I've been reading a little of
Robin Wall Kimmererand like how she looks at things. Here's a quote from an interview in "Sun"
magazine April 2016. Much of what she says in this interview makes sense to me. She is trained as a scientist and also is a proponant of
Traditional ecological knowledge
Both Western science and traditional ecological knowledge are methods of reading the land. But they're reading the land in different ways. Scientists use the intellect and the senses, usually enhanced by technology. They set spirit and emotion off to the side and bar them from participating. Often science dismisses indigenous knowledge as folklore-not objective or empirical, and thus not valid. But indigenous knowledge, too, is based on observation, on experiment. The difference is that it includes spiritual relationships and spiritual explanations. Traditional knowledge brings together the seen and the unseen, whereas Western science says that if we can't measure something, it doesn't exist.
Reading her history shows that she has combined both worlds successfully.
I wondered if anyone has read her
books?
Gathering Moss: A Natural and Cultural History of Mosses (Oregon State University Press, 2003) ISBN 0-87071-499-6.
Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants (Milkweed Editions, 2013) ISBN 9781571313355.