How is the natural life of a place shaped by its geography?
Answers
Answered by
0
hey budy
here ur answer
The ancient Romans believed every place—from a street corner to an entire nation—possessed a genius loci, a presiding spirit that animated it, watched over it. Today, we dismiss such fanciful notions, and in fact gleefully pronounce the death of geography itself. Digital technologies have dissolved the inconvenient confines of the physical world, leaving us free to frolic in a placeless present. Or so we’re told. To butcher Mark Twain, rumors of geography’s demise have been greatly exaggerated. Not only is geography distinctly undead, it is more alive than ever.
i hope it help u
here ur answer
The ancient Romans believed every place—from a street corner to an entire nation—possessed a genius loci, a presiding spirit that animated it, watched over it. Today, we dismiss such fanciful notions, and in fact gleefully pronounce the death of geography itself. Digital technologies have dissolved the inconvenient confines of the physical world, leaving us free to frolic in a placeless present. Or so we’re told. To butcher Mark Twain, rumors of geography’s demise have been greatly exaggerated. Not only is geography distinctly undead, it is more alive than ever.
i hope it help u
Similar questions