ABSTRACT

In this original and ambitious work, the renowned geographer Robert Sack argues for places that expand our awareness of reality and that increase the variety and complexity of reality. The joint application of these two criteria is the basis of a geographically informed moral theory that emphasizes the role of altruism. As well, it sheds light on the connection between the real and the good. Place-making that is guided by these criteria can affect our concepts of justice, our concerns about nature, and our views of democracy and the economy. What emerges is a geographical theory of morality based on the concepts of space, place, and place-making. Using historical and contemporary examples at all geographical scales to illustrate his theory, Sack forces readers see their geographical actions and everyday surroundings in an entirely new way.

part |84 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|38 pages

Geography, the Real, and the Good

chapter 2|44 pages

The Power of Place

part I|66 pages

Instrumental Judgments

chapter 3|20 pages

Situatedness and Relativism

chapter 4|44 pages

Situatedness and Absolutism

part II|116 pages

Intrinsic Judgments

chapter 5|40 pages

The Theory

chapter 6|42 pages

Geopsychological Dynamics

chapter 7|32 pages

Geosocial Dynamics

part |4 pages

PostScript

chapter 8|2 pages

The Problematic and Moral Theory