Joseph Wood Krutch

The Forgotten Peninsula: A Naturalist in Baja California
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Great field book!
  • a lovely piece of writing about an amazing place
The Forgotten Peninsula: A Naturalist in Baja California
Joseph Wood Krutch
Manufacturer: University of Arizona Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

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ASIN: 0816509875

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great field book!.......2005-12-19

This is the book we use on NOLS expeditions, and we have to literally carry these books. It is worth carrying.

5 out of 5 stars a lovely piece of writing about an amazing place.......2003-07-13

This is one of the books that first drew me to Baja california years ago. Unfortunately much of what Krutch saw has inevitably been swept away by the rising tide of tourism & development, but enough remains that Krutch's lyrical prose is more than a eulogy, one can still find some of teh magic that he describes so well here. I would strongly reccomend this book to anyone planning on visiting Baja California and/or anyone who is interested in the intersection between natural history and literature -one gets both here.
Modern Temper: A Study And A Confession
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • The sea of faith was once at the full
  • A WINNING DEFEATIST:
  • Modernism vs retro-Victorian 'useful fiction'
  • A prophetic work
Modern Temper: A Study And A Confession
Joseph Wood Krutch
Manufacturer: Harvest Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

GeneralGeneral | Philosophy | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
CulturalCultural | Anthropology | Social Sciences | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
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  5. The Promise of Pragmatism: Modernism and the Crisis of Knowledge and Authority

ASIN: 0156617579

Book Description

Krutch's incisive examination of the dilemmas faced by modern man has proved remarkably prophetic. This book stands as an unflinchingly honest examination of the major moral questions of our era.

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars The sea of faith was once at the full .......2006-10-30

Krutch defines the modern temper in terms of the loss of a sense of the meaningfulness of life, and centrality of Man. The Darwinian revolution , the Copernician revolution the Freudian Revolution have made Mankind see itself as no longer the Center of all, with clear knowledge of Good and Evil, Right and Wrong. This picture of the modern Temper has its forbears, one might even say one can say it in the Bible itself, in Koheleth's 'vanity of vanities all is vanity'. Though Krutch defines the Modern Era in distinction to the Victorian Age that sense of certainties lost and gone is also present in it, as Arnold's great poem , "Dover Beach" indicates.
Clearly the First World War was also a great historical watershed which for many broke the sense of Mankind's inevitable progress, and ultimate Goodness.
Today we still struggle with the dilemnas and paradoxes Krutch ably outlines in this work.
One caveat. In his last chapter he speaks about the force of a new primitive collective which will come and take over from the old , apparently, worn- out , too lost- in- thought great power the United States. He hints strongly that that will be Russia.
We are well more than half a century from the time Krutch wrote this still in many ways relevant work. The Soviet Union has disintegrated. The United States, for all its problems and difficulties, remains the most vibrant large society in the world.
On another level many of the dilemnas Krutch saw arising from the triumph of materialism and science have intensified with Man's increasing inventiveness and capacity for creation. We now have powers of creation undreamed sixty or seventy years ago. And they too raise questions about our ultimate meaning and understanding.
This is a truly thought- provoking , elegantly and clearly written work. I recommend it highly.
One more point. I do not think that Krutch foresaw the way precisely the dilemnas he indicated would lead to a new varied quest for 'spirtituality' and religion at all levels.
This again is a sure indication of how human beings are far better at diagnosis than at prognosis.

5 out of 5 stars A WINNING DEFEATIST:.......2006-02-20

Perhaps the most problematic thinkers of the past for us to assess are those who accurately diagnosed the diseases of modernity but succumbed to them anyway. In his 1956 Preface to this 1929 collection of interconnected essays that apparently appeared mostly in The Atlantic Monthly, the critic Joseph Wood Krutch sums up the crisis of the age of materialism and sciencism as follows:

The universe revealed by science, especially the sciences of biology and psychology, is one in which the human spirit cannot find a comfortable home. That spirit breathes freely only in a universe where what philosophers call Value Judgments are of supreme importance. It needs to believe, for instance, that right and wrong are real, that Love is more than a biological function, that the human mind is capable of reason rather than merely of rationalization, and that it has the power to will and to choose instead of being compelled merely to react in the fashion predetermined by its conditioning. Since science has proved that none of these beliefs is more than a delusion, mankind will be compelled either to surrender what we call humanity by adjusting to the real world or to live some kind of tragic existence in a universe alien to the deepest needs of its nature.

