Naturalism is a personal philosophy of life and everyday living. It offers practical solutions to the many ills of excess capitalism being inflamed by consumerism. Naturalism speaks of a healthy and harmonious relationship between man and his environment which is the key to the principle of sustainability.
Dr Abe V Rotor
--------------------------------------------------
Living with Nature on the Internet and Radio
Living with Nature-School on Blog was initiated in May 2010 as a conduit of Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School on Air), offering the website viewer and the radio broadcast audience a simulcast audio-visual session of a particular topic/s for the day. The website (avrotor-blogspot.com) makes the lessons available jointly or independently open worldwide.
To date (May 2910 ro July 2015), there are more than one million pageviews. Topics of interests (top ten) are indicated, so with the participating countries, on daily, weekly and monthly basis other than the continuing total visitors record. PBH audience, other than blog viewers, are monitored by its sponsors (DZRB-PBS), which has 32 stations nationwide and worldwide access on the Internet. There are two satellite websites - Naturalism - The Eighth Sense and A Naturalist World of Dr Abe V Rotor. Selected articles from the Blog have been published in a series of books (Living with Nature Series), and in the author's column (Okeyka Apong) in Bannawag Weekly Magazine.
-------------------------------------------------
All over the world people are "going back to Nature." They eat food grown without chemicals, wear clothes made of plant fiber, live in homes designed with the landscape.
They have learned to avoid genetically modified food, cuisine of unknown ingredients, and vitamin capsules claiming panacea. They shun from drug dependent medical treatments.
They find more time with family, friends, hobbies and relaxation. They have become wiser to know the difference between necessity and want, affluence and austere living.
Many are moving out of the city and settle down on homestead, or country home like the original American bungalow, or our own Nipa Hut where simplicity and food sufficiency make living happy and healthy.
They become less and less dependent on the supermarket and the mall. They free themselves from the burden of postmodern living, a kind of freedom from the clout of a materialistic culture, entrapment of corporate domination, artificiality of things made beautiful, and restlessness in living on the fast lane.
Harvest Time, mural detail by the author.
Air pollution, Paris France
Dr Abe V Rotor
--------------------------------------------------
Living with Nature on the Internet and Radio
Living with Nature-School on Blog was initiated in May 2010 as a conduit of Paaralang Bayan sa Himpapawid (People's School on Air), offering the website viewer and the radio broadcast audience a simulcast audio-visual session of a particular topic/s for the day. The website (avrotor-blogspot.com) makes the lessons available jointly or independently open worldwide.
To date (May 2910 ro July 2015), there are more than one million pageviews. Topics of interests (top ten) are indicated, so with the participating countries, on daily, weekly and monthly basis other than the continuing total visitors record. PBH audience, other than blog viewers, are monitored by its sponsors (DZRB-PBS), which has 32 stations nationwide and worldwide access on the Internet. There are two satellite websites - Naturalism - The Eighth Sense and A Naturalist World of Dr Abe V Rotor. Selected articles from the Blog have been published in a series of books (Living with Nature Series), and in the author's column (Okeyka Apong) in Bannawag Weekly Magazine.
-------------------------------------------------
All over the world people are "going back to Nature." They eat food grown without chemicals, wear clothes made of plant fiber, live in homes designed with the landscape.
They have learned to avoid genetically modified food, cuisine of unknown ingredients, and vitamin capsules claiming panacea. They shun from drug dependent medical treatments.
They find more time with family, friends, hobbies and relaxation. They have become wiser to know the difference between necessity and want, affluence and austere living.
Many are moving out of the city and settle down on homestead, or country home like the original American bungalow, or our own Nipa Hut where simplicity and food sufficiency make living happy and healthy.
They become less and less dependent on the supermarket and the mall. They free themselves from the burden of postmodern living, a kind of freedom from the clout of a materialistic culture, entrapment of corporate domination, artificiality of things made beautiful, and restlessness in living on the fast lane.