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A Sacred Unity

Further Steps to an Ecology of Mind

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
376 Seiten
2023 | 2nd ed.
Triarchy Press (Verlag)
978-1-913743-79-6 (ISBN)
CHF 43,60 inkl. MwSt
In 31 posthumously collected lectures and writings, anthropologist, systems thinker and cyberneticist Gregory Bateson (1904-1980) addresses questions of ecology, mind, consciousness, linguistics, evolution and communication. His masterly synthesis stresses the need to re-establish a “sacred unity” between the human mind and the biosphere.
Gregory Bateson died in 1980, but his work grows more and more relevant each year. In his wide-ranging, penetrating thought he illuminated many dimensions of human interaction and of our connection to the wider biological world.

One of the questions that runs through this book is “how to describe a living system without killing it?” This starts early with Bateson’s anthropological work on culture, and runs through into ecology, identity, change, evolution and learning. How to talk about these things – and organisms that are experiencing them – without resorting to typologies?

The sacred and its relationship to a description of ecology is foremost. As are the puzzles of being an individual in culture in a whole vast collection of biological relationships and cultural idea-relationships – and how to bring all of those into the field of ecology.

The answer to the question “what is the world?” is “it’s what I perceive it to be.” And the question of what I perceive is only going to begin to have some looseness in it, when the question is asked: “Are you perceiving the world, or are you perceiving your perception?” Perhaps this question is the beginning of the possibility of loosening the matrix.

When Bateson talks about coevolution – the way that the grass changes when the horse changes, and the horse changes as the grass changes, along with multiple other organisms – there is change taking place so that they can stay in relationship. But in order to continue the relationships all the organisms have to change. In order to change, they have to be able to have a perception shift. And yet, it should be impossible. It should be that the organisms can only do what the organisms do. And a horse is a horse, and the grass is the grass. But life shows us again and again, things change. In fact, that is the basis of continuing to be alive in an ecology; to change. Continuing requires discontinuing.

Many of the articles in this book are about ‘wiping your glosses’ – the glosses that accumulate in psychiatry, anthropology, ecology, education, and getting to see a little bit more clearly, which always means seeing relationship and always means seeing parts and wholes encompassed within bigger wholes.

As he develops his theory of evolution he says it’s not the individual organism or species that evolves. It’s the organism-plus-the-environment that evolves.

This book is a forest of ideas explored though many careful visits. Order, change, learning, health, harm, perception … what is it to be alive? Each chapter is full of the rigor of someone who does not want to underestimate the lifeforms in view and knows that many more life-processes are present, but not (yet) perceivable. There is room in these pages to allow the overlaps and the understories to tangle and seep between the chapters and let them describe each other. There is not an agreed upon way to understand this work, each reader will find their own way through within their own experiences. And the next time you read it, you will find that either the chapters or you have changed again…

Anthropologist, biologist, philosopher, student of behavior and experience in virtually every arena of human life, Gregory Bateson (1904-1980) was one of the most far-reaching thinkers of the twentieth century, an explorer who always saw the connections between the various objects and realms of his explorations. Bateson thus occupies a position uniquely suited to assist us in unifying our ever more fragmented lives and knowledges, as well as to teach us—between the lines—about love, elegance, clarity, and understanding.

Introduction to the 2023 edition
Introduction to the 1991 edition
Editor’s Note on the Selection and Arrangement of Material

PART I Form and Pattern in Anthropology
Cultural Determinants of Personality
Human Dignity and the Varieties of Civilization
Sex and Culture
Naven: Epilogue 1958
Distortions Under Culture Contact
Some Components of Socialization for Trance
From Anthropology to Epistemology

PART II Form and Pathology in Relationship
The New Conceptual Frames for Behavioral Research
Cultural Problems Posed by a Study of Schizophrenic Process
A Social Scientist Views the Emotions
The Double-Bind Theory—Misunderstood?
The Growth of Paradigms for Psychiatry

PART III Epistemology and Ecology
Mind/Environment
The Thing of It Is
A Formal Approach to Explicit, Implicit, and Embodied Ideas, and to Their Forms of Interaction
The Birth of a Matrix, or Double Bind and Epistemology
This Normative Natural History Called Epistemology
Our Own Metaphor: Nine Years After
The Science of Knowing
Men Are Grass: Metaphor and the World of Mental Process

PART IV Health, Ethics, Aesthetics, and the Sacred
Language and Psychotherapy—Frieda Fromm-Reichmann’s Last Project
The Moral and Aesthetic Structure of Human Adaptation
A Systems Approach 243
The Creature and Its Creations
Ecology of Mind: The Sacred
Intelligence, Experience, and Evolution
Orders of Change
The Case Against the Case for Mind/Body Dualism
Symptoms, Syndromes, and Systems
Seek the Sacred: Dartington Seminar
“Last Lecture”

Bibliography of the Published Work of Gregory Bateson
Acknowledgments ~ 1991
Acknowledgments ~ 2023
Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo 20 black and white illustrations
Verlagsort Bridport
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Erkenntnistheorie / Wissenschaftstheorie
Sozialwissenschaften Ethnologie
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 1-913743-79-9 / 1913743799
ISBN-13 978-1-913743-79-6 / 9781913743796
Zustand Neuware
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