Thom van Dooren
@thomvandooren.bsky.social
Field philosopher and writer. Professor of Environmental Humanities at the University of Sydney. Author of "Flight Ways," "The Wake of Crows," and "A World in a Shell."
www.thomvandooren.org
www.thomvandooren.org
Lots of fascinating questions in the dialogue (or lack there of) between natural and social sciences. Much of the work in biology is refreshingly non dogmatic about what culture might be (even if grounded in some constraining assumptions). I'm hopeful that there is space for good discussion here.
January 6, 2025 at 9:14 AM
Lots of fascinating questions in the dialogue (or lack there of) between natural and social sciences. Much of the work in biology is refreshingly non dogmatic about what culture might be (even if grounded in some constraining assumptions). I'm hopeful that there is space for good discussion here.
Thanks Warwick. Yup, lots of discussion by Darwin and other naturalists of things we might call culture. Fewer focused efforts to define and study how those modes of life take shape and are shared.
January 6, 2025 at 9:07 AM
Thanks Warwick. Yup, lots of discussion by Darwin and other naturalists of things we might call culture. Fewer focused efforts to define and study how those modes of life take shape and are shared.
In Australia, a lot of EH/STS events and other news items are posted here www.aehhub.org
Australian Environmental Humanities Hub
Visit the post for more.
www.aehhub.org
January 3, 2025 at 9:22 AM
In Australia, a lot of EH/STS events and other news items are posted here www.aehhub.org