Interconnections, relationships, and environmental wholes: A phenomenological ecology of natural and built worlds

dc.citation.ctitlePhenomenology and Ecology: the Twenty-Third Annual Symposium of the Simon Silverman Phenomenology Center: lecturesen
dc.citation.epage86en
dc.citation.isbn9780978657246en
dc.citation.spage53en
dc.contributor.authorSeamon, David
dc.contributor.authoreidtriaden
dc.contributor.editorGeib, Melissa
dc.date.accessioned2009-08-26T16:41:49Z
dc.date.available2009-08-26T16:41:49Z
dc.date.issued2009-08-26T16:41:49Z
dc.date.published2006en
dc.description.abstractIn this article, I ask what the relationships, interconnections, and environmental wholes of ecology become in a phenomenological perspective. To answer this question, I consider one phenomenon from the natural world—color—and one phenomenon from the human-made world—vibrant urban places. To discuss a phenomenology of vibrant urban places, I turn to my own work on the bodily dimensions of environmental experience and action, especially as the lived body comes to know its everyday environment through the regularity and routine of extended time-space patterns contributing to the transformation of physical space into lived place. I also emphasize, after architectural theorist Bill Hillier, that the physical structure of place, particularly the spatial configuration of pathways, plays a major role in establishing whether streets are well used and animated or empty and lifeless. To discuss a phenomenology of color, I turn to the proto-phenomenology of Goethe, who devised a qualitative way of seeing and understanding that can rightly be called a phenomenology of the natural world. Most significantly for a phenomenological understanding of relationships, interconnections and environmental wholes, Goethe’s work demonstrates how light and color involve an underlying “belonging” seen in perceptual presence but only understood through a moment of insight in which all the parts are understood together and have a fitting place. This article was originally prepared as a keynote address delivered at the symposium, “Renew the Face of the Earth: Phenomenology and Ecology,” organized by the Simon Silverman Phenomenology Center at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pa., March, 12, 2005.en
dc.description.conferenceRenew the Face of the Earth: Phenomenology and Ecology. Twenty-third Annual Symposium of the Simon Silverman Phenomenology Center, 2005, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, PA.en
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2097/1692
dc.publisherSimon Silverman Phenomenology Center, Duquesne University Pressen
dc.subjectPhenomenology of placeen
dc.subjectSpace syntaxen
dc.subjectPhenomenology and ecologyen
dc.subjectGoethean scienceen
dc.subjectGoethe's theory of coloren
dc.subjectPlace theoryen
dc.titleInterconnections, relationships, and environmental wholes: A phenomenological ecology of natural and built worldsen
dc.typeArticle (author version)en

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