Gregory Bateson died in 1980, but his work grows more and more
relevant each year. In his wide-ranging, penetrating thought he
illuminated many dimensions of human interaction and of our
connection to the wider biological world. One of the questions that
runs through this book is “how to describe a living system
without killing it?” This starts early with Bateson’s
anthropological work on culture, and runs through into ecology,
identity, change, evolution and learning. How to talk about these
things – and organisms that are experiencing them – without
resorting to typologies? The sacred and its relationship to a
description of ecology is foremost. As are the puzzles of being an
individual in culture in a whole vast collection of biological
relationships and cultural idea-relationships – and how to bring
all of those into the field of ecology. The answer to the question
“what is the world?” is “it’s what I perceive it to be.”
And the question of what I perceive is only going to begin to have
some looseness in it, when the question is asked: “Are you
perceiving the world, or are you perceiving your perception?”
Perhaps this question is the beginning of the possibility of
loosening the matrix. When Bateson talks about coevolution – the
way that the grass changes when the horse changes, and the horse
changes as the grass changes, along with multiple other organisms
– there is change taking place so that they can stay in
relationship. But in order to continue the relationships all the
organisms have to change. In order to change, they have to be able
to have a perception shift. And yet, it should be impossible. It
should be that the organisms can only do what the organisms do. And
a horse is a horse, and the grass is the grass. But life shows us
again and again, things change. In fact, that is the basis of
continuing to be alive in an ecology; to change. Continuing
requires discontinuing. Many of the articles in this book are about
‘wiping your glosses’ – the glosses that accumulate in
psychiatry, anthropology, ecology, education, and getting to see a
little bit more clearly, which always means seeing relationship and
always means seeing parts and wholes encompassed within bigger
wholes. As he develops his theory of evolution he says it’s not
the individual organism or species that evolves. It’s the
organism-plus-the-environment that evolves. This book is a forest
of ideas explored though many careful visits. Order, change,
learning, health, harm, perception … what is it to be alive? Each
chapter is full of the rigor of someone who does not want to
underestimate the lifeforms in view and knows that many more
life-processes are present, but not (yet) perceivable. There is
room in these pages to allow the overlaps and the understories to
tangle and seep between the chapters and let them describe each
other. There is not an agreed upon way to understand this work,
each reader will find their own way through within their own
experiences. And the next time you read it, you will find that
either the chapters or you have changed again…
General
Imprint: |
Triarchy Press
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
June 2023 |
Authors: |
Gregory Bateson
|
Dimensions: |
234 x 156mm (L x W) |
Pages: |
376 |
Edition: |
2nd ed. |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-913743-79-6 |
Categories: |
Books
|
LSN: |
1-913743-79-9 |
Barcode: |
9781913743796 |
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