THEthe world, judging by the 4 books to read of the weekit’s not just what appears: that’s much more. It is a live organism where everything, but everything lives. The trees live, the pittime and the alletins of Lapland live. Our same universe lives.

They are fascinating readings those selected because they make us understand one thing basically: Man is not the absolute master of the earth, the man is only part of it. The earth and its creatures have in fact coexized for billions of years transforming a cluster of orbiting rock into a cosmic oasis, a planet that breathes, metabolizes and regulates its climate.

And, although it is now acquired by the science that the senses are not only five as Aristotle claimed, but many more, we humans continue to “think about” that way and, in doing so, We lose infinite nuances of ourselves.

4 books to read to overcome the anthropocentric vision

In Sentients The zoologist Jackie Higgins on his journey around the world to study animals, he discovered, for example, The allec of Lapland that feels twenty decibel twenty under the limit of the human ear. The tiny mole with a starred muzzle that “sees” with his miraculous nose. And then the Pcome out-fantasma with his night vision. It says that ciascuna of these creatures embodies a sense that exists, dormant, even within us.

A fascinating story, as well as Markus Zusak’s Memoir, Swiss bestseller writer, who in Three huge dogs and some human (Piemme) tells in an exciting story the story of the adoption of his three dogs, Reuben, Archer And FROSTY which brought the C to the housetotal aos. But, at the same time, time lessons to be learned.

Read trees

Books to read

In the same way the writer and member of the Royal Institute of Navigation and the Royal Geographical Society, Tristan Gooley, He tells us in his Read trees (Others) that each tree is like a book: the leaves, the resin, the footprints of animals around the roots are signs that reveal secrets on its life and on the landscape in which we find ourselves, clues to the secret language of trees and natural wonders around us.
Every tree we meet can talk to us, if we know how to listen to it, and explain to us where we are, and perhaps even who we really are.

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