The social creation of nature
| owner: | APIRG |
|---|---|
| tags: | Natural history ,Philosophy ,Philosophy of nature ,History ,Ecology ,Environment |
| author: | Lorne Leslie Neil Evernden |
| LCC: | QH331 |
Description
"I think The Social Creation of Nature stands Evernden in relation to the present generation roughly as Thoreau stood in relation to New England Transcendentalism."--Max Oelschlaeger, author of The Idea of Wilderness. "A thoughtful and illuminating book... For Evernden, `wildness' is what should be defended and preserved."-- New Scientist. One reason for our failure to "save the earth," argues Neil Evernden, is our disagreement about what "nature" really is--how it works, what constitutes a risk to it, and even whether we ourselves are part of it. Nature is as much a social entity as a physical one. In addition to the physical resources to be harnessed and transformed, it consists of a domain of norms that may be called upon in defense of certain social ideals. In exploring the consequences of conventional understandings of nature, The Social Creation of Nature also seeks a way around the limitations of a socially created nature in order to defend what is actually imperiled--"wildness," in which, Thoreau wrote, lies hope for "the preservation of the world."