
The Spell of the Sensuous
Perception and Language in a More-Than-Human World
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Narrated by:
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Sean Runnette
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By:
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David Abram
For a thousand generations, human beings viewed themselves as part of the wider community of nature, and they carried on active relationships not only with other people but with other animals, plants, and natural objects (including mountains, rivers, winds, and weather patterns) that we have only lately come to think of as "inanimate". How, then, did humans come to sever their ancient reciprocity with the natural world? What will it take for us to recover a sustaining relationship with the breathing earth?
In The Spell of the Sensuous, David Abram draws on sources as diverse as the philosophy of Merleau-Ponty, Balinese shamanism, Apache storytelling, and his own experience as an accomplished sleight-of-hand magician to reveal the subtle dependence of human cognition on the natural environment. He explores the character of perception and excavates the sensual foundations of language, which - even at its most abstract - echoes the calls and cries of the earth. In this lyrical work, Abram weaves his arguments with a passion, a precision, and an intellectual daring that recall such writers as Loren Eisleley, Annie Dillard, and Barry Lopez.
©1996 David Abram (P)2017 TantorListeners also enjoyed...




















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Mind blowing
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Be ready to engage your intellect!
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this narrator should president over funerals.
interesting ideas terrible narration
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I think it's very unlikely that anyone will love ALL of this book. Some people will really like the anthropological/scientific/historical rigor and learning about human language and history, and will get a little impatient with the flowery descriptions. Others will like the poetic and "big picture" parts and get a little bored with the nitty-gritty academic sections. But if you stick with it, it really does all come together in the end and it's totally worth it, so I encourage people to be patient and keep an open mind, either way!
Dense but worth it!
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There is no book as poetic as intellectual aa this
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The first written languages were pictographic or idiomatic, using symbols that represented aspects of the natural world (wavy lines represent flowing water, for example). But with phonetic writing, the symbols with which we recorded our experience and observations stopped representing what they described, and began to represent instead the sounds of the human voice. The letters of the alphabet do not describe Nature; they tell us how to say the words humans use to describe Nature. The subtle yet historically profound consequence is that we traded our direct I-Thou relationship with reality for a primary relationship with written text, with the sound of our own voice. Our sense of I-Thou was transferred from the ocean, the forest, the mountain, the gazelle, to the written page describing those things.
Abrams makes the startling point that we did not transition at that point from animism to materialism; we did not become "no longer animistic." Rather we transferred our animism from the world to the word. From Nature to the written page. Consider that, as I type this review, I am filling pixels with shapes and scratches (letters that represent sounds made by the human mouth/tongue/voice). That's not what your brain is experiencing, though, looking at these scratches. You are hearing a voice in your head. You may be seeing images stirred by these words. You are in an animistic relationship with these written words, this electronic text. According to Abrams we once had that same kind of relationship with the natural world. We understood the voices of wind and water, birds calls and animal behavior, as directly as you and I agree on the meaning of these written words. Now we are trapped in a mental world one step removed from the natural reality we still depend on for physical survival. A world made rigid, frozen in time and space, by the unchangeability of text, the fixedness of recorded history, the "factuality" of material science, the unshakeable literalness of shared canons of knowledge.
I am reminded, writing this review, of the theory that has become popular lately that we are living in a computer simulation. The universe is not what it appears to be, but is rather a complex computer program designed to mimic reality, created by some ancient aliens or ultradimensional intelligences. Well, maybe our simulacrum isn't quite so high-tech, and maybe no aliens are necessary to explain it. Maybe we have written ourselves into a textual human world divorced from Nature, and stepped into that world as if it were real. Maybe we are the aliens. Maybe the simulation is a story we're writing, phonetic word, by word, by word.
Lots of food for thought here . If the concepts I've outlined in this review resonate with you, put The Spell of the Sensuous on your must-read list.
The Spell of the Sensuous is a book that could cha
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Stellar introduction to a revolutionary approach to language, nature and the human embedded in the natural world.
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wonderful
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Spellbound
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Phenomenal
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