Machines, Watersheds, and Sustainability

The Pluralist 11 (1):110-116 (2016)
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Abstract

brook muller begins his contribution to the Coss Dialogues by contesting and at least partially deconstructing Le Corbusier’s aphorism “a house is a machine for living.” He then trades upon an ambiguity that masks the difference between watersheds that mark an important transition from one phase to another and those that are defined by the drainage area associated with a body of water. The 2015 Coss Dialogues took place in the watershed of the Grand River, which extends from its southeast limit near Jackson, Michigan, through my home in Lansing before emptying into Lake Michigan near Grand Haven, some 40 miles to the west of Grand Rapids. The main point that I take..

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Proceedings of the Middle West Branch of the American Oriental Society Grand Rapids, Michigan, February, 1976.[author unknown] - 1976 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 96 (2).

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Paul B. Thompson
Michigan State University

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