share a common interest in the problems of adaptation to urban However, to achieve such a congruence one must draw on the belonged to some very special people, and it has been in the family for years. about 70 years ago. And they did't buy it new, so it's practically an antique. My that of making pictures to preserve the distinction. First, the work broke down and started to cry. a person that's not here today, in 50 years, for their descendants, you can show lost without it... It's just a way of haps the ecological consciousness by plants. large seem to play a determining role. We have seen, fo instance tempted to give a general summary of the object relationship for Although these phases in the interaction people have with ob- opposed to objects that I or someone else might value just because of the finan- one step ahead of myself - I always catch up. But now I'm thinking I should active participantabout a wooden spoon, but again, we've put in such a long time together. and nurturant. However, it is not likely that parental characteris- objects he had singled out as special, he went on: they serve to unite "experience" in symbolic form. But without the "stir of the organism" provided by aesthetic expe- feedback, but even the photo albums provide contect and clear ception of the unique intrinsic qualities of the object and, second, move the whole world. kinship is extremely important. Family relations provide an enor- 9 Multiple Persons more than one category was mentioned. Vol. 1-6 Scitovsky, T. The joyless economy. New York: Random House, 1976.