Understanding Gregory Bateson: Mind, Beauty, and the Sacred EarthState University of New York Press, 25 mrt 2010 - 292 pagina's Gregory Bateson (1904–1980), anthropologist, psychologist, systems thinker, student of animal communication, and insightful environmentalist, was one of the most important holistic thinkers of the twentieth century. Noel G. Charlton offers this first truly accessible introduction to Bateson's work, distilling and clarifying Bateson's understanding of the "mind" or "mental systems" as being present throughout the living Earth, in systems and creatures of all kinds. Part biography, part overview of the evolution of his ideas, Charlton's book situates Bateson's thought in relation to that of other ecological thinkers. This long-awaited volume opens up this challenging thinker's body of work and introduces it to a new generation of readers. |
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Pagina 8
... awareness of interrelationship within the “sacred” world of living mental systems. In chapter 7, it is shown that the nested and interrelated processes of the world can be seen as “the sacred,” an appropriate focus for “religious ...
... awareness of interrelationship within the “sacred” world of living mental systems. In chapter 7, it is shown that the nested and interrelated processes of the world can be seen as “the sacred,” an appropriate focus for “religious ...
Pagina 10
... awareness of the sacred nature of our living ecology. Stewart Brand, meeting Bateson some seven years before his death, described his first impression (Brand 1974a, 13): “Six-foot five, disheveled . . . Bateson's presence is like that ...
... awareness of the sacred nature of our living ecology. Stewart Brand, meeting Bateson some seven years before his death, described his first impression (Brand 1974a, 13): “Six-foot five, disheveled . . . Bateson's presence is like that ...
Pagina 11
... awareness of social tendencies and a prophetic understanding of the attitudes that threaten future possibilities. Such a man is Gregory Bateson. I write “is” because, though he died in 1980, his ideas are very much alive. Though his ...
... awareness of social tendencies and a prophetic understanding of the attitudes that threaten future possibilities. Such a man is Gregory Bateson. I write “is” because, though he died in 1980, his ideas are very much alive. Though his ...
Pagina 28
Je hebt de weergavelimiet voor dit boek bereikt.
Je hebt de weergavelimiet voor dit boek bereikt.
Pagina 31
Je hebt de weergavelimiet voor dit boek bereikt.
Je hebt de weergavelimiet voor dit boek bereikt.
Inhoudsopgave
1 | |
11 | |
The Living World is Organized by Minds | 31 |
The Earlier Years | 69 |
5 Aesthetics Ecology and the Path Toward Grace | 101 |
6 Aesthetic Engagement and the Grace of Relatedness | 137 |
7 Bateson and The Sacred | 159 |
8 Wise Action? | 209 |
Table of Lifetime Events and Publications | 225 |
Notes | 243 |
Bibliography | 249 |
Index | 273 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Understanding Gregory Bateson: Mind, Beauty, and the Sacred Earth Noel G. Charlton Gedeeltelijke weergave - 2008 |
Understanding Gregory Bateson: Mind, Beauty, and the Sacred Earth Noel G. Charlton Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2008 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
action activity aesthetic approach artistic aspects attempt awareness beauty become believe Berleant biological body chapter characteristics claims communication complex concerned Conference conscious consciousness context creation culture cybernetic dependent discussed divinity Earth ecological effects enable engagement ethic evolution example exist experience fact Fear feel further grace Gregory Bateson human ideas important individual influence insight integration interaction involved knowledge larger later learning linked living world logical London Mary material matter Mead means mental process mental systems metaphor mind nature necessary noted object offers organisms pattern philosophy possible present produced question recognize relationships religion religious Reprinted requires response sacred says seen sense separate social society species suggests theory things thinkers thinking thought tion unconscious understanding unity University whole wisdom writes York
Populaire passages
Pagina 185 - The flourishing of human life and cultures is compatible with a substantial decrease of the human population. The flourishing of nonhuman life requires such a decrease.
Pagina 185 - Richness and diversity of life forms contribute to the realization of these values and are also values in themselves. (3) Humans have no right to reduce this richness and diversity except to satisfy vital needs.
Pagina 186 - The ideological change is mainly that of appreciating life quality (dwelling in situations of inherent value) rather than adhering to an increasingly higher standard of living. There will be a profound awareness of the difference between big and great.
Pagina 58 - For others, more creative, the resolution of contraries reveals a world in which personal identity merges into all the processes of relationship in some vast ecology or aesthetics of cosmic interaction. That any of these can survive seems almost miraculous, but some are perhaps saved . . . from being swept away on oceanic feeling by their ability to focus in on the minutiae of life. Every detail of the universe is seen as proposing a view of the whole.
Pagina 58 - AUGURIES OF INNOCENCE To see the world in a grain of sand, And a heaven in a wild flower; Hold infinity in the palm of your hand, And eternity in an hour.
Pagina 45 - The interaction between parts of mind is triggered by difference and difference is a nonsubstantial phenomenon not located in space or time; difference is related to negentropy and entropy rather than to energy.
Pagina 124 - Plotinus the Platonist proves by means of the blossoms and leaves that from the Supreme God, whose beauty is invisible and ineffable, Providence reaches down to the things of earth here below. He points out that these frail and mortal objects could not be endowed with a beauty so immaculate and so exquisitely wrought, did they not issue from the Divinity which endlessly pervades with its invisible and unchanging beauty all things.
Pagina 97 - Finally, in the dim region where art, magic, and religion meet and overlap, human beings have evolved the "metaphor that is meant," the flag which men will die to save, and the sacrament that is felt to be more than "an outward and visible sign, given unto us.
Pagina 100 - I would include with these the best of religion. These are all activities in which the whole individual is involved. The artist may have a conscious purpose to sell his picture, even perhaps a conscious purpose to make it. But in the making he must necessarily relax that arrogance in favour of a creative experience in which his conscious mind plays only a small part.