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How Nature Taught Man to Know, Imagine, and Reason

How Language and Literature Recreate Nature's Lessons

by Edward H. Strauch (Author)
©1995 Others XII, 320 Pages
Series: American University Studies , Volume 29

Summary

This exposition retraces the four distinct lessons early man derived from his intimate contact with nature as individual and as species. Nature taught man four archetypal lessons centered on omnipresent phenomena: camouflage, metamorphosis, the limits of life, and symbiosis. Abundant evidence for these modes of perception, imagination, and thinking is found in ancient and modern writing. This text describes each lesson nature taught man and explains how each is distinctly present in language, writing strategies, literature, poetics, and literary theories. Together, these modes compose the epistemology man has used over the millennia.

Details

Pages
XII, 320
Year
1995
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820424354
Language
English
Keywords
Camouflage Metamorphosis Symbiosis Thinking Limit
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt/M., Paris, Wien, 1995. XII, 320 pp.

Biographical notes

Edward H. Strauch (Author)

The Author: Eduard Hugo Strauch received his Diplôme Supérieur in French Civilization from the Sorbonne and his Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from Indiana University. He is the author of over twenty publications, including the book A Philosophy of Literary Criticism (1974). Dr. Strauch has taught in France, Austria, Africa, Iran, and Micronesia. He currently is an associate professor of English at the University of Guam, Mariana Islands.

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Title: How Nature Taught Man to Know, Imagine, and Reason