While you could hardly ask for a description of the psychotic effects of belief in Science, the flaw in Krutch's conclusion is obvious: the third option is simply to choose to believe in humanity instead of in biology and psychology. That such a humanism is predicated on faith in God rather than in science can hardly be a bar, since we know, and have known, that Reason itself is ultimately nothing but a faith. What Krutch and others who despaired of the human condition in an Age of Reason had essentially done was just to choose a "tragic existence in a universe alien to the deepest needs of its nature," when they could instead have chosen, as their ancestors always had, and as most Americans still do, a universe where the human spirit breathes free.

The Modern Temper is a fascinating read and necessary to an understanding of the kind of spiritual nihilism that enabled Darwinism, Communism, Fascism, Existentialism, etc., but it is a a defeatist text. Mr. Krutch served a most lucid warning about the tenor of his times, but then ran up the white flag, which leaves the work fatally flawed.

4 out of 5 stars Modernism vs retro-Victorian 'useful fiction'.......2003-04-12

In his book The Modern Temper, Joseph W. Krutch defined the title concept to mean the angst-ridden state of mind exhibited by people in the 1910's and 1920's who wanted to return to the simpler ways of Victorian certainties and principles, such as the concept of man radicaly differentiated from animals, the existence of universal moral truths, and the certain existence of God. Unfortunately for them, Charles Darwin and his theory of evolution hit the Victorian fan, thus beginning the gradual unravelling of God, absolutes, and other Victorian principles. William James himself added fuel to the fire by espousing pragmatism as a method to actively find out a belief system that fits in with people's experiences.

The situation of people exhibiting that modern temper was akin to an adult nostalgically looking back to at his simple childhood, a world of poetry, mythology, and religion that was upset by the world of science. The ideal world was replaced by the world of Nature. The anthropomorphic God and human needs and feelings were ousted by Nature. Yet, there was a need to crawl back into the womb, as "the myth, having once been established, persists long after the assumptions upon which it was made have been destroyed, because, being born of desire, it is far more satisfactory than any fact".

The failure of the laboratory and hence of science underlined this dilemma. The scientific method came to be applied in fields such as history, philosophy, and anthropology, so why not lay out the human soul on the dissection table and start hacking away? However, science was used to seek out a light, such as ultraviolet or infrared, that man, limited in sight by the visible spectrum, was unable to see. Mankind thus lost its faith in its findings to discover that sought-for moral world.

The implications for love were likewise devastating. Formerly the thing that brought man closest to the divine state or the highest level possible, depending on how man saw himself, the value of love became a hormonal thing. Sex replaced love by demystifying and desanctifying it, increasing its accessibility.

The long-term implications of the modern temper and the yearning of returning to the pre-Darwinian womb hints at the collapse of the American Empire. Krutch mentioned how philosophical debates sapped the vitality of Greece to the point that it was conquered by the Romans, who after building an empire yielding enormous riches and comforts, suffered the same fate under philosophically innocent barbarians.

Metaphysics, which operated outside the realm of observable and objective reality, established certitudes such as ethics, whose realization caused a blooming of the human spirit. Yet science and applied Darwinism knocked down those certitudes like nine-pins, causing that human spirit to wilt as man realized the dissonance between the idealized world of his childhood and the harsh unrelenting world of Nature. The solution was to create the beneficent "fiction," transforming life to an art. All one has to do is to assume the existence of some moral order "and ... construct in his imagination a world where they actually do." And if the foundations of that fiction can be destroyed by science or the physical world, so what? One protects his world by erecting a Great Wall between it and the physical world. The trouble is twofold. One is the lack of ultimate conviction belied by any self-created world. The other is the believer's self-deceptive slide away from reality.

