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Homo geographicus : a framework for action, awareness, and moral concern

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TLDR
Sack's "Homo Geographicus" as mentioned in this paper provides a powerful intellectual broadside on behalf of reason as a faculty of mind that all humans share and provides possible moral directions for us to pursue so that we can be more responsible for our actions and make better our places, our homes, and the earth itself.
Abstract
"This brilliant book, reflecting an original mind and years of preparatory research, is a major work of contemporary geographical scholarship. It is perhaps the most important theoretical work in human geography of the past thirty years. 'Homo Geographicus' provides a powerful intellectual broadside on behalf of reason as a faculty of mind that all humans share. This will be a controversial book that will stimulate much-needed debate about geographical agency, spatiality, and postmodernist claims. An exemplary book."--John Agnew, Syracuse University "Robert Sack is one of the most original theoreticians in geography today. In 'Homo Geographicus' he continues his project of identifying the geographical sources of social life, and takes an important step toward giving the geographic perspective an essential and central role in modern social theory."--J. Nicholas Entrikin, University of California at Los Angeles "Written in straightforward and unpretentious language, 'Homo Geographicus' refocuses thinking about the nature of the geographic and provides a framework for why and how the various domains of study within the discipline of geography are intimately linked." --Billie Lee Turner II, George Perkins Marsh Institute, Clark University In 'Homo Geographicus' Sack offers nothing less than a philosophy and theory of geography. He maps out how nature, culture, self, and such geographical factors as space, place, home, and world fit together, enabling us to see more clearly how we transform the world and how we are affected by that transformation. He also provides possible moral directions for us to pursue so that we can be more responsible for our actions and make better our places, our home, and the earth itself.

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Land, terrain, territory

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Between Geography and Philosophy: What Does It Mean to Be in the Place-World?

TL;DR: The convergence between geography and philosophy has become increasingly manifest in the past two decades as mentioned in this paper, as if Strabo's celebrated opening claim in his Geographia had finally become true two millennia later: "The science of Geography, which I now propose to investigate, is, I think, quite as much as any other science, a concern of the philosopher" (Strabo I, 3).