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Le Otto Lezioni Magistrali Come La Natura Ci Insegna A Vivere
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Book Synopsis Le otto lezioni magistrali. Come la natura ci insegna a vivere by : Gary Ferguson
Download or read book Le otto lezioni magistrali. Come la natura ci insegna a vivere written by Gary Ferguson and published by . This book was released on 2023 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:
Book Synopsis Le otto lezioni magistrali by : Gary Ferguson
Download or read book Le otto lezioni magistrali written by Gary Ferguson and published by Edizioni Mondadori. This book was released on 2023-02-07 with total page 196 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Fin dall'epoca classica la filosofia occidentale ci ha abituati a credere nella superiorità degli esseri umani. Troppo a lungo abbiamo considerato noi stessi come creature eccezionali al centro di un universo a nostra disposizione, abbiamo assunto comportamenti folli nei confronti della natura e ci siamo allontanati dalla sua meraviglia. Oggi, invece, la ricerca scientifica dimostra sempre più la profonda connessione fra tutti gli esseri viventi sulla Terra, e ci ricorda che la natura è una preziosa maestra di vita. Affrontando temi estremamente attuali quali la biodiversità, l'efficienza energetica e l'interdipendenza tra gli ecosistemi, il naturalista Gary Ferguson ci invita dunque a osservare l'armonia, l'equilibrio e il ritmo della natura e a trarne insegnamento per le nostre vite: gli alberi dialogano e si aiutano a vicenda tramite le reti sotterranee di funghi; le foreste sopravvivono agli incendi prosperando più forti e variegate di prima grazie alla capacità di superare i traumi; orche, elefanti e scimpanzé manifestano il lutto per la morte di un membro del gruppo; e molte comunità di animali - leoni, lupi e delfini - fanno affidamento sulla leadership femminile, improntata alla collaborazione, e si rimettono alla saggezza degli anziani. Con una scrittura ricca e coinvolgente e spaziando dall'arte alla scienza, dalla filosofia alla storia, Ferguson ci esorta a riscoprire con speranza l'innegabile relazione fra esseri umani e natura, perché prestarvi attenzione aiuta a condurre esistenze più appaganti, realizzare società più giuste e garantire un destino migliore a noi stessi e all'intero pianeta. Un libro potente e importante. Otto magistrali lezioni, per tutti.
Download or read book The Carry Home written by Gary Ferguson and published by Catapult. This book was released on 2015-09-15 with total page 251 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The nature writing of Gary Ferguson arises out of intimate experience. He trekked 500 miles through Yellowstone to write Walking Down the Wild and spent a season in the field at a wilderness therapy program for Shouting at the Sky. He journeyed 250 miles on foot for Hawks Rest and followed through the seasons the first fourteen wolves released into Yellowstone National Park for The Yellowstone Wolves. But nothing could prepare him for the experience he details in his new book. The Carry Home is both a moving celebration of the outdoor life shared between Ferguson and his wife Jane, who died tragically in a canoeing accident in northern Ontario in 2005, and a chronicle of the mending, uplifting power of nature. Confronting his unthinkable loss, Ferguson set out to fulfill Jane's final wish: the scattering of her ashes in five remote, wild locations they loved and shared. The act of the carry home allows Ferguson the opportunity to ruminate on their life together as well as explore deeply the impactful presence of nature in all of our lives. Theirs was a love borne of wild places, and The Carry Home offers a powerful glimpse into how the natural world can be a critical prompt for moving through cycles of immeasurable grief, how bereavement can turn to wonder, and how one man rediscovered himself in the process of saying goodbye.
