- Possibilism (geography)
Possibilism in
cultural geography is the theory that the environment sets certain constraints or limitations, but culture is otherwise determined by man's actions. InCultural ecology Marshall Sahlins used this concept in order to develop alternative approaches to theenvironmental determinism dominant at that time in ecological studies.The controversy between geographical "possibilism" and "determinism" might be considered as one of (at least) three dominant
epistemologic controversies of contemporary geography. The other two controversies are 1) the "debate between neopositivists and neokantians about the "exceptionalism" or the specificity of geography as a science [and 2)] the contention between Mackinder and Kropotkin about what is - or should be - geography." [José William Vesentini , [http://confins.revues.org/document1162.html "Controvérsias geográficas: epistemologia e política"] ,Confins (magazine) - Revue Franco-Brésilienne de Géographie]"Possibilism" in geography is, thus, considered as a distinct approach to geographical knowledge, directly opposed to geographical "determinism".
External links
* [http://courses.washington.edu/anth457/hist-lec.htm University of Washington lecture]
* [http://www.valpo.edu/geomet/histphil/test/vidal.html Valparaiso University on La Blache]ources
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