Skip to content
DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.
DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.

Steps to an Ecology of Mind

Gregory Bateson
Barcode 9780226039053
Book

Sold out
Original price £22.15 - Original price £22.15
Original price
£22.15
£22.15 - £22.15
Current price £22.15

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 15/04/2000

Genre: Philosophy & Spirituality
Sub-Genre: Society & Culture
Label: University of Chicago Press
Language: English
Publisher: The University of Chicago Press

Gregory Bateson was a philosopher, anthropologist, photographer, naturalist and poet, as well as the husband and collaborator of Margaret Mead. This anthology of his major work contains a foreword by his daughter Mary Katherine Bateson. Gregory Bateson was a philosopher, anthropologist, photographer, naturalist, and poet, as well as the husband and collaborator of Margaret Mead. With a new foreword by his daughter Mary Katherine Bateson, this classic anthology of his major work will continue to delight and inform generations of readers.

"This collection amounts to a retrospective exhibition of a working life. Bateson has come to this position during a career that carried him not only into anthropology, for which he was first trained, but into psychiatry, genetics, and communication theory. He . examines the nature of the mind, seeing it not as a nebulous something, somehow lodged somewhere in the body of each man, but as a network of interactions relating the individual with his society and his species and with the universe at large."—D. W. Harding, New York Review of Books

"[Bateson's] view of the world, of science, of culture, and of man is vast and challenging. His efforts at synthesis are tantalizingly and cryptically suggestive.This is a book we should all read and ponder."—Roger Keesing, American Anthropologist