Nature is important one to every one.. and we should protect nature because if we protest nature nature protest we as soon as possible While people created art and built cities and argued about golden ratios, the natural world continued existing. In Western colonial cultures, a renewed appreciation for the beauty of the natural world grew steadily throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries—I imagine this as wealthy white society looking out at rugged or serene landscapes and saying things like hmm and aah and yonder.
But why does there seem to be a universal appeal when it comes to certain types of landscape, and how do you know that sunsets are beautiful?
For some, natural beauty means the absence of perfection or repetition, but for others it is the widespread, symmetrical repetition that is so pleasing, so meaningful, so memorable—both havoc and order are spread richly throughout the natural world.
Over ten years ago a psychology professor working in Tokyo, Shigeru Watanabe, found that Java sparrows could distinguish between harmonious and discordant music, preferring the more tuneful tunes, and perhaps that is all human appreciation is too.
Conspiracy theorists on social media questioned the painting's authenticity, suggesting the man was holding an "iPhone." The debate reached such an extent that
Cook
became involved and responded by saying he was not sure whether Apple had been the maker of the iPhone.
Users on
sparked the discussion, asking whether time travel is real or not. The object in the painting somewhat resembles the iPhone, leading users to make all kinds of claims based on conspiracy theories.
Identified as Syed Tabia and Syed Bisma, they are daughters of Syed Sajad, who leads the prayers in his Watoo village in Kulgam. The sisters were studying in a Srinagar coaching centre. Their father and the sisters insisted that proper coaching was the key reason that they could make it. They scored 625 and 570 marks.
This despairing Plath is a far cry from the poet I have come to know and admire – a poet who writes about the simple beauty of meadows and the tenacity of fungi as well as the splendours of rugged wilderness.
Plath’s fascination with the natural world began in childhood, as she makes clear in her essay Ocean 1212-W, in which she details the importance of the sea to her poetic imagination. This interest in nature continued into adulthood, when she read the work of biologists such as Rachel Carson, whom she writes about in her letters.
Any other poet with this background would at least be credited with a passing interest in the natural world. However, Plath’s untimely death by suicide has skewed much interpretation of her poetry. The well-versed argument that Plath only uses nature in her poetry as a “mirror to look deeper into herself, has pervaded critical writing on her work from the 1960s to the 21st century.