From barometers to the famous BBC shipping forecast, we have over the centuries developed the means to predict, harness, and shield ourselves from what is happening in the atmosphere. Attitudes about the planet's weather, as well as about human identity, have thereby taken on new meanings. In an era of climatic anxiety, what weather is and how weather behaves have taken on additional currency. Benjamin Hale weaves together philosophy and anecdote into a many-faceted exploration of this powerful force that shapes who we are and how we think about our place in the world. He argues that in our drive to 'scientize' weather, with all the technological advances in managing, anticipating, and understanding it, we also risk distancing ourselves from weather and losing a complete sense of what it is. This entertaining book reminds us that the weather is and always will be in some sense outside our control, and that consequently we are and forever will be learning to live alongside it.
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Raising profound questions about our control over the natural world, this book explores human beings' multifaceted relationship with the weather.
Introduction;
1. Neither rain, nor snow, nor sleet, nor hail: what is
weather?;
2. Of rain and parades: how weather affects us;
3. Battening the
hatches: living with weather;
4. Seeing through the fog: predicting the
weather;
5. Catching a cloud: controlling the weather; Conclusion: silver
linings; Notes; Bibliography; Index.
Benjamin Hale is Professor in the Departments of Environmental Studies and Philosophy at the University of Colorado, Boulder. He is author of The Wild and the Wicked: On Nature and Human Nature (2016), co-editor of the journal Ethics, Policy and Environment, and former President of the International Society for Environmental Ethics.