Skip to product information
1 of 1

Alexander F. Skutch and Dana Gardner

Origins of Nature's Beauty: Essays by Alexander F. Skutch

Origins of Nature's Beauty: Essays by Alexander F. Skutch

Regular price $17.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $17.00 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Condition
Binding

Near fine used hardcover. Dust jacket has small chips at corners. First edition.

A lifetime's keen observation of the physical world has led Alexander Skutch to ask deeply philosophical questions about the nature of "nature." In this thought-provoking study, he turns his attention to the problem of how "quality"--beauty, goodness, morality--has arisen in a process of evolution that appears to favor sheer "quantity."

Skutch draws his examples from the natural wonders he knows best--birds, butterflies, and flowers. He shows how each uses beauty to attract mates or pollinators and repel or hide from predators--all instances where quality serves the goal of increasing the quantity of a species. More than this, Skutch offers intriguing evidence that animals may possess an aesthetic sense and consciously choose beautiful objects, just as humans do.

These views, running counter to prevailing mechanistic explanations of natural processes, offer food for thought to both specialists and the general public. It is Skutch's deeply held conviction that naturalists should try to discover and make widely known whatever is "fair and heartening" in nature, in contrast to the apparent randomness and violence of Darwinian natural selection.

With illustrations by Dana Gardner.

this is a used book
Publisher University of Texas Press
Year 1992
Pages 292
Buteo Books #BC0370U

Explore more in Ornithology & Natural History

View full details