A Philosophy of Gardens by David E Cooper - review by Charles Elliott

Charles Elliott

The Telos of Titchmarsh

A Philosophy of Gardens

By

Oxford University Press 184pp £17.99
 

This terrifying little book represents an attempt by a professor of philosophy to establish – what else? – a philosophy of gardens. None, he argues, presently exists. There is plenty of garden writing, discussion of gardens, theorising about what makes a garden good or bad, but no real philosophy of gardens acceptable to a critical thinker like himself. 

Drawing on a galaxy of big names for help, from Schopenhauer, Nietzsche and Kant to Wittgenstein and Heidegger, David Cooper bravely and steadily hacks his way through a jungle of propositions and logical contradictions. What is a garden? Is it a form of art? Or of nature? Should a garden