Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Our Gardens Need Science and Spirituality
The landscape design world is still far too divorced from actual
ecological processes and communities that very much exist in our
country, even in urban centers and other novel ecosystems (we can deny
those ecological communities all we want, but it won't make us feel any
better about our role in climate change or extinction, or lead to
effective outcomes). We're getting there as more projects become joint
collaborations between architects, engineers, biologists, ecologists, and
horticulturists. But if these new gardens do not spur a significant
psychological if not spiritual ethic grounded in both reverence and
science, an ethic that truly links human and animal culture well beyond
even biophilic aesthetics, our species will not endure. How we
experience and intervene in our daily environment is how we will
experience and intervene in our larger world.
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3 comments:
I see a bit of this happening - slow change. Wishing it was faster.
Very interesting point on the need for collaboration.
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