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Philosophies of Place - An Intercultural Conversation (Paperback)
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Philosophies of Place - An Intercultural Conversation (Paperback)
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Humanity takes up space. Human beings, like many other species,
also transform spaces. What is perhaps uniquely human is the
disposition to qualitatively transform spaces into places that are
charged with distinctive kinds of intergenerational significance.
There is a profound, felt difference between a house as domestic
space and a home as familial place or between the summit of a
mountain one has climbed for the first time and the "same" rock
pinnacle celebrated in ancestral narratives. Contemporary
philosophical uses of the word "place" often pivot on the
distinction between "space" and "place" formalized by
geographer-philosopher Yi-fu Tuan, who suggested that places
incorporate the experiences and aspirations of a people over the
course of their moral and aesthetic engagement with sites and
locations. While spaces afford possibilities for different kinds of
presence—physical, emotional, cognitive, dramatic,
spiritual—places emerge as different ways of being present, fuse
over time, and saturate a locale with distinctively collaborative
patterns of significance. This approach to issues of place,
however, is emblematic of what Edward S. Casey has argued are
convictions about the primacy of absolute space and time that
evolved along with the progressive dominance of the scientific
imagination and modern imaginations of the universal. The recent
reappearance of place in Western philosophy represents a turn away
from abstract and a priori reasoning and back toward phenomenal
experience and the primacy of embodied and emplaced intelligence.
Places are enacted through the sustainably shared practices of
mutually-responsive and mutually-vulnerable agents and are as
numerous in kind as we are divergent in the patterns of values and
intentions. The contributors to this volume draw on resources from
Asian, European, and North American traditions of thought to engage
in intercultural reflection on the significance of place in
philosophy and of the place of philosophy itself in the cultural,
social, economic, and political domains of contemporary life. The
conversation of place that results explores the meaning of
intercultural philosophy, the critical interplay of place and
personal identity, the meaning of appropriate emplacement, the
shared place of politics and religion, and the nature of the
emotionally emplaced body.
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