This introduction to the philosophy of geography explores some of the liveliest areas of geographical argument. Each selection begins with an editorial that summarizes the debate that follows.
I really enjoy the stuff this book talks about although I will not pretend to understand, however, a few nice nuggets from the goldmine of thought it inspires, are what sort of spatial metaphors do we use when discussion "marginalization" and colonization, and what do these metaphors imply and how do they misdirect. Also, another article in here deals with western science attempting to test things in a "non" place, I guess some sort of extreme reductionism, which is likely problematic. And then also using the "poetics" of place, or an interesting paradox between using dense academic language as poetics, in that no single meaning can or should be intended by language, and rather we often dance around ideas, and so writing should reflect this dance, the attempt to define while also leaving inference open to the reader. Again, I need to read more (this is based on the introduction and maybe three articles there-in) but I think geography has some very worthwhile and exciting things to offer any of us living in the world of academia, and also those of us interested in qualitative measures (how do we measure success if not wholely temporally? how should we/ or should we even measure student performance-- and how is that measure informed? etc, etc... I doubt this book directly answers those questions, but it can help if those are questions you have.)