonstrates their surprising relevance. Earth, air, watereven fire (energy, global warming)are still central to the world agenda: sustaining life in a millennium of ecological crisis. From that day to this, wise philosophers keep their thoughts in touch with the sensuous, elemental Earth." Holmes Rolston III, author of Environmental Ethics: Duties to and Values in the Natural World

"With his voluminous knowledge and deep understanding of the history of philosophy, David Macauley brings the classical elements to life by showing their renewed relevance to the pressing problems of our age. His knowledge is immense, and his nuance for interconnections is tremendous. This is a great work of philosophy." David Rothenberg, author of Thousand Mile Song: Whale Music in a Sea of Sound

"This highly original study pursues the migration of philosophical thought on and through the elemental environmental ideas of earth, air, fire, and water across the length of its twenty-five hundred year history, from Empedocles to the present day. But this is no inquiry merely into the history of these ancient ideas, but rather testimony to their continuing fecundity in living experience. They give sensuous specificity to the pallid idea of "nature" and concretize environmental abstractions. Rich with broad learning and illustrative detail evoking the many kinds of wondersensuous, poetic, cognitive, scientific, reverentialin experiencing the elements, Macauley's writing projects a wide landscape for exploring the many strata of meaning in environmental experience." Arnold Berleant, author of Sensibility and Sense: The Aesthetic Transformation of the Human World

"David Macauley's Elemental Philosophy is a wonderfully well-written tour de force. It combines close analysis of ancient philosophical sources with contemporary materials of astonishing intellectual breadth. This interdisciplinary work possesses theoretical rigor, cosmopolitan scope, and literary sophistication. It will appeal to general readers who may relish, as I have, this powerful invitation for philosophical regrounding and lyrical reflection about basic elemental principles that are critical to living wisely and well on planet earth today." Eric W. Orts, University of Pennsylvania

"After industrialization, knowledge became fragmented and people lost touch with the material realities of the places in which they lived. David Macauley blends ancient Greek precepts with twenty-first century circumstances: earth, air, fire, and water call upon us from across the millennia to reanimate humanity's connection to our home planet." David Spanagel, Worcester Polytechnic Institute

Muu info

Explores the ancient and perennial notion of the four elements as environmental ideas.
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction 1(10)
Four-Thought
1(2)
Sheltering the Elements
3(3)
Plan of the Work
6(5)
Part I Elemental Encounters and Ideas
11(90)
Chapter 1 Philosophy's Forgotten Four
13(46)
Earth
14(11)
Air
25(11)
Fire
36(7)
Water
43(8)
Interstice: Stone
51(8)
Chapter 2 The Topology of the Elemental Environment
59(42)
Elementary Letters
60(3)
Elemental Places
63(3)
Elements as Archetypes
66(1)
Elemental Opposition
67(2)
Elemental Substances
69(3)
Chemical Elements
72(2)
Cultural Comparisons
74(7)
The Frame of the Four
81(3)
Social Construction of the Elements
84(9)
Intertice: Wood
93(8)
Part II Elemental Theories
101(152)
Chapter 3 The Flowering of Ecological Roots: Empedocles' Elemental Thought
103(40)
Four-Play
103(1)
The Problem of the Poems
104(2)
Square Roots and Radical Rhizomes
106(4)
Empedocles' Elemental Cosmology
110(3)
Ecological and Political Equality
113(2)
Organic Unity
115(2)
Environmental Action
117(2)
Anticipation of Evolution
119(1)
Animal Empathy
120(2)
Environmental Roots
122(1)
Ecological Ethos
122(2)
Crafting Nature
124(2)
Purity and Pollution
126(5)
The Rhizomes of Deleuze and Guattari
131(6)
Interstice: Ice and Snow
137(6)
Chapter 4 Plato's Chora-graphy of Earth, Air, Fire, and Water
143(36)
The ABC of Everything
143(1)
A Probable Physics
144(1)
Derivation of Earth, Air, Fire, and Water
145(2)
The Corpus of an Ecological Cosmos
147(1)
Second Beginnings and Constrained Construction
148(2)
Removing the Spell of the Elements
150(3)
Elemental Recycling
153(2)
Forms of the Four?
155(1)
Elements Emplaced: Chora-graphy in the Matrix
156(4)
Construction and Structure of the Primary Bodies
160(3)
War and Play of the Elements
163(2)
Dispatching the Stoicheia; Elemental S/endings
165(3)
Husserl and the Mathematization of Nature
168(2)
Postscript to Plato: Whitehead's Philosophical Footnotes
170(3)
Interstice: Cloud
173(6)
Chapter 5 The Place of the Elements and the Elements of Place: Aristotle's Natural Household
179(30)
Four Accounts of Five Elements
179(3)
A Dictionary of Elemental Definitions
182(1)
The Ancient Generation Gap
183(3)
Pondering Weight
186(2)
The Place of the Elements
188(4)
The Elements of Place
192(2)
Homecoming and Inhabitation
194(7)
Interstice: Heat and Cold
201(8)
Chapter 6 The Economy and Ecology of the Aristotelian Elements
209(44)
Hot, Cold, Wet, and Dry
209(4)
Converting the Contraries
213(3)
Compounding the Quartet
216(2)
Prime Matter as Persisting Problem
218(7)
Extra Terrestrials: The Fifth Element
225(3)
Elemental Contact: Beholding Tangible Bodies
228(5)
In Touch with the Environment
233(1)
The Soul and the External World
234(4)
Aristotle and Ecology
238(5)
Interstice: Light and Shadow
243(10)
Part III Elemental Worlds
253(104)
Chapter 7 Domestication of the Elements
255(38)
Outside-In
255(2)
Plumbing Philosophy
257(3)
Watercraft and Landscape Aesthetics
260(4)
From Waterways to Waterworks
264(3)
Bottled Water
267(3)
Fire and Water
270(1)
Eclipse of the Atmosphere
271(2)
Escape from Earth
273(2)
End of the Elements?
275(8)
Interstice: Night
283(10)
Chapter 8 In Touch with the Sensuous World: The Reclamation of the Elemental in Continental Philosophy
293(40)
Elemental Reveries: Bachelard's Poetics
295(5)
Elemental Dwelling: Heidegger's Fourfold
300(8)
Elemental Flesh: Merleau-Ponty's Re-membering
308(2)
Elemental Sensibility: Levinas on Enjoyment
310(2)
Elemental Imperatives: Lingis and Our Sensuous Surroundings
312(4)
Elemental Passions: Irigaray on Breath and Body
316(3)
Elemental Landscapes: Casey on Place
319(2)
Elemental Nature: Sallis on Imagination
321(3)
From Elements to the Elemental
324(3)
Interstice: Space
327(6)
Chapter 9 Revaluing Earth, Air, Fire, and Water: Elemental Beauty, Ecological Duty, and Environmental Policy
333(24)
Elemental Ethics
334(4)
Elemental Aesthetics
338(7)
Environmental Action
345(7)
Bewildering Order
352(5)
Notes 357(62)
Index 419
David Macauley is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Environmental Studies at Penn State University, Brandywine. He is the editor of Minding Nature: The Philosophers of Ecology.