Showing posts with label anthropology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anthropology. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Butterflies: Decoding Their Signs and Symbols Review

Butterflies: Decoding Their Signs and Symbols
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Butterflies: Decoding their Signs and Symbols" by Philip Howse, is as creative as it is beautiful. Dr. Howse will intrigue biologists and naturalists with his new vision of mimicry and its implications for understanding evolution. Whether it is a moth that looks like a snake, or a butterfly that has large spots on its wings giving the appearance of huge menacing eyes this book challenges the imagination and scientific understanding of its readers. But it doesn't stop there ... Howse shows how many images from Nature have found their way onto artifacts throughout history, some on priceless objects stored in the world's museums. What makes this book different from other natural history books is how Philip Howse elegantly weaves together his insights, backed by over 50 years of personal scientific study, with carefully researched historical knowledge, supported by remarkably beautiful images. This book deserves a place on every coffee table, but it also a book that must be read and which which will change the way you see things . It will delight readers of all ages.

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A pioneering exploration of butterfly markings and how humans respond to them.
People have always marveled at the colors, patterns and designs on the wings of butterflies and moths, but there has been little attempt to decode them or to recognize any great significance in them.

In Butterflies: Decoding Their Signs & Symbols Philip Howse explains how these markings protect butterflies and moths from their principal predators, including birds, lizards and monkeys. These insectivores, he argues, detect their prey by perceiving small details of shape and color rather than the "whole picture" of the insect. These details can create an illusion that camouflages the butterfly or threatens its predator.

If humans look at the detail on a butterfly in the way that a bird sees it, surprising images reveal themselves: owls' eyes, snakes' heads, caterpillars, lizards, wasps, scorpions, birds' beaks, feathers. Howse explores how these signs and symbols, so important in the animal world, became archetypal symbols in our world. Photographs and illustrations chronicle how butterflies and their markings have appeared throughout history, whether on cave walls and in modern art or in our most important mythologies, where they were transformed into the Mother Goddesses by the ancient Greeks, the ancient Egyptians and the Aztecs.

Butterflies: Decoding Their Signs & Symbols is a fascinating illustrated study of butterflies, but it also poses provocative questions and offers conclusions that will leave readers with a new view of the natural world and how they perceive it. Naturalists and lepidopterists will find it of particular interest.


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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Opportunity's Shadow and the Bee Moth Effect: When Danger Transforms Community: An Existential Psychology Approach to Chaos and Choice in Social, Community, Clinical, and Iatrogenic Contexts Review

Opportunity's Shadow and the Bee Moth Effect: When Danger Transforms Community: An Existential Psychology Approach to Chaos and Choice in Social, Community, Clinical, and Iatrogenic Contexts
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Useful for classes on understanding Trauma (PTSD) and Psychology. Dynamic clarity. Endorsements on back include anthropologist Barbara Tedlock, Sociologist/Psychologist Nathan Hare, Psychologists Stephen M. Johnson, and Bert Karon.

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A compelling contemporary topic, transformation of communities in danger, is addressed with fresh concepts and terminology; a breakthrough book useful to professionals in psychology & related fields and yet viable as trade or text It is written in lively engaging fashion suitable for textbook use in courses on social, community, clinical and counseling psychology- either for graduate or advanced undergraduate courses, as supplemental text, or in trade/professional use.It's unique Existential Lifespan Psychology focus on classic and current well publicized community opportunities, and hazards, offers psychologists and their students in the field fresh clarity and practical approaches for useful transformation

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Friday, September 16, 2011

The Rose's Kiss Review

The Rose's Kiss
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I'm a garden writer myself (Allergy-Free Gardening, Ten Speed Press) and I just finished reading The Rose's Kiss by Peter Bernhardt. I really enjoyed this book and was amazed at how much I learned too. I read quite a bit of botanical-based material and all too often find the writing very dry, factual but not much fun to read. This book though, is just the opposite--it is fun and totally interesting and you'll learn a great deal from it...be you a botanist, gardener, or just someone who likes to learn more about science.
Peter Bernhardt (who I don't know personally and have never met) has a deep understanding and obvious love of botany and it shows. He is also a very fine writer and he explains things so well, so clearly, that they stick in your mind. I expect that he is also a terrific teacher since he is so expert at explaining complicated material in a simple, easy to understand way. He also tosses in hundreds of fascinating little tidbits of information as he explains flowers, for this is a book about flowers, how they're formed, how they work, how they're pollinated---great section on bats and possums and other small animals that pollinate flowers.
I like too the way he explains exactly what each scientific name means and that he always gives the reader the origins of the word.
I underlined heavily my copy of The Rose's Kiss and it is a book that I'll keep going back over, reading again all the many sections I've underlined. This book was a present to me from my Dad, and I would highly recommend it as a present for anyone you care about who has more than a passing interest in botany, horticulture, life sciences, and (or) Nature and gardening. A terrific book!

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