Seeing Things Whole: The Essential John Wesley Powell

Seeing Things Whole: The Essential John Wesley Powell
ISBN-10
1559638737
ISBN-13
9781559638739
Category
Nature
Pages
416
Language
English
Published
2004-01-01
Publisher
Island Press
Author
John Wesley Powell

Description

John Wesley Powell was an American original. He was the last of the nation's great continental explorers and the first of a new breed of public servant: part scientist, part social reformer, part institution builder. His work and life reveal an enduringly valuable way of thinking about land, water, and society as parts of an interconnected whole; he was America's first great bioregional thinker. Seeing Things Whole presents John Wesley Powell in the full diversity of his achievements and interests, bringing together in a single volume writings ranging from his gripping account of exploring the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon to his views on the evolution of civilization, along with the seminal writings in which he sets forth his ideas on western settlement and the allocation and management of western resources. The centerpiece of Seeing Things Whole is a series of selections from the famous 1878 Report on the Lands of the Arid Region and related magazine articles in which Powell further develops the themes of the report. In those, he recommends organizing the Arid Lands into watershed commonwealths governed by resident citizens whose interlocking interests create the checks and balances essential to wise stewardship of the land. This was the central focus of John Wesley Powell's bioregional vision, and it remains a model for governance that many westerners see as a viable solution to the resource management conflicts that continue to bedevil the region. Throughout the collection, award-winning writer and historian William deBuys brilliantly sets the historical context for Powell's work. Section introductions and extensive descriptive notes take the reader through the evolution of John Wesley Powell's interests and ideas from his role as an officer in the Civil War through his critique of Social Darwinism and landmark categorization of Indian languages, to the climatic yet ultimately futile battles he fought to win adoption of his land-use proposals. Seeing Things Whole presents the essence of the extraordinary legacy that John Wesley Powell has left to the American people, and to people everywhere who strive to reconcile the demands of society with the imperatives of the land.

Other editions

Similar books

  • Seeing All Things Whole: The Scientific Mysticism and Art of Kagawa Toyohiko (1888–1960)
    By Thomas John Hastings

    While Kagawa remained a Protestant his whole life, this fact may indicate a strong yet tacit “catholic” impulse in this great Japanese scientific mystic, especially when combined with his choice of Francis, à Kempis, and Ignatius as ...

  • Spirituality in Business: Theory, Practice, and Future Directions
    By J. Biberman, L. Tischler

    Her book Edgewalkers: People and Organizations That Take Risks, Build Bridges, and Break New Ground is a best-selling business book. Judi is the Academic Director for the Master of Arts in Organizational Leadership program at the ...

  • Robert K. Greenleaf: A Life of Servant Leadership
    By Don M. Frick

    Greenleaf discovered White's writing his first week in Manhattan, and White's outlook was to have a “very great . . . remarkable” influence on his ability to “see things whole.”23 To understand White's effect, which one can see ...

  • Vision and Place: John Wesley Powell and Reimagining the Colorado River Basin
    By Daniel McCool, Jason Robison, Thomas Minckley

    deBuys, Seeing Things Whole, 5. 11. Janet Neuman, “Dusting Off the Blueprint for a Dryland Democracy: Incorporating Watershed Integrity and Water Availability Into Land Use Decisions,” in Wet Growth: Should Water Law Control Land Use?, ...

  • The North American West in the Twenty-First Century
    By Brenden W. Rensink

    deBuys, Seeing Things Whole, 1, 139–208; Sweeney, Prelude to the Dust Bowl, 3–18. 21. deBuys, Seeing Things Whole, 1. 22. deBuys, Seeing Things Whole, 1. For a sense of Powell's detractors see Smythe, The Conquest of Arid America, 19, ...

  • More Hesselbein on Leadership
    By Frances Hesselbein

    These leaders who see the organization, the community, and the society whole will in the end sustain the democracy. That's the big picture of seeing ... seeing. Life. whole. in the end, seeing things whole is not just the imperative of ...

  • Timeless Leadership
    By , SAGE Publications India Pvt. Ltd

    Francis Hesselbein3 elaborates, In the end, seeing things whole is not just the imperative of business, government, and social sector leaders; the overarching, overriding imperative of seeing things whole rests with you and me.

  • The Study of Philosophy: A Text with Readings
    By Andrew Pessin, S. Morris Engel

    in Gordon Preece (ed.), Rethinking Peter Singer (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 2002), p. 102. 10. See, for example, Romans 8:19–25; Colossians 1:15–23. 11. For example, David John Atkinson, David Field, Arthur F. Holmes, ...

  • My Life in Leadership: The Journey and Lessons Learned Along the Way
    By Frances Hesselbein

    "Through her life story you will touch the marrow of a unique contributor to humanity. This book's appeal will transcend time and captivate the hearts of leaders around the globe.

  • Reconstructing a Christian Theology of Nature: Down to Earth
    By Anna Case-Winters

    Maintaining the integrity of creation entails seeing it whole, as a web of relations. ... A corollary to the habit of seeing things “whole” is the ethical task of making things whole in the sense of healing— healing the damage that has ...