Book Synopsis The Eight Master Lessons of Nature by : Gary Ferguson
Download or read book The Eight Master Lessons of Nature written by Gary Ferguson and published by Penguin. This book was released on 2019-10-22 with total page 274 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: A riveting manifesto for the millions of people who long to forge a more vital, meaningful connection to the natural world to live a better, more fulfilling life Looking around at the world today—a world of skyscrapers, super highways, melting ice caps, and rampant deforestation—it is easy to feel that humanity has actively severed its ties with nature. It’s no wonder that we are starving to rediscover a connection with the natural world. With new insights into the inner workings of nature's wonders, Gary Ferguson presents a fascinating exploration into how many of the most remarkable aspects of nature are hardwired into our very DNA. What emerges is a dazzling web of connections that holds powerful clues about how to better navigate our daily lives. Through cutting-edge data and research, drawing on science, psychology, history, and philosophy, The Eight Master Lessons of Nature will leave readers with a feeling of hope, excitement, and joy. It is a dazzling statement about the powers of physical, mental, and spiritual wellness that come from reclaiming our relationship with Mother Nature. Lessons about mystery, loss, the fine art of rising again, how animals make us smarter, and how the planet’s elders make us better at life are unforgettable and transformative.
Book Synopsis Libraries Serving Dialogue by : Odile Dupont
Download or read book Libraries Serving Dialogue written by Odile Dupont and published by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. This book was released on 2014-08-25 with total page 176 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The IFLA Religious Libraries in Dialogue Special Interest Group is dedicated to libraries serving as places of dialogue between cultures through a better knowledge of religions. This book based on experiences of libraries serving interreligious dialogue, presents themes like library tools serving dialogue between cultures, collections dialoguing, children and young adults dialoguing beyond borders, story telling as dialog, librarians serving interreligious dialogue.
Book Synopsis Shouting at the Sky by : Gary Ferguson
Download or read book Shouting at the Sky written by Gary Ferguson and published by Macmillan. This book was released on 1999-03-15 with total page 278 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Gary Ferguson recounts the experiences he had while spending two months in the Utah wilderness with a group of troubled teens.
Download or read book Retrotopia written by Zygmunt Bauman and published by John Wiley & Sons. This book was released on 2017-03-06 with total page 133 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: We have long since lost our faith in the idea that human beings could achieve human happiness in some future ideal state—a state that Thomas More, writing five centuries ago, tied to a topos, a fixed place, a land, an island, a sovereign state under a wise and benevolent ruler. But while we have lost our faith in utopias of all hues, the human aspiration that made this vision so compelling has not died. Instead it is re-emerging today as a vision focused not on the future but on the past, not on a future-to-be-created but on an abandoned and undead past that we could call retrotopia. The emergence of retrotopia is interwoven with the deepening gulf between power and politics that is a defining feature of our contemporary liquid-modern world—the gulf between the ability to get things done and the capability of deciding what things need to be done, a capability once vested with the territorially sovereign state. This deepening gulf has rendered nation-states unable to deliver on their promises, giving rise to a widespread disenchantment with the idea that the future will improve the human condition and a mistrust in the ability of nation-states to make this happen. True to the utopian spirit, retrotopia derives its stimulus from the urge to rectify the failings of the present human condition—though now by resurrecting the failed and forgotten potentials of the past. Imagined aspects of the past, genuine or putative, serve as the main landmarks today in drawing the road-map to a better world. Having lost all faith in the idea of building an alternative society of the future, many turn instead to the grand ideas of the past, buried but not yet dead. Such is retrotopia, the contours of which are examined by Zygmunt Bauman in this sharp dissection of our contemporary romance with the past.
Book Synopsis Hole in the Sky by : William Kittredge
Download or read book Hole in the Sky written by William Kittredge and published by Vintage. This book was released on 1993-06-01 with total page 259 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: William Kittredge's stunning memoir is at once autobiography, a family chronicle, and a Westerner's settling of accounts with the land he grew up in. This is the story of a grandfather whose single-minded hunger for property won him a ranch the size of Delaware but estranged him from his family; of a father who farmed with tractors and drainage ditches but consorted with movie stars; and of Kittredge himself, who was raised by cowboys and saw them become obsolete, who floundered through three marriages, hard drinking, and madness before becoming a writer. Host hauntingly, Hole in the Sky is an honest reckoning of the American myth that drove generations of Americans westward -- and what became of their dream after they reached the edge.
