ABSTRACT

In this work Tim Ingold offers a persuasive new approach to understanding how human beings perceive their surroundings. He argues that what we are used to calling cultural variation consists, in the first place, of variations in skill. Neither innate nor acquired, skills are grown, incorporated into the human organism through practice and training in an environment. They are thus as much biological as cultural. To account for the generation of skills we have therefore to understand the dynamics of development. And this in turn calls for an ecological approach that situates practitioners in the context of an active engagement with the constituents of their surroundings.

The twenty-three essays comprising this book focus in turn on the procurement of livelihood, on what it means to ‘dwell’, and on the nature of skill, weaving together approaches from social anthropology, ecological psychology, developmental biology and phenomenology in a way that has never been attempted before. The book is set to revolutionise the way we think about what is ‘biological’ and ‘cultural’ in humans, about evolution and history, and indeed about what it means for human beings – at once organisms and persons – to inhabit an environment. The Perception of the Environment will be essential reading not only for anthropologists but also for biologists, psychologists, archaeologists, geographers and philosophers.

This edition includes a new Preface by the author.

chapter |8 pages

General introduction

part I|180 pages

Livelihood

chapter Chapter 1|17 pages

Culture, nature, environment

Steps to an ecology of life

chapter Chapter 2|16 pages

The optimal forager and economic man

chapter Chapter 4|21 pages

From trust to domination

An alternative history of human–animal relations

chapter Chapter 6|27 pages

A circumpolar night's dream

chapter Chapter 7|27 pages

Totemism, animism and the depiction of animals

chapter Chapter 8|26 pages

Ancestry, generation, substance, memory, land

part II|174 pages

Dwelling

chapter Chapter 9|19 pages

Culture, perception and cognition

chapter Chapter 10|21 pages

Building, dwelling, living

How animals and people make themselves at home in the world

chapter Chapter 11|25 pages

The temporality of the landscape

chapter Chapter 12|14 pages

Globes and spheres

The topology of environmentalism

chapter Chapter 13|32 pages

To journey along a way of life

Maps, wayfinding and navigation

chapter Chapter 14|58 pages

Stop, look and listen!

Vision, hearing and human movement

part III|168 pages

Skill

chapter Chapter 15|23 pages

Tools, minds and machines

An excursion in the philosophy of technology

chapter Chapter 16|14 pages

Society, nature and the concept of technology

chapter Chapter 17|20 pages

Work, time and industry

chapter Chapter 18|13 pages

On weaving a basket

chapter Chapter 19|17 pages

Of string bags and birds' nests

Skill and the construction of artefacts

chapter Chapter 20|15 pages

The dynamics of technical change

chapter Chapter 21|25 pages

‘People like us’

The concept of the anatomically modern human

chapter Chapter 23|17 pages

The poetics of tool-use

From technology, language and intelligence to craft, song and imagination