Abstract

This article provides a brief genealogy of ontological thinking about the concept of space from a geographical perspective. In particular, it focuses on philosophical debates on the nature of space post-1950, tracing the evolution of spatial thought. It is divided into three sections: absolute conceptions of space (including implicitly absolute space, absolute space, cognitive space); relative conceptions of space (including relative space; masculinist and paradoxical space; metaphorical space, virtual space, and timespace); and ontogenetic conceptions of space.

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