Kinnaman- Landscapes of the Sacred Ch. 2
Lane explains the meaning of giving voice to place. He writes of the two Greek words for place, topos and chora. Aristotle emphasized topos and understood it to be “a point no different of any other point, an inert container exerting no particular influence on the creatures or objects within it”. In comparison, Plato referred to chora as a place that “carries its own energy and power, summoning its participants to a common dance, to the “choreography” most appropriate to their life together”. In life experiences, topos may transition to chora. A “place without any distinctive sense of presence” may, in contrast, become a place of meaning.
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