Richard Hartshorne
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Richard Hartshorne (1899, Kittanning, Pennsylvania, – 1992), was a prominent American geographer. He completed his doctorate at the University of Chicago (1924), then taught at the University of Minnesota (1924–40) and the University of Wisconsin (1940–70), with war-time interruption. He is the author of The Nature of Geography (1939), Perspective on the Nature of Geography (1959), and, with Mark Hoyt Ingraham, The Academic Citizen (1970). Among his brothers was the prominent philosopher Charles Hartshorne.
[edit] Articles
"Recent Developments in Political Geography, I", The American Political Science Review, Vol. 29, No. 5 (Oct., 1935), pp. 785-804.
The Concepts of 'Raison d'Être' and 'Maturity' of States; Illustrated from the Mid-Danube Area", Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 30, pp. 59-60; 1940.
hi:रिचर्ड हार्टशोर्नja:リチャード・ハーツホーン pt:Richard Hartshorne ru:Хартшорн, Ричард

