ABSTRACT

Life Takes Place argues that, even in our mobile, hypermodern world, human life is impossible without place. Seamon asks the question: why does life take place? He draws on examples of specific places and place experiences to understand place more broadly. Advocating for a holistic way of understanding that he calls "synergistic relationality," Seamon defines places as spatial fields that gather, activate, sustain, identify, and interconnect things, human beings, experiences, meanings, and events.

Throughout his phenomenological explication, Seamon recognizes that places are multivalent in their constitution and sophisticated in their dynamics. Drawing on British philosopher J. G. Bennett’s method of progressive approximation, he considers place and place experience in terms of their holistic, dialectical, and processual dimensions. Recognizing that places always change over time, Seamon examines their processual dimension by identifying six generative processes that he labels interaction, identity, release, realization, intensification, and creation.

Drawing on practical examples from architecture, planning, and urban design, he argues that an understanding of these six place processes might contribute to a more rigorous place making that produces robust places and propels vibrant environmental experiences. This book is a significant contribution to the growing research literature in "place and place making studies."

chapter 1|7 pages

Life Takes Place

An Introduction

chapter 2|11 pages

Preliminaries for a Phenomenology of Place

Principles, Concepts, and Method

chapter 3|10 pages

Understanding Place Holistically

Analytic vs. Synergistic Relationality

chapter 4|14 pages

Explicating Wholeness

Belonging, Progressive Approximation, and Systematics

chapter 5|9 pages

The Monad of Place

chapter 6|14 pages

The Dyad of Place

chapter 7|17 pages

Understanding the Triad

Relationships, Resolutions, and Processes

chapter 15|10 pages

Integrating the Six Place Processes

chapter 16|15 pages

Life Takes Place

Criticisms, Concerns, and the Future of Places

chapter |8 pages

Postscript

Experience versus Knowledge and the Lived versus the Conceptual