Abstract
Urban ecology is increasingly interdisciplinary, with biophysical and social scientists joining forces to study how human and built environments and processes interact with non-human nature. Humanistic disciplines that study high culture and intellectual currents also bear upon urban ecology, since cities are not simply aggregates of human and non-human factors but seats of civilization and loci of concentrated creative energy. The Russian city of St. Petersburg, which Dostoevsky called “the most abstract and intentional city in the world,” offers an example of the way individual acts of intellectual and artistic creation affect the energy balance of a city and its interaction with ecological forces. Such concentrated creative energy may be a key to making cities sustainable, and it should not remain outside the calculus of urban ecology.
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May, R. Editorial—On the role of the humanities in urban ecology: The case of St. Petersburg. Urban Ecosystems 7, 7–15 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1023/B:UECO.0000020168.12869.45
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/B:UECO.0000020168.12869.45