Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Philosophy of geography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

icon
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Philosophy of geography" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(September 2014) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Part of a series on
Geography

Philosophy of geography is the subfield ofphilosophy which deals withepistemological,metaphysical, andaxiological issues ingeography, with geographic methodology in general, and with more broadly related issues such as the perception and representation of space and place.[1][2]

History

[edit]

Philosophy of geography deals withepistemological,metaphysical, andaxiological issues ingeography, with geographic methodology in general, and with more broadly related issues such as the perception and representation of space and place.[citation needed]

Methodological issues concerning geographical knowledge have been debated for centuries, if not more.

In the US,Richard Hartshorne (1899–1992) is credited with its first major systematic treatment in English in 1939,The Nature of Geography: A Critical Survey of Current Thought in the Light of the Past, which prompted several volumes of critical essays in subsequent decades. Hartshorne himself credited the German geographerAlfred Hettner (1859-1941) as founder of a chorology tradition.[3]

John Kirtland Wright (1891–1969), an American geographer notable for hiscartography and study of the history of geographical thought, coined the related termgeosophy in 1947, for this kind of broad study of geographical knowledge. Other key works in the field includeDavid Harvey's 1969Explanation in Geography and French philosopherHenri Lefebvre's 1974The Production of Space. It was a discussion of issues he raised which in part inspired the founding of aSociety for Philosophy and Geography in the 1990s.

US Organizations

[edit]

TheSociety for Philosophy and Geography was founded in 1997 by Andrew Light, a philosopher later atGeorge Mason University, and Jonathan Smith, a geographer atTexas A&M University. Three volumes of an annual peer-reviewed journal,Philosophy and Geography, were published by Rowman & Littlefield Press which later became a bi-annual journal published by Carfax publishers. This journal merged with another journal started by geographers,Ethics, Place, and Environment, in 2005 to becomeEthics, Place, and Environment: A journal of philosophy and geography published by Routledge. The journal was edited by Light and Smith up to 2009, and has published work by philosophers, geographers, and others in allied fields, on questions of space, place, and the environment broadly construed. It has come to be recognized as instrumental in expanding the scope of the field ofenvironmental ethics to include work on urban environments.

In 2009 Smith retired from the journal and Benjamin Hale from the University of Colorado came on as the new co-editor. Hale and Light relaunched the journal in January 2011 asEthics, Policy and Environment.[4] While the journal has since focused more on the relationship between environmental ethics and policy, it still welcomes submissions on relevant work from geographers.

A book series, also initially published by Rowman & Littlefield, and later by Cambridge Scholars Press, began in 2002 to publish the transactions of theSociety for Philosophy and Geography's annual meetings, organized by Gary Backhaus and John Murungi of Towson University.[5] In 2005 the society sponsoring these annual meetings became theInternational Association for the Study of Environment, Space, and Place, and in 2009 the book series gave way to a peer-reviewed journal,Environment, Space, Place, published semiannually and currently edited by C. Patrick Heidkamp, Troy Paddock, and Christine Petto of Southern Connecticut State University.[6]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Tratado de Geografía Humana
  2. ^Geographies of the mind.
  3. ^Hartshorne (1958) "The concept of geography as a science of space, from Kant and Humboldt to Hettner" in: Annals of the Association of American Geographers Vol 48 (2). p. 97
  4. ^Hale, Benjamin; Light, Andrew (March 2011)."Ethics, Policy & Environment: A New Name and a Renewed Mission"(PDF).Ethics, Policy and Environment.14 (1):1–2.doi:10.1080/21550085.2011.561581.S2CID 154330491.Archived(PDF) from the original on 24 January 2012.
  5. ^"IASESP Conference History". 2 October 2007. Archived from the original on 2 October 2007. Retrieved8 May 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  6. ^"Environment, Space, Place - www.zetabooks.com". 9 July 2009. Archived fromthe original on 9 July 2009. Retrieved8 May 2018.

External links

[edit]
Links to related articles
Branches
Branches
Aesthetics
Epistemology
Ethics
Free will
Metaphysics
Mind
Normativity
Ontology
Reality
By era
By era
Ancient
Chinese
Greco-Roman
Indian
Persian
Medieval
East Asian
European
Indian
Islamic
Jewish
Modern
People
Contemporary
Analytic
Continental
Miscellaneous
  • By region
By region
African
Eastern
Middle Eastern
Western
Miscellaneous
Concepts
Theories
Philosophy of...
Related topics
Philosophers of science
Precursors
Branches
Human
Physical
Technical
Integrated
Techniques
and tools
Quantitative
Qualitative
Institutions,
organizations,
and societies
Education
Publication
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Philosophy_of_geography&oldid=1325735865"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp