Geography as a Science of the Earth's Surface Founded on the Third View of Space
Bin Jiang

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new geography based on a third, organismic view of space, emphasizing living structures and hierarchical substructures to better understand and make Earth's surface more alive.
Contribution
It introduces a novel third view of space as a living structure and develops fundamental laws and principles for a geography rooted in this perspective.
Findings
Tobler's law and scaling law are fundamental to living structures.
Living structures differ from non-living ones by their hierarchical and adaptive features.
The approach applies across multiple scales, from small ornaments to the entire Earth's surface.
Abstract
The third (or organismic) view of space states that space is neither lifeless nor neutral, but a living structure capable of being more living or less living, thus different fundamentally from the first two mechanistic views of space: Newtonian absolute space and Leibnizian relational space. The living structure is defined as a physical and mathematical structure or simply characterized by the recurring notion (or inherent hierarchy) of far more small substructures than large ones. This paper seeks to lay out a new geography as a science of the Earth's surface founded on the third view of space. The new geography aims not only to better understand geographic forms and processes but also - maybe more importantly - to make geographic space or the Earth's surface to be living or more living. After introducing two fundamental laws of geography: Tobler's law on spatial dependence (or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrban Design and Spatial Analysis · Land Use and Ecosystem Services · Urban Green Space and Health