Book Synopsis Through the Woods by : Gary Ferguson
Download or read book Through the Woods written by Gary Ferguson and published by Torrey House Press. This book was released on 2015-02-10 with total page 170 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: A conversational journey through America’s forests, introducing readers to people whose lives are intertwined with the soul of the woods.
Book Synopsis Mussolini's Theatre by : Patricia Gaborik
Download or read book Mussolini's Theatre written by Patricia Gaborik and published by Cambridge University Press. This book was released on 2021-05-06 with total page 327 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: A vividly written portrait of Benito Mussolini, whose passion for the theatre profoundly shaped his ideology and actions as head of fascist Italy This consistently illuminating book transforms our understanding of fascism as a whole, and will have strong appeal to readers in both theatre studies and modern Italian history.
Book Synopsis Early Cinema and the "National" by : Richard Abel
Download or read book Early Cinema and the "National" written by Richard Abel and published by Indiana University Press. This book was released on 2008-12-17 with total page 362 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Essays on “how motion pictures in the first two decades of the 20th century constructed ‘communities of nationality’ . . . recommended.” —Choice While many studies have been written on national cinemas, Early Cinema and the “National” is the first anthology to focus on the concept of national film culture from a wide methodological spectrum of interests, including not only visual and narrative forms, but also international geopolitics, exhibition and marketing practices, and pressing linkages to national imageries. The essays in this richly illustrated landmark anthology are devoted to reconsidering the nation as a framing category for writing cinema history. Many of the 34 contributors show that concepts of a national identity played a role in establishing the parameters of cinema’s early development, from technological change to discourses of stardom, from emerging genres to intertitling practices. Yet, as others attest, national meanings could often become knotty in other contexts, when concepts of nationhood were contested in relation to colonial/imperial histories and regional configurations. Early Cinema and the “National” takes stock of a formative moment in cinema history, tracing the beginnings of the process whereby nations learned to imagine themselves through moving images.
Book Synopsis Introduction to the Analysis of the Literary Text by : Cesare Segre
Download or read book Introduction to the Analysis of the Literary Text written by Cesare Segre and published by Bloomington : Indiana University Press. This book was released on 1988 with total page 360 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:
Book Synopsis The Nature of Generosity by : William Kittredge
Download or read book The Nature of Generosity written by William Kittredge and published by Vintage. This book was released on 2010-09-22 with total page 289 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Hailed as one of our finest writers about the American West, William Kittredge now brings all his experience and intelligence to bear on the wider, and wilder, West of our civilization. In certain respects, The Nature of Generosity continues the story of Hole in the Sky, the acclaimed memoir of Kittredge's early life on his family's vast ranch in Oregon; but it also ranges freely, and exhilaratingly, around the world and through recorded time. A travel book of sorts--from New York and Venice to the Andalusian hills of García Lorca, from the cow towns of Montana to the caves at Lascaux--it is driven by the quest to reconcile childhood simplicities with the complex, urgent, adult questions about who to be, and how, and why. Drawing on our various histories--biological, cultural, psychological--Kittredge celebrates diversity as the cornerstone of our social possibilities, examines the freedom and responsibility this entails, and suggests that our culture's habitually selfish, combative behavior is far from being in our best interests--or, indeed, in our nature. Less geographical than philosophical, at once learned and curious, observant and personal, The Nature of Generosity is a revolutionary, and practical, magnum opus.
Book Synopsis German Social Democracy, 1905-1917 by : Carl E. Schorske
Download or read book German Social Democracy, 1905-1917 written by Carl E. Schorske and published by Harvard University Press. This book was released on 1955 with total page 378 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: No political parties of present-day Germany are separated by a wider gulf than the two parties of labor, one democratic and reformist, the other totalitarian and socialist-revolutionary. Social Democrats and Communists today face each other as bitter political enemies across the front lines of the Cold War; yet they share a common origin in the Social Democratic Party of Imperial Germany. How did they come to go separate ways? By what process did the old party break apart? How did the prewar party prepare the ground for the dissolution of the labor movement in World War I, and for the subsequent extension of Leninism into Germany? To answer these questions is the purpose of Carl Schorske's study.
