Laura Paquette - Ecology of Eden Ch 13 & 14
In the 13th and 14th chapters of the Ecology of Eden, Eisenberg writes about the distinction between the two images he commonly uses. He makes this between the "mountains" and the "towers" where the mountains refer to nature and the towers refer to people. He is mainly concerned with the relationships between them, how humans should have a "pastoral nature" toward nature and be like "shepherds". In the next chapter, Eisenberg goes on to explain the middle landscape and how we wouldn't be able to all live there or we wouldn't be pastoral to nature. Another point was about arcadia and how it is simply a phase but we cannot exists there infinitely. It can be seen as a "golden age" and references classical elements such as the Greek god Pan and its links to music.
To answer the question given, "what is the midpoint between mountains and towers?", I believe that the midpoint isn't a location, but rather a mode of living. How humans live with technology that will benefit nature and how nature can exist wild but incorporated into human civil life. I think in addition to biotechnological advancements with hydroponics, humans should seek more responsible everyday-use items as well. Perhaps implementing education programs that encourage this is a good place to start.
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