Wordsworth as scatterbrain: Deconstructing the 'nature' of William wordsworth's guide to the Lakes

Ethics, Place and Environment 11 (2):205 – 212 (1835)
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Abstract

In his Guide to the Lakes (1810, 1835), the English Romantic poet William Wordsworth used the word 'nature' in two senses. Sometimes it denoted a holistic ideal, in the manner of metaphysicians, and sometimes a concrete landscape of discrete things, in the manner of natural scientists. The Guide to the Lakes thus marks a watershed in Western philosophy of nature. Although chronologically the ideal preceded the concrete landscape, conceptually the concrete landscape precedes the ideal, much as in Nietzsche's 'fiction of causation'.

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Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society.Raymond Williams - 1977 - Science and Society 41 (2):221-224.
Ecocriticism.Greg Garrard - 2004 - Psychology Press.

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