1st Edition

A New Theory of Landscape Aesthetics

By David Jacques Copyright 2027
220 Pages 36 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

220 Pages 36 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book reexamines the philosophical bases of landscape aesthetics and integrates it with the work of psychologists and neurologists to produce a much-revised account of landscape appreciation. Landscape aesthetics is a major driver for what we take pleasure in, where to live, and how to live. Paradoxically, there is no evolutionary or economic advantage to such behaviour, and a definitive... Read more

Preface

1. Traditional Theory on Beauty 

2. Philosophical Lucubrations 

3. Perception and Predictive Processing

4. Empirical Aesthetics and Processing Theories 

5. Neuroaesthetics and Other Workings of the Mind

6. Meaning and Identity

7. Aesthetic Pleasures

8. The Act of Appreciation

9. Idealising – How the World Ought to Be

10. Notes on Landscape Aesthetics

Biography

David Jacques, OBE, is a landscape historian and conservationist with an interest in cultural landscapes and landscape aesthetics. He has previously served as an Inspector of Historic Parks and Gardens at English Heritage, a consultant on historic garden restoration projects such as the Privy Garden at Hampton Court, and an advisor to ICOMOS on World Heritage Site nominations. He has taught landscape conservation for MA courses at the Institute of Advanced Architectural Studies at York, the Landscape Conservation MA at the Architectural Association, and the Institute of Historical Research at the University of London. His first publication on landscape aesthetics was in 1980, and his Landscape Appreciation: Theories since the Cultural Turn, a prequel to this book, appeared in 2019.