Agricultura biodynamica

Rudolphus Steiner.

Agricultura biodynamica est ratio agriculturae organicae primum a Rudolpho Steiner excogitata, rebus utens quas proponentes holisticum rationum rusticarum intellectum appellant[1][2] Unus ex primis motibus agriculturae quae sustineri potest,[3][4][5] fertilitatem soli, auctum plantarum, et tutelam pecoris ut opera per oecologiam coniuncta tractat,[6][7][8] conspectus spirituales et mysticos vehementius dicens. Proponentes agriculturae biodynamicae, inter quos Steiner, eam appellaverunt scientiam incorpoream, partem maioris motus anthroposophiae.[9][10]

Biodynamica multum communiter cum aliis doctrinis organicis habet: usum stercorum et compositorum exprimit, usumque substantiarum chemicarum artificiosorum in solo et plantis vetat. Inter rationes in doctrina biodynamica unicas sunt tractatio animalium, plantarum, et soli ut systema unum; fides productioni loci et systematibus distributionis; usus translaticorum et evolutio novorum generum et varietatum loci; et usus calendarii astrologici pro satione et plantatione. Agricultura biodynamica variis additamentis herbaceis et mineralibus pro addiectionibus compositi et asperginibus agrorum utitur; quae aliquando per rationes controversas parantur, sicut inhumatio quarzi contusi in cornu bovis farti, ratio quae "vires cosmicas in solo" legere dictur, tam magiae sympatheticae quam agronomiae similius.

Anno 2011, artes biodynamicae ad 142 482 hectariorum in 47 civitatibus adhibebantur. Germania 45 centesimas summae per orbem terrarum tenebat;[11] reliquum 1750 hectariorum per civitatem peraequabat. Nonnullae vineae notabiles biodynamicas vitium cultorum rationes sibi sumpserunt.[12] Sunt agenturae testificationis pro operibus biodynamicis, quarum plurimae sunt sodales Demetris Internationalis, gregis internationalis normarum biodynamicarum.

Nulla differentia in eventibus commodis ratione probata est inter affirmatas agriculturae biodynamicae artes et agriculturam organicam (similem) et usum agriculturae integratae. Reprehensores agriculturam biodynamicam scientiam falsam aestimaverunt ob inopiam indiciorum validorum eius efficacitatis et scepticismum rerum tantum cogitatio magica reprehensarum.[13][14][15][16]

Nexus interni

  1. Anglice: "a holistic understanding of agricultural processes."
  2. OrgAg2:145.
  3. Paull, John (2011) "Biodynamic Agriculture: The Journey from Koberwitz to the World, 1924–1938", Journal of Organic Systems, 2011, 6(1):27–41.
  4. D. W. Lotter, 2003."Organic agriculture" in Journal of Sustainable Agriculture 21(4).
  5. Richard Harwood, olim C. S. Mott Chair for Sustainable Agriculture in Universitate Civica Michiganiae, motum biodynamicum appellat "first organized and well-defined movement of growers and philosophies [in sustainable agriculture] (Harwood 1990:6).
  6. OrgAg.
  7. Ikerd, John (2010). "Sustainability, Rural". In Leslie A. Duram. Encyclopedia of Organic, Sustainable, and Local Food. ABC-CLIO. pp. 347–349. ISBN 0313359636 .
  8. Abbott, L. K.; Murphy, Daniel V. (2007). Soil Biological Fertility: A Key to Sustainable Land Use in Agriculture. Springer. p. 233. ISBN 140206618X .
  9. OrgAg2.
  10. Paull, John (2011) "Biodynamic Agriculture: The Journey from Koberwitz to the World, 1924–1938", Journal of Organic Systems, 2011, 6(1):27–41.
  11. John Paull, "Organics Olympiad 2011: Global Indices of Leadership in Organic Agriculture," Journal of Social and Development Sciences, 1(4):144–150 (Maio 2011).
  12. Reeve et al. 2005.
  13. Jamie Goode, The Science of Wine: From Vine to Glass (University of California Press, 2006, ISBN 978-0-520-24800-7).
  14. Linda Chalker-Scott (2004), "The Myth of Biodynamic Agriculture," Master Gardener Magazine.
  15. D. Smith (2006), "On Fertile Ground? Objections to Biodynamics," The World of Fine Wine, 12:108–113.
  16. Holger Kirchmann (1994), "Biological dynamic farming--an occult form of alternative agriculture?" Journal of Agricural Environmental Ethics 7(2):173–187; doi:10.1007/BF02349036.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Nelliwinne