Book Synopsis Hold the Enlightenment by : Tim Cahill
Download or read book Hold the Enlightenment written by Tim Cahill and published by Villard. This book was released on 2011-09-07 with total page 372 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In Hold the Enlightenment, America’s favorite and funniest adventure writer returns with his most entertaining collection of essays yet, as he travels the globe and faces down challenges that are animal, topographical—and human. Hold the Enlightenment takes Tim Cahill to sites as far-flung as Saharan salt mines, the Congolese jungle, and Hanford, Washington, home of the largest toxic-waste dump in the Western hemisphere. With his trademark wit and insight, Cahill describes stalking the legendary Caspian tiger in the mountains bordering Iraq, slogging through a pitch-black Australian eucalyptus forest to find the nocturnal platypus, diving with great white sharks in South Africa, staving off enlightenment at a yoga retreat in Jamaica, and much, much more. In these essays, vivid and masterly storytelling combine with outrageously sly humor and jolts of real emotion to show one of the most popular journalists of our time at the absolute peak of his game.
Book Synopsis Where Rivers Change Direction by : Mark Spragg
Download or read book Where Rivers Change Direction written by Mark Spragg and published by . This book was released on 2000 with total page 267 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Mark Spragg grew up on the oldest dude ranch in Wyoming - a remote spread in the Shoshone National Forest. It is a sublime but unforgiving landscape, a place of unrelenting winds, pitiless blizzards, fierce rivers, and the men who work there have to be tough to survive. Spragg writes lyrically of this world, its animals - horses, bears, elk - and of its people, in particular his parents and John, an old cowboy who becomes the boy's mentor. This is a book about joy - Spragg's writing is miraculous; tough but beautiful, passionate and funny.
Download or read book Hawks Rest written by Gary Ferguson and published by Torrey House Press. This book was released on 2015-11-23 with total page 196 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: "Among the many pleasures of re–reading Gary Ferguson's Hawks Rest, is finding the prose even more accomplished than remembered, the wit more agile, the observations more revelatory, its stance in the world proved once again so precisely wise. Hawks Rest is a book I will return to again and again." —MARK SPRAGG, author of Where Rivers Change Direction and An Unfinished Life "Gary Ferguson is one of the preeminent historians of the American West, and of the place and value of wilderness within that history. Hawk's Rest is an intense journal of the politics and ecology of one of America's wildest cores, in Yellowstone National Park. In many ways, this book is an important portrait of one of the foundations of our country's democracy, and of the struggles to hold on to that idea." —RICK BASS, author of All the Land to Hold Us "Hawks Rest is a long step toward a user's guide to wilderness, and a reverential and beautifully said hymn to the wild." —TIM CAHILL, author of Hold the Enlightenment and Jaguars Ripped My Flesh "A lyrical and often tough–minded evocation of a summer spent in the Yellowstone backcountry, a place that is, unexpectedly, full of larger-than-life characters, some of whom are admirable and some of whom are not.” —WILLIAM KITTREDGE, author of Hole in the Sky and The Nature of Generosity "Dazzling…an Edward Abbey–esque book, full of snappy vignettes and chiseled writing." —SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE "A sharp and ironic sense of what it's like to live in the American outback, twenty–first–century style." —NATURAL HISTORY MAGAZINE "A well-written work…if you love Yellowstone, a great treat." —DESERET NEWS "Ferguson evoke(s) feelings of solitude, timelessness and aching beauty in the smallest details…" —THE OREGONIAN "Mournful and defiant as a wolf howl…an eloquent tribute to a threatened place and its lone protectors." —LOS ANGELES TIMES Hawks Rest brings the wonder, politics, and wildness of one of America’s most vast and popular national parks to readers everywhere. With a new introduction by the author, this edition offers fresh insight into the condition of parks nationwide, while reintroducing readers to Ferguson's timeless tales and unique wisdom. Gary Ferguson is the author of twenty–two books including Through the Woods and, most recently, The Carry Home. He lives with his wife, Mary, in Montana's Beartooth Mountains, and in Portland, Oregon.