The advent of postmodernists and their struggles against premodernists and modernists in America seems to be that same debate that will make us soft and while we are busy arguing, the underbelly of our empire will be slit open by another country in the vitality stage. The question is who? A very thought-provoking book on the conflict between modernism and absolutism.

4 out of 5 stars A prophetic work.......2000-03-01

Written in the pivotal year 1929, Krutch captured in this series of essays the sense of foreboding that led into the nightmare decade and a half spanning the Depression '30s and the conclusion of World War II. His essential theme is that "the modern temper," one of questioning and skepticism, had led Man to a frightening crossroads where the old myths of the past -- religion, dramatic tragedy, devotion to family -- no longer worked, yet the technology and psychological insights that had remorselessly torn these values apart offered no consolation other than the promise of more objective knowledge.

Man was left instead, Krutch felt, with what is best described as the existential dilemma, although of course he didn't use this term. He saw Man as struggling to come to terms with the paradox of expanding knowledge. That is to say, the more we understand, the more it becomes clear that the universe of which we are only a tiny part spins according to its own laws, with no regard for Man's deep and abiding need for spiritual sustenance. Yet once Man has released the genie of technology and of skepticism, it is difficult to return to the old myths, in which Man was always placed at the center of the moral and spiritual universe.

This is a bleak book, yet it does much to explain the blind adherence to ideology that characterized the disastrous fascist, totalitarian movements of the 1930s. In this regard, a good companion read (and one that reaches a very different set of conclusions) is Viktor Frankl's "Man's Search for Meaning."
The Desert Year: A Naturalist and Philosopher Views the Pattern of the Desert World of the American Southwest
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • A Connecticut Yankee in Arizona
  • romantic to the core
  • The most extraordinary insight into the magic of Tucson.
The Desert Year: A Naturalist and Philosopher Views the Pattern of the Desert World of the American Southwest
Joseph Wood Krutch
Manufacturer: Penguin (Non-Classics)
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 0670001430

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A Connecticut Yankee in Arizona.......2003-06-08

Written over 50 years ago, this classic book of nature writing captures the near timelessness of the southern Arizona desert in a series of essays describing the author's fifteen-month sojourn there. While Krutch harks back to Thoreau, his perspective, turns of thought, and style of expression are similar to the reflective essays of E. B. White. They begin with observations of plant and animal life and evolve into ruminations on the nature of human life.

Krutch writes of birds, the night sky, bats, saguaro cactus, ocotillo, and desert flowers. Considering them, he rediscovers the truth in ideas he has so long held as true that they've become near platitudes. Where there is plentitude in some things, for instance, there is no need for it in others. Nature cares for the species but not individuals, while human values tend toward the opposite. While every rose has its thorn, the blooming cactus shows us that the reverse is also true. A visit to the vastness and forbidding desert monuments of Cathedral Valley in south central Utah reminds him of the precariousness of human life.

The desert leads Krutch to contemplation of its paradoxes, as well. For instance, the struggle for life here where conditions for survival are more restrictive actually create an uncrowded and more serene ecosystem by comparison with the tropics. The varieties of bird life are vastly greater here than in more temperate climates. A species of toads can live unseen and unheard for 363 days of the year, emerging after a rain fall to sing and reproduce, then disappear and survive somehow in the waterless months between. Finally, there's one question he's never able to answer: why bats fly clockwise from Carlsbad cave.

You can't really know a place, he believes, until you have seen it both as novel and as familiar. A landscape is no more than a picture postcard until you have spent time there and discover yourself in the midst of it. "The Desert Year" is a wonderful account of that process and a celebration of the joy that can be found in settling down for a while in a place that gradually comes to feel like home.

5 out of 5 stars romantic to the core.......2002-01-05

Here is a converted desert romantic with an interest in not only nature but man. Krutch writes and hits the mark like Thoreau and Eiseley and you won't want to miss him or this book if you're looking for a little sanity in a world gone mad.

5 out of 5 stars The most extraordinary insight into the magic of Tucson........1999-07-14

If you have an interest in the desert and why we live here with JOY you must read this book. Krutch was an extraordinary man and he lived an extraordinary life his first year here. This book is the story of why he stayed instead of returning to New York. It is perhaps the most admired book about Tucson that has ever been written.
The Grand Canyon: Today and All Its Yesterdays
Average customer rating: Not rated
    The Grand Canyon: Today and All Its Yesterdays
    Joseph Wood Krutch
    Manufacturer: Univ of Arizona Pr
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Paperback

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    ASIN: 0816511128
    And even if you do; essays on man, manners & machines
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      And even if you do; essays on man, manners & machines
      Joseph Wood Krutch
      ProductGroup: Book
      Binding: Unknown Binding
      ASIN: B00005VE6N
      From Henry David Thoreau: "In Wildness Is the Preservation of the World". Selections & Photographs By Eliot Porter
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        From Henry David Thoreau: "In Wildness Is the Preservation of the World". Selections & Photographs By Eliot Porter
        Henry David Thoreau
        Manufacturer: Sierra Club - Ballantine Books
        ProductGroup: Book
        Binding: Paperback
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        ASIN: B000CF59N6
        GREAT CHAIN OF LIFE PA
        Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
        • most meaningful
        GREAT CHAIN OF LIFE PA
        Joseph Wood Krutch
        Manufacturer: Houghton Mifflin
        ProductGroup: Book
        Binding: Paperback

        GeneralGeneral | Nature & Ecology | Science | Subjects | Books
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        ASIN: 0395259436

        Customer Reviews:

        5 out of 5 stars most meaningful.......2007-01-04

        To have a sense of all that is in nature and the sense of balance, for a full and intelligent appreciation of the natural world, in a single readable volume - this is the book. A great book. I have read this twice in 20 years and expect to read it again, for perspective, and to still learn.
        The voice of the desert
        Average customer rating: Not rated
          The voice of the desert
          Joseph Wood Krutch
          Manufacturer: Cottonwood Public Library
          ProductGroup: Book
          Binding: Unknown Binding

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          ASIN: B0006XX1NE
          Measure of Man on Freedom, Human Values, Survival and the Modern Temper
          Average customer rating: Not rated
            Measure of Man on Freedom, Human Values, Survival and the Modern Temper
            Joseph Wood Krutch
            Manufacturer: Peter Smith Publisher Inc
            ProductGroup: Book
            Binding: Hardcover

            ModernModern | Philosophy | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
            ASIN: 0844607495
            The Best Nature Writing of Joseph Wood Krutch
            Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
            • toward a commitment to conservation
            The Best Nature Writing of Joseph Wood Krutch
            Joseph Wood Krutch
            Manufacturer: University of Utah Press
            ProductGroup: Book
            Binding: Paperback

            ClassicsClassics | General | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
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            ASIN: 0874804809

            Customer Reviews:

            5 out of 5 stars toward a commitment to conservation.......2007-01-03

            Krutch was an amateur naturalist and a great speaker for the cause of conservation. This is quite simply one of the most important books I have ever read. I had been reading Krutch's nature books one at a time over many years. This representative and highly readable collection brings it all together! Great book.

            Authors:

            1. Marie Krysinska
            2. Marilyn Krysl
            3. Michael P. Kube-McDowell
            4. Maxine Kumin
            5. Milan Kundera
            6. Stanley Kunitz
            7. A.I. Kuprin
            8. Vyacheslav Kupriyanov
            9. Hanif Kureishi
            10. Katherine Kurtz

            Authors

            Authors