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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
The John Muir Newsletter, Fall/Winter 2011/2012, The John Muir Center
The John Muir Newsletter, Fall/Winter 2011/2012, The John Muir Center
Muir Center Newsletters, 1981-2015
Fall/Winter 2011/2012 ; LA--/*. ; oJW J\\AAAA, uLwtiAjU)OlGA, THE JOHN MUIR CENTER SPECIAL POINTS OF INTEREST: The present is the key to the past. Muir would apply geological formation and specifically the action of glacial ice to the handiwork of God. Muir chose to live "to entice people to look at Nature's loveliness." In the beginning and to the end botany was the foundation upon which Muir's work as a preservationist grew and glacial studies were seamlessly connected to his study of plants. An Essay P h e n o m on John E N A L S C I …
The John Muir Newsletter, Spring/Summer 2011, The John Muir Center
The John Muir Newsletter, Spring/Summer 2011, The John Muir Center
Muir Center Newsletters, 1981-2015
Page 1 transcription missing
PAGE 2 LEGACY Exploring John Muir' Through Photography and Film :::.':: i: :::: in Catherine Tatge & Claudia Hanna On April 13, around 150 gathered in Pacific's Janet Leigh Theatre for a special program celebrating Muir and his legacy. Photographer Scot Miller of Fort Worth discussed the many backcountry trips he took retracing Muir's route that led to his book, My First Summer in the Sierra, published in 1911. The centennial edition, published by Houghton-Mifflin, Muir's original press, features Miller's photographs in the Sierra. Miller also shared a video of his trips in the Sierra with …
The Role Of Nature In John Muir's Conception Of The Good Life, Randy R. Larsen
The Role Of Nature In John Muir's Conception Of The Good Life, Randy R. Larsen
Antioch University Full-Text Dissertations & Theses
Aristotle says our best moral guidance comes from considering the lives of exemplary individuals. I explore John Muir, as an exemplar of environmental virtue, and consider the role of Nature in his conception of the good life. I argue his conception consists of a web of virtue including various goods, values, and virtues. I suggest three virtues are cardinal: attentiveness, gratitude and reverence. I explore how Muir cultivated these virtues in Nature.
I argue Muir sought freedom from a popular conception of the good life, grounded in the gilded age values of money and materialism, and was sensitive to the …