Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Towards landscape conscience: a geographical perspective
This article aims to show the reciprocal significance of space to human conscience and vice versa. We argue that human conscience is equally founded on external, spatial relations rather than strictly internal states or processes, and we apply the concept of ‘conscience’ to the landscape (‘landscape conscience’). Through an extensive literature review of relevant scientific fields, the article builds its argument for the spatiality of conscience beyond its previously strictly anthropocentric emphasis as a purely internal phenomenon, towards a more contingent and comprehensive approach to its study as a humans-space/landscape interrelationship. Further, we aim to elucidate the ways in which ‘landscape’ is amenable to—and consequently may profit from—the employment of the concept and insights of ‘conscience’. The interconnections and interlinkages of the three broadly defined domains/spheres of human faculties/capacities (perception, emotion, behaviour) in formulating and linking together human interrelations to the surrounding world, emerge as inherently instrumental to conscience formation.
Towards landscape conscience: a geographical perspective
This article aims to show the reciprocal significance of space to human conscience and vice versa. We argue that human conscience is equally founded on external, spatial relations rather than strictly internal states or processes, and we apply the concept of ‘conscience’ to the landscape (‘landscape conscience’). Through an extensive literature review of relevant scientific fields, the article builds its argument for the spatiality of conscience beyond its previously strictly anthropocentric emphasis as a purely internal phenomenon, towards a more contingent and comprehensive approach to its study as a humans-space/landscape interrelationship. Further, we aim to elucidate the ways in which ‘landscape’ is amenable to—and consequently may profit from—the employment of the concept and insights of ‘conscience’. The interconnections and interlinkages of the three broadly defined domains/spheres of human faculties/capacities (perception, emotion, behaviour) in formulating and linking together human interrelations to the surrounding world, emerge as inherently instrumental to conscience formation.
Towards landscape conscience: a geographical perspective
Pavlis, Evangelos (Autor:in) / Terkenli, Theano S. (Autor:in)
Landscape Research ; 48 ; 1004-1018
17.11.2023
15 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Unbekannt
One landscape or many? A geographical perspective
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 1985
|Landscape analysis and planning : geographical perspectives
TIBKAT | 2015
|Specific Geographical Waterfront Landscape Optimization Design
British Library Conference Proceedings
|Sustainable Tourism: a Geographical Perspective
Online Contents | 2000
|