Books > Humanities > Philosophy > Western philosophy > Ancient Western philosophy to c 500
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Nature Speaks - Medieval Literature and Aristotelian Philosophy (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,333
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Nature Speaks - Medieval Literature and Aristotelian Philosophy (Hardcover)
Series: The Middle Ages Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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What does it mean to speak for nature? Contemporary environmental
critics warn that giving a voice to nonhuman nature reduces it to a
mere echo of our own needs and desires; they caution that it is a
perverse form of anthropocentrism. And yet nature's voice proved a
powerful and durable ethical tool for premodern writers, many of
whom used it to explore what it meant to be an embodied creature or
to ask whether human experience is independent of the natural world
in which it is forged. The history of the late medieval period can
be retold as the story of how nature gained an authoritative voice
only to lose it again at the onset of modernity. This distinctive
voice, Kellie Robertson argues, emerged from a novel historical
confluence of physics and fiction-writing. Natural philosophers and
poets shared a language for talking about physical inclination, the
inherent desire to pursue the good that was found in all things
living and nonliving. Moreover, both natural philosophers and poets
believed that representing the visible world was a problem of
morality rather than mere description. Based on readings of
academic commentaries and scientific treatises as well as popular
allegorical poetry, Nature Speaks contends that controversy over
Aristotle's natural philosophy gave birth to a philosophical
poetics that sought to understand the extent to which the human
will was necessarily determined by the same forces that shaped the
rest of the material world. Modern disciplinary divisions have
largely discouraged shared imaginative responses to this problem
among the contemporary sciences and humanities. Robertson
demonstrates that this earlier worldview can offer an alternative
model of human-nonhuman complementarity, one premised neither on
compulsory human exceptionalism nor on the simple reduction of one
category to the other. Most important, Nature Speaks assesses what
is gained and what is lost when nature's voice goes silent.
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