BiophiliaHarvard University Press, 1984 - 157 pages Biophilia is Edward O. Wilson’s most personal book, an evocation of his own response to nature and an eloquent statement of the conservation ethic. Wilson argues that our natural affinity for life—biophilia—is the very essence of our humanity and binds us to all other living things. |
Table des matières
Prologue | |
Bernhardsdorp | 1 |
The Superorganism | 21 |
The Time Machine | 37 |
The Bird of Paradise | 49 |
The Poetic Species | 55 |
The Serpent | 81 |
The Right Place | 101 |
The Conservation Ethic | 117 |
Surinam | 139 |
Reading Notes | 145 |
Acknowledgments | 157 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
adult Agassiz American ants Asa Gray beautiful behavior Bernhardsdorp biologists biology biophilia bird of paradise body Bouterse brain Cambridge cells chemical chimpanzee close colony conservation ethic create creatures culture cycle Darwin David Hilbert distance diversity dreams ecology emotions environment equilibrium evolution evolutionary exist experience explored fauna foraging fungus garden genes genetic giant grass grows habitat head human hundred individual insects island Kanzi kind land leafcutter leafcutter ants look MacArthur machine Manaus ment mental million mind molecular molecules monkeys natural selection naturalist nest number of species organisms original Paramaribo Peirce plants and animals population pygmy chimpanzee queen rain forest Saramacca River savanna scientific scientists serpent snakes soil South Sue Savage-Rumbaugh Superorganism surface Surinam symbols T. S. Eliot theory thousand tion tree tropical turn University Press vegetation walked wild woodland words workers World Wildlife Fund York