Native Science: Natural Laws of Interdependence *[Book]

In Native Science, Gregory Cajete "tells the story" of Indigenous science as a way of understanding, experiencing, and feeling the natural world. He points to parallels and differences between the Indigenous science and Western science paradigms, with special emphasis on environmental/ecological studies. After discussing philosophical foundations, Cajete addresses such topics as history and myth, primal elements, social ecology, animals in myth and reality, plants and human health, and cosmology and astronomy. In the Indigenous view, we human observers are in no way separate from the world and its creatures and forces. Because all creatures and forces are related and thus bear responsibility to and for one another, all are co-creators. Five centuries ago Europeans arrived on the American continent, but they did not listen to the people who had lived for millennia in spiritual and physical harmony with this land. In a time of global environmental degradation, the science and worldview of the continent's First Peoples offer perspectives that can help us work toward solutions. Read more

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Why Must Read Native Science: Natural Laws of Interdependence?

This book is a comprehensive treatment of native American metaphysics and ways of knowing. Although the diversity of traditions and stories is very wide, I believe it provides a good general treatment of the naturalistic approaches to knowledge of the indigenous peoples of the Americas. Daniel J. Thompson, Ph.